Showing posts with label neoclassical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label neoclassical. Show all posts

18 February 2022

Lisa Gerrard & Jules Maxwell "Burn" (2021)

Burn
release date: May 7, 2021
format: digital (7 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [4,04]
producer: James Chapman
label: Atlantic Curve - nationality: Australia / Northern Ireland, UK


Collaborative project between Australian Lisa Gerrard and Northern Irishman Jules Maxwell, with the latter acting as live keyboardist on several occasions in Gerrard and Brendan Perry's duo project Dead Can Dance after their reformation in 2012. The album has a duration of only 35 minutes and consists of seven compositions with running lengths from four to six minutes. Gerrard alone is credited five tracks, while two tracks (#2 and #3) are composed by Gerrard and Maxwell in collaboration.
Musically, it's neo-classical with influence from darkwave, world music, and with hints from electronica, just as it has been the case with other works by Gerrard, e.g. The Silver Tree (2006) and which has charachterised releases by Dead Can Dance. Burn is, however, something else. The rhythm sections are shaped solely by programming or by bass and synth-bass with Gerrard singing on all tracks in an unknown or indistinct language - her very own metaphysical language, where her voice only functions on an instrumental level. That said, it's quite a sonorous, distinctive, and powerful instrument Gerrard possesses. She blends her alto voice beautifully in and out of progressive rhythmic loops and occasionally swings her vocal up into higher spheres clothed in mysticism of the East and sometimes with a well-developed technique taken from the scene of opera. Multi-instrumentalist Jules Maxwell adds rhythm, electronics, synth-bass, and grandiosity in appropriate measure and otherwise lets the music unfold in beautiful harmony with Gerrard as guiding instrumentalist.
It's original, beautiful, unpretentious, and yet wide-ranging. Since the early eighties, Gerrard has been responsible for strong original releases with Dead Can Dance - together with Hans Zimmer, she created the musical counterpart to the cinematic side of "Gladiator" (2000), and she has generally become an acclaimed soundtrack composer for a long series of films starting with soundtracks under the name Dead Can Dance back in '89 for the film "El niño de la luna" (aka "Moon Child" - not released as a soundtrack until 2019). They gained more recognition with their music for Ron Fricke's remarkable "Baraka" (1992), after which they released several soundtracks. As soloist, Gerrard first collaborated with Pieter Bourke on the music for "The Insider" by Michael Mann in 1999, and most recently in 2017 she and Peter Orr stood behind the soundtrack to "2:22" by Paul Currie. Gerrard has been nominated for dozens of international awards and she has received around 10 major awards for her work as a composer.
Burn is a certified gem of an album that should find wider recognition. Highly recommended!
[ Gaffa.dk 5 / 6 stars ]

2021 Favourite releases: 1. Mogwai As the Love Continues - 2. Thåström Dom som skiner - 3. Lisa Gerrard &
Jules Maxwell Burn

08 November 2021

Lingua Ignota "Sinner Get Ready" (2021)

Sinner Get Ready
release date: Aug. 6, 2021
format: digital (9 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,62]
producer: Kristin Hayter
label: Sargent House - nationality: USA


4th studio album by Lingua Ignota (aka Kristin Hayter) following two years after Caligula (Jul. 2019) is once again with Hayter herself in multiple roles as technical staff, photographer, and producer. The album is partially made in collaboration with sound engineer and producer Seth Manchester, but otherwise it's exclusively Hayter as vocalist, instrumentalist, and composer. As Lingua Ignota she continues in the apocalyptic style with a less hard-hitting industrial tone than what characterised the predecessor, and instead there is room for a greater musical scope, which suits her expression. Additional stylistic features creep in from traditional folk, Americana, experimental music mixed with pervasive classical notes. On a first listen, it may sound a much like produced on the same thematic pot, but where she focused on Satan on her previous album, she now confronts God and blind believers. The lyrics revolve around Christian liturgy, sin, punishment, death, revenge, and to a lesser extent, the theme of forgiveness.
The album has generally been met by positive reviews, much like Caligula did. If you're not familiar with Lingua Ignota, it might be a bit of a frightening acquaintance at first with her obvious fascination for hard-hitting thrash metal and the death metal realm, but if you're able to stay in the intrusive brutal darkness, you may notice how other tones are present and open up. It's in the counterplay between the beauty and the ugly that Hayter moves confrontationally in and out of moods. Under the moniker of Lingua Ignota, Hayter released her debut album Let the Evil of His Own Lips Cover Him via bandcamp.com in Feb. 2017, and already with the follow-up All Bitches Die (Jun. 2017) just five months later, she had become an international name. The album Caligula from 2019 is her first with a record company to back her up. She is trained in classical music, and stylistically, she skilfully mix elements from experimental popular music with classical music and thus has a natural kinship with Diamanda Galás. Both play with the brutal confrontation with Christian ideals in experimental classical processing. Here, you'll also find links to more recent neoclassical music such as Chelsea Wolfe and Swedish artist Anna von Hausswolff, who both experiment with a mix of popular music, and especially darkwave style, with classical compositions and furthermore exploit tensions between beauty and ugly. Hayter still sounds like no one else, because she is also an artist who seems more deeply rooted in alternative noise styles and more experimental approaches.
I can easily imagine Lingua Ignota as a highly original and fascinating artist, but focusing purely on the music product, her expression with strong bonds to a thrash metal and black metal scene then places Hayter in the periphery of what I basically understand works as good music.
However, Sinner Get Ready is Hayter's most nuanced and complex album and it's definitely worth to know.
Recommended.
[ Gaffa.dk 6 / 6, Pitchfork, The Guardian, PopMatters 4 / 5 stars ]

26 September 2021

Anna von Hausswolff "All Thoughts Fly" (2020)

All Thoughts Fly
udgivet: Sep. 25, 2020
format: digital (7 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,85]
producer: Anna von Hausswolff, Filip Leyman
label: Southern Lord - nationality: Sweden


5th studio album by Swedish organist Anna von Hausswolff, who has now switched to the admirable label Southern Lord. The album follows 2½ years after Dead Magic (Mar. 2018) and it includes seven instrumentals, which have been created in a combination of live recordings and post-production with the addition of electronic instruments. The live element is Anna von Hausswollf on a large (German) baroque organ in Örgryte Nya Kyrka, Gothenburg, and the entire work is based on sensory impressions that von Hausswolff experienced in releation to her visit at the Parco dei Mostri, also named Sacro Bosco (and Villa delle Meraviglie), the remarkable 16th-century Baroque park in Bomarzo, Lazio, Italy, from which the front cover photo was taken with von Hausswolff in the mouth of the meter-high head L'Orco.
It's not an album where you find von Hausswolff looking for new paths - not that she needs to - her music is most original, kept in her well-known experimental, neoclassical darkwave. The simple post-production leaves the music quite bare, where you get a clear sense of the pompous power of the organ. These are progressive compositions that slowly indicate a beauty side by side with a darkness that both evokes a sensation of security but which also may be perceived as gloomy - completely in line with the history of the Baroque garden.
All Thoughts Fly is an almost peerless work and nothing less than Anna von Hauswolff's best to date.
Highly recommended.
[ allmusic.com, SputnikMusic 4,5 / 5, New Noise 5 / 5, 👍Pitchfork 7,7 / 10 stars ]

20 March 2021

Sigur Rós "Odin's Raven Magic" (2020)

Odin's Raven Magic
(soundtrack)
release date: Dec. 4, 2020
format: digital (8 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,72]
producer: Sigur Rós [?]
label: Krúnk - nationality: Iceland

Track highlights: 2. "Alföður orkar" - 3. "Dvergmál" - 4. "Stendur æva" - 5. "Áss hinn hvíti" - 7. "Spár eða spakmál" - 8. "Dagrenning"

Soundtrack album, or so it has been described by the band on its bandcamp site. The music here is actually "an orchestral collaboration between Sigur Rós, Hilmar Örn Hilmarsson, Steindór Andersen and Maria Huld Markan Sigfúsdóttir which premiered 18 years ago at the Barbican Centre in London [...]" [written in 2020] - it premiered at the Barbican Centre in London, Apr. 21, 2002, which means the band had not yet released its third studio album as the collaboration falls between the second, Ágætus byrjun (Jun. 1999) and [ ] ('the brackets album') (Oct. 2002).
In hindsight, 'cause I didn't know about it until it was released in 2020, it's remarkable album. Near majestic. I understand the term soundtrack, although it's 'only' the music to an ancient Icelandic poem without a visual side to it. It's orchestrated, but nevertheless it also feels like a post-rock, or experimental transgressing piece of art. It's neo-classical and experimental rock - but it works unlike many other such attempts of a fusion between classical music and music from the pop culture.
Odin's Raven Magic is simply a truly wonderful album.
All tracks are credited Jón Þór Birgisson, Georg Hólm, Orri Páll Dýrason, Kjartan Sveinsson, Steindór Andersen, Hilmar Örn Hilmarsson and María Huld Markan Sigfúsdóttir.

07 March 2021

Lingua Ignota "Wicked Game" (2018) (single)

Wicked Game
, single
release date: Aug. 7, 2020
format: digital (1 x File, FLAC)
[single rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,68]
producer: Kristin Hayter
label: Sargent House - nationality: USA

Tracklist: 1. "Wicked Game"

Single release by Lingua Ignota issued via her new label Sargent House is one of several covers Kristin Hayter has recorded in the wake of the album's success with Caligula (2019). An all-covers album has been rumoured in the process but so far she has released singles in 2020 of "Jolene" (Dolly Parton), "Kim" (Eminem), and then this one by Chris Isaak as digital download singles only. Most recently in the series of covers, a 4-track ep, Agnus Dei, consisting of two covers of extreme black metal / grindcore and two compositions by Händel and J.S. Bach, respectively, was released in Feb. 2021.
"Wicked Game" has already been immortalised in its original version and through several fine covers, but Lingua Ignota's version is undoubtedly another that should be remembered. It's made with great respect of the original expression and tone, and still Hayter has nonetheless shaped it according to her own musical expression. She has managed to add another layer of desolation to the song without her regular use of black metal, throat singing, and metal noise. There is no doubt, however, who stands beind this version, and one can only guess that a great future could await Hayter if she would dare to throw off the brutal black-heavy noise in order to establish herself further as an artist. At least she shows a fine example of that right here.

05 December 2020

Lisa Gerrard "The Silver Tree" (2006)

The Silver Tree
release date: Dec. 5, 2006
format: digital (14 x File, FLAC - 2007 reissue)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,88]
producer: David Badrick & Lisa Gerrard
label: Rubber Records - nationality: Australia


2nd solo album by Australian artist Lisa Gerrard follows more than a decade after her solo debut The Mirror Pool (Aug. 1995). This doesn't by any means suggest that Gerrard isn't a highly productive artist. She often releases music with collaborating artists, and she has made a golden career from her engagements as soundtrack composer. In '96 she released a so far final studio album, Spiritchaser with the duo-project Dead Can Dance (together with Brendan Perry). In '98 she released the collaboration album Duality with Pieter Bourke, and also with Bourke, she made the soundtrack to Michael Mann's The Insider (1999), the soundtrack to Ridley Scott's The Gladiator (2000) composed with Hans Zimmer - an accomplishment that sky-rocketed her composer value - and again with Bourke she composed the soundtrack to the biographical sports drama Ali (2001), the soundtrack to Whalerider (2003), the collaboration album Immortal Memory together with Patrick Cassidy (2004), and the soundtrack Salem's Lot (2004) with Christopher Gordon to a TV-series. And it doesn't stop with this, as Gerrard has also delivered compositions and vocals to songs appearing on various other releases including TV-series, movies, documentaries and as performing guest on other artists' releases.
Lisa Gerrard works on a classical arena with trained classical intrumentalists and composers, but she also works with artists from a "popular" music culture, the experimental electronic music scene and often on music labeled as neo-classical. On top of this, Gerrard has made it her trademark to blend national folklore from various parts of the world, and not seldom you will find traces of music inspired by traditional folk from the Balkan area - sometimes incorporating tones from an Arabian / Middle East tradition - all brought together in an original colourful blend with her timeless ethereal signature. She has become an acclaimed vocalist with a vocal range of three octaves, and when performing her own songs, she often sings in her own made-up language, sometimes referred to as 'glossolalia'.
The Silver Tree was nominated the Best Album Prize at the Australian Music Awards in 2006, and it may be an album that brings many of her former releases to mind, but it's not a matter of picking bits and pieces from her past and mixing it all together anew. It's more the result of a skilled artist's inspiration overflown with her quality trademarks that makes it a highly original album. It's both electronic, ambient and neo-classical, and not necessarily styles that are present in all 14 compositions. As in styles, the songs vary in tempo, in cadence, in mood but it's all cleverly woven together with Gerrard's delicate touch - be it in the arrangements of the single composition or in the tone of her singing voice. The tracks also vary in running times with the shortest playing for only 1½ minute and the longest for more than 10 minutes. In between there's nearly everything. It may be based on electronic rhythm beats, on hymn-like ambience, or progressive darkwave, but still it remarkably works as a coherent release.
I've always fancied the music with Gerrard's partecipation and it never ceases to amase me, and it always reminds me, what an absolute great artist she is! She has been awarded many prizes for her work, but in my mind, she is way to overlooked an artist and deserves much more recognition - as composer, as vocalist, and as performing artist.
Highly recommended!

19 July 2020

Lingua Ignota "Caligula" (2019)

Caligula
release date: Jul. 19, 2019
format: digital (11 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,12]
producer: Kristin Hayter
label: Profound Lore - nationality: USA


3rd studio album by Lingua Ignota follows two years after her self-released international breakthrough All Bitches Die. The album is released on Profound Lore and features Kristin Hayter as songwriter, composer, instrumentalist, singer, photographer, and as producer, just as was the case on her two previous albums.
With this, Hayter refers to the dark time as partner in a long-lasting violent relationship, which she uses here to direct the general focus on. Central to the tracks are motifs such as (violent) revenge in the form of satanic brutal forces. Or perhaps rather: the prince of darkness himself as the righteous (?) avenger of violence against women. The brutality is drawn out through all eleven tracks, which have a total running time of 66 minutes, but in a refined way, where Hayter performs in slow ceremonial lamentation as well as extreme experimental noise-metal - and with throat singing, where her screams take on the form of apocalyptic dimensions.
The album garnered good reviews and ended up on several lists including the year's best albums, and Hayter herself has been highlighted as one of today's most remarkable musicians.
It's difficult to point to outstanding or especially distinguished tracks on Caligula because the compositions offer such unique melodic structures that it makes just as much sense to compare them with parts of classical works. Hayter mixes styles and genres like a painter mixes colors. There is classical or neoclassical music, folk - as in traditional folk music - you'll find metal - as in industrial metal and there is experimental noise metal and more nuanced darkwave. The album is her most complex work to date, which is not only either gentle or brutal. In places it's calm, quiet, soothing and elaborated. And it contains beautiful passages, yet it's mostly black on black. It's music formulated in capital letters BLACK. And, like her two previous albums, it's still quite fascinating. Even for someone who doesn't care much for death metal or related styles like black metal. I don't care about Slipknot, Korn, Metallica, Iron Maiden, etc., but Hayter is as attractive as car headlights to a deer: Scary, fascinating, and something that you deep down just know you should stay far far away from, yet you're gravitated towards it. I'm not a fan, but I can easily sense quality underneath a disturbing surface.
[ Footnote: and yes, Hayter actually has "Caligula" tattooed across her chest ]
Recommended? For a listen or two: Definitely! For multiple full spins: No way!
[ 👎Gaffa.dk 6 / 6, PopMatters 4,5 / 5, Soundvenue 5 / 6, Pitchfork, The Guardian 4 / 5, 👍Blabbermouth 3,5 / 5 stars ]

15 April 2020

Dead Can Dance "The Serpent's Egg" (1988)

The Serpent's Egg
release date: Oct. 24, 1988
format: cd (2008 remaster)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,92]
producer: Brendan Perry, Lisa Gerrard, John A. Rivers
label: 4AD Records - nationality: Australia


4th studio album by Dead Can Dance follows 15 months after Within the Realm of a Dying Sun and is like their recent two albums produced mainly by the duo and in collaboration with John A. Rivers on four tracks. All songs are credited Brendan Perry and Lisa Gerrard with the former singing lead vocals on three songs (tracks #3, #5, and #10), whereas Gerrard once again proves her stunning vocal on the remainders. The album consists of ten songs with a relatively short total running time at around 36 minutes.
Compared to the predecessor, The Serpent's Egg is also experimental, less electronically-founded and even more stripped to the bone regarding the musical arrangements. On this, not only Gerrard lives up to her almost usual brilliant vocal standard but Perry also delivers some of his best performances. The album is without fillers and it showcases the duo's originality and capability to keep renewing itself as front runners withtin an alt. rock sphere bonded to classical works and to no particular dominating style, which in itself is so rare.
The album is no less than a timeless classic and highly recommended.
[ 👍allmusic.com 4 / 5 stars ]

10 April 2020

Lingua Ignota "All Bitches Die" (2017)

original cover
All Bitches Die
release date: Jun 7, 2017
format: digital (4 x File, FLAC)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [2,98]
producer: Kristin Hayter
label: selvudgivet - nationality: USA


2nd studio album by American Lingua Ignota [meaning 'unknown language'], as the moniker of Kristin Hayter. She debuted on bandcamp with the album Let the Evil of His Own Lips Cover Him in Feb. 2017 and only five months later she's then ready with this album, which was also released via her bandcamp-profile, but this time to overwhelming international interest. She soon became associated with the record label Profound Lore, who re-issued this one with a new cover in 2018. The album consists of only four compositions of varying length from 5½ to 15 minutes and with a total running time of just over 42 minutes.
Musically speaking, it's based on a mixture of dark - or rather: absolute black noise metal with elements from classical music and a clear inspiration from industrial rock. Hayter's own life story as a victim in a long violent relationship lays a great foundation for her musical and lyrical universe. She is a classically trained musician and is credited the entire performance alone as songwriter, composer, sound engineer, producer, photographer, instrumentalist, and vocalist. Her expression balances on the extremely brutal, and she experiments with the use of pure noise, just as the use of her vocal reflects a similar approach. She possesses an excellent singing voice, which can be soft, finely tuned and sometimes terrifyingly distorted as bestial death screams and disturbing throat singing.
There is no doubt that Hayter is an original. The queen of darkness, Diamanda Galás, is closest as an inspiration and related artist, but Hayter is not only concerned with performance and singing, as a primary instrument. The compositions have both qualities from ambient and classical compositions, which make it both neoclassical works and experimental noise rock.
All Bitches Die is a fierce acquaintance. You probably have to have a certain fondness for Galás or black metal to find this beautiful. To my ears it's more fascinating than ordinary black metal, death metal, or related styles, but it's also too extreme a musical expression for me to just think it's really cool.
Disturbing. Fascinating. And at the same time, too much brutality.
[ SputnikMusic 4 / 5 stars ]

2018 reissue on Profound Lore


27 February 2020

Dead Can Dance "Within the Realm of a Dying Sun" (1987)

Within the Realm of a Dying Sun
release date: Jul. 27, 1987
format: cd (2008 remaster)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,72]
producer: Dead Can Dance, John A. Rivers
label: 4AD Records - nationality: Australia


3rd studio album by the duo-project Dead Can Dance following 1½ years after the fine Spleen and Ideal and much like that, this is also produced by the duo in collaboration with John A. Rivers.
The album marks the continued journey within the duo's own stylistic soundscape of neo-classical darkwave and with a subtle addition of electronica. It's pompous and it's ethereal without the dreampop-sound that shaped the debut from '84. This is lighter and more simple without audible electric guitars - instead, it employs keyboards, synths, dulcimer, and classical orchestra representation by organ, strings, oboe, and brass.
Compared to the predecessor, there's a stronger emphasis on classical instrumentation on this as well as more simple compositions with a progressive ambient touch.
Another recommended release from the duo.
[ allmusic.com 4 / 5 stars ]

18 January 2020

Dead Can Dance "Spleen and Ideal" (1985)

Spleen and Ideal
release date: Nov. 1985
format: vinyl (CAD 512) / cd (1986 reissue) / cd (2008 remaster)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [4,06]
producer: Dead Can Dance & John A. Rivers
label: 4AD Records - nationality: Australia


2nd studio album by Australian neo-classical darkwave band Dead Can Dance, who at this point have been reduced to a duo consisting of singer, drummer & percussionist Lisa Gerrard (who would later become an acclaimed film composer) and British multi-instrumentalist Brendan Perry. The album consists of nine compositions with varied durations from approx. 3 minutes to the album's longest track "The Cardinal Sin" of approx. 5½ minutes, and with a total running length of just 38 minutes.
In terms of style, the music here can only poorly be compared to other contemporary releases. In its time it fell under the category of post-punk, which it really never was. I think the closest critics could rightly describe the style as was gothic rock and experimental rock - perhaps with a touch of art rock, but seen from a music historical perspective it's nothing less than a modern cornerstone, which has only gained greater recognition over time. It's difficult, and perhaps impossible, to imagine contemporary works by artists such as Jocelyn Pook and Anna von Hausswolff, but also Chelsea Wolfe and Lingua Ignota, and basically: the whole wave of contemporary artists in neo-classical darkwave without pointing to the legacy of Dead Can Dance and perhaps this album in particular.
I purchased Spleen and Ideal on vinyl back in the mid-80s without having any knowledge of the band or of the music they played. All I knew was that 4AD Records put out music with super-interesting names and pretty original artists, and the band oozed that particular post-punk edge that (to me) connected them to bands like Bauhaus, Modern English, This Mortail Coil, and Joy Division (which admittedly came out on Factory Records). However, I also remember the first time I listened to the album and was really disappointed. It wasn't at all like the other bands I knew of. And it wasn't even close to some of the ones mentioned here. I tried repeatedly to listen to the album but always ended up putting something else on. Luckily, I kept the album, although in the late 80s and early 90s I got into a really bad habit of selling off early 80s albums that I didn't listen much to in order to finance newer music with a stronger appeal.
When I finally re-listened to Spleen and Ideal again in the 2010s it was like a sheer revelation. How could I have failed to understand the obvious qualities of this very album?! No, it doesn't sound like anything else from the early or late 80s - except subsequent albums by Dead Can Dance. It's enchanting and beautiful music sounding like timeless tones that call for a kind of ceremonial gathering. The beauty of it is that you can simultaneously let it fill you without thinking about cultural or religious boundaries. But above all, it's remarkable how little it shares with other music originating in the mid-80s.
Highly recommended.
[ allmusic.com 4,5 / 5 stars ]

[ collectors' item ]

19 September 2018

Anna von Hausswolff "Dead Magic" (2018)

Dead Magic
release date: Mar. 2, 2018
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,62]
producer: Randall Dunn
label: City Slang - nationality: Sweden

Tracklist: 1. "The Truth, the Glow, the Fall" - 2. "The Mysterious Vanishing of Electra" (live) - 3. "Ugly and Vengeful" (live) - 4. "The Marble Eye" - 5. "Källans återuppståndelse"

4th studio album by Anna von Hausswolff with new producer Randall Dunn builds on some of the same stylistic ingredients she revealed on her previous album, The Miraculous from 2015. The difference here, at a first listen, is the more lengthy compositions with two tracks above 10 minutes playing time and "just" 5 tracks in total, but it's also a collection of songs that sees the artist embrace elements from a huge variety of styles and genres. It's art pop, chamber pop, experimental rock, neoclassical darkwave and it's post rock, but without settling on one specific style - and that's a huge accomplishment as the end result - thanks to the original sound and the arrangements - is a very coherent yet extremely varied album.
The album was met by positive reviews, and once again places Anna von Hausswolff at the peak of her career with her so far finest release. What I really enjoy about this, is the inclusion of brighter and lighter pieces in her usually dark and sinister soundscape. It's not just the explorations of dark matter, but a journey through various musical landscapes that convey an uplifting sensation. Where her previous albums shared more with Diamanda Galás, she has now turned up more on her Kate Bush kinship - which really suits her sound.
Recommendable.
[ allmusic.com, Mojo and Q all hand it 4 / 5, PopMatters and SputnikMusic 4,5 / 5 stars ]

07 September 2017

Tindersticks "Minute Bodies: The Intimate World of F. Percy Smith" (OST) (2017)

Minute Bodies: The Intimate World of F. Percy Smith
(soundtrack)
release date: Jun. 9, 2017
format: digital
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,02]
producer: Stuart A. Staples
label: Lucky Dog / City Slang - nationality: England, UK

Soundtrack album by Tindersticks to a film directed and written by Stuart A. Staples about British film pioneer and photographer Frank Percy Smith. The album is credited 'Tindersticks with Thomas Belhom and Christine Ott', and both French musicians, Belhom and Ott, have previously appeared on Tindersticks releases. Drummer Belhom appeared on both of Staples' first solo releases, the band's 2008 album The Hungry Saw, as well as on several soundtrack albums by Tindersticks. Composer and multi-instrumentalist Christine Ott first played with Tindersticks on the soundtrack to Claire Denis' 35 Rhums (2008) and then also on the soundtrack to Denis's film Les salauds (2013), and she appears here with her 'specialty instrument', Ondes martenot, as pianist, on Fender Rhodes, and as vocalist.
The album consists of 15 mainly instrumentals of varying length from 1:34 to 8:25 minutes and they are all experimental ambient with an electronic touch.
As an album, it relates to other Tinderstick soundtracks in that it may also be seen as neo-classical works, largely created as a supplement to a visual expression.

28 January 2017

Nico Muhly & Teitur "Confessions" (2016)

Confessions
release date: Oct. 21, 2016
format: digital
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,08]
producer: recorded by Saskia Coolen
label: Nonesuch Records - nationality: USA / Faroe Islands, Denmark


Collaboration album by classical American composer & conductor Nico Muhly and folk pop singer / songwriter Teitur of the Faroe Islands. The album appears to be recorded on the spot with Muhly as conductor of Holland Baroque Society Orchestra at Muziekcentrum Frits Philips, Eindhoven in The Netherlands. The two main collaborators are both credited as musical composers with Teitur as songwriter and vocalist, and most of the songs have been written especially for this album consisting of 14 compositions with a total running time at just below 48 minutes. The song "If You Wait" from Teitur's Story Music (2013) has been re-arranged and is here listed as "If You Wait a Little Longer" (track #10).
Musically, this is on the border of popular music touching on classical, or simply a neo-classical project. Teitur sings in his usual melancholic style accompanied by a full orchestra with bold focus on strings. Most but not all compositions are with lyrics but still Teitur and Muhly share composer credits on all tracks, and it's not really surprising to find Teitur in this unusual territory. He has often made use of strings and composed music of 'chamber pop' and most recently he has been experimenting with other styles, most noteworthy heard on Story Music, and now in another field here with Muhly.
Other artists have made attempts of transgressing the borders between popular music and the classical sphere - most often without much success, and Confessions is yet another example of pitfalls in that category. To me, it ressembles Elvis Costello's attempt with The Juliet Letters (1993) with The Brodsky Quartet in the way that the vocalist (from the popular culture) seems determined to continue his singing style only accompanied by classical music, and in that respect I find that Teitur fulfills his job better than Costello managed, although Costello and The Brodsky Quartet actually was met by some acclaim and eventually went on a tour to promote the album, which again was seen as an artistic and commercial success. I don't think Muhly and Teitur will be greeted with the same kind of open arms for their initative. They are simply not as famous as their British collegue, but their project does overshine the aforementioned collaboration by being more daring, or perhaps Teitur's singing style simply fits the chamber pop universe better. Anyhow, I'm not a fan of this regardless the momentarily fine moments they do produce with their colliding spheres. I know absolutely nothing about Nico Muhly and only sought the album out because of Teitur's presence, and in his discography the album falls in the lower part as his so far second least favourable album to date.

20 March 2016

Tindersticks "Ypres" (OST) (2014)

Ypres (soundtrack)
release date: Sep. 20, 2014
format: digital
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,54]
producer: Stuart A. Staples
label: Lucky Dog / City Slang - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Room 1 - Whispering Guns Parts 1, 2 and 3" - 5. "Room 3 - Sunset Glow"

Soundtrack album - or that's how it's often referred to, although it's perhaps more of a 'soundscape'. At least that's what a sticker on the album reads: "Soundscapes From The In Flanders Fields World War I Museum In Ypres, Belgium", i.e. "Soundscapes from the 'In Flanders Fields Museum' in Ypres, Belgium" for its permanent exhibition about World War I. In connection with the 100th memorial of the start of the war, Tindersticks apparently received a request from the museum to create the 'soundscapes' (or a sound collage) for a permanent exhibition. The music is purely instrumental and is credited Stuart Staples and Dan McKinna in collaboration.
The individual compositions may be hard to separate from one another - partly because their function is to act as sound collage for an exhibition space and thus is required to be played in infinite loops. Much in concordance to the music the band has composed for films by Claire Denis, the music differs significantly from the band's regular studio albums, while at the same time it carries a mark of having a close bond to a visual side that is hard to imagine. Still, Ypres is a different dark, insistent and rather gloomy collage, which with its locked-in mood fades out like an unsettling obscurity - something that might precisely underpin an exhibition about the horrors of war. The album appears as a more complete work than other of the band's soundtracks. It's rich in strings and reminiscent of outright Medieval times mixed with elements of post-rock. They are mostly slow compositions that beautifully unfold their wings and almost wraps up the listener in an intense mood saturated with the strongest emotions. In many ways it's a most distinctive work - also for Tindersticks, who shows itself here in a completely new and quite exciting territory.

10 February 2016

Anna von Hausswolff "The Miraculous" (2015)

The Miraculous
release date: Nov. 13, 2015
format: cd
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,48]
producer: Filip Leyman
label: City Slang - nationality: Sweden

Track highlights: 1. "Discovery" - 3. "Pomperipossa" - 4. "Come Wander With Me / Deliverance" (live) - 6. "An Oath" - 7. "Evocation" (live) - 9. "Stranger"

3rd studio album by Anna von Hausswolff is like the predecessor Ceremony from 2013 produced by Filip Leyman and released on the small independent German label, City Slang.
The Miraculous introduces Anna von Hausswolff more boldly as an experimental darkwave artist than her two previous releases did. At first, she came out as an alternative art pop and chamber pop artist, and then released the darker and more secluded Ceremony, which in a way was a bit of an almost religious hymn-based work with heavy use of the pipe organ, but it didn't contain the multi-faceted shape of art pop, experimental rock and neoclassical darkwave as common denominator. Here, she combines all styles into one melting pot, which both makes it a strong and original orchestrated work and at the same time launches her music through the classical barrier. Most boldly, it sounds inspired by the Dead Can Dance album Spleen and Ideal (1985) but it also makes me think of Mike Oldfield - the progressive patterns of elements taken from progressive rock and classical' music, and Jocelyn Pook - the classical experimental approach, as well as Greek-American neoclassical darkwave icon, Diamanda Galás. There's always the presence of an underlying sinister tone and a sensation of the unpleasant and unexpected next.
A first listen may not reveal obvious hits, and the album may not contain any traditional such, but it may grab you as an emotional journey through hidden layers of both mysterious darkness and utter beauty.
From my perspective, and without being truly great, this is clearly the so far best release by Anna von Hausswolff.
[ allmusic.com 4 / 5 stars ]

19 September 2015

Elvis Costello & The Brodsky Quartet "The Juliet Letters" (1993)

The Juliet Letters

release date: Jan. 19, 1993
format: digital
[album rate: 2,5 / 5] [2,68]
producer: Brodsky Quartet, Elvis Costello and Kevin Killen
label: Warner Bros. - nationality: England, UK

Studio album by the music crossover-project featuring pop / rock artist Elvis Costello and British classical string ensemble (the) Brodsky Quartet consisting of Ian Belton and Michael Thomas on violin, Paul Cassidy on viola and Jaqueline Thomas on cello.
The album was released to mostly positive reviews and the project also perfomed live to critical acclaim. I just don't think it works that well. Costello performs songs from his most delicate jazzy corner à la "Almost Blue" / "Shipbuilding" with the string quartet as instrumental appendix trying to fit in, or simply communicate that this is true art. I find it boring, uninspiring altogether, and see it as more of a media stunt he pulled through.
[ allmusic.com 3 / 5, Rolling Stone 4 / 5 stars ]

11 April 2015

Anna von Hausswolff "Ceremony" (1995)

Ceremony
release date: Jul. 18, 2012
format: digital
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,36]
producer: Filip Leyman
label: City Slang - nationality: Sweden

Track highlights: 1. "Epitaph of Theodor" - 2. "Deathbed" - 4. "Goodbye" - 6. "Epitaph of Daniel" - 8. "Liturgy of Light" - 11. "Sova" (live) - 12. "Funeral for My Future Children"

2nd studio album by Swedish artist Anna von Hausswolff contains 13 tracks and its running time is just above the hour. Stylistically, it's a rather different release than her two year old debut as it builds on repetitive simple patterns of neoclassical origin. It's still touching on the art pop of her former release but here in an ambient pop style and the most significant change is its quite sinister sound, which has led to label it as neoclassical darkwave, and combined with the ambient and slow, progressive compositions it becomes almost meditative. Several songs are build around the pipe organ [referenced in the cover] and with bold use of echo / delay effects on both vocals and other instruments, it sounds as if recorded in a church.
It's not an immediate favourite of mine, but Anna von Hausswolff sounds like she's directing her music to a summoning of some holy or unholy nature, and she also presents compositions that build on classical formulas and yet sound quite unique, although, I find that it builds on music by Dead Can Dance, as well as neoclassical, artist Jocelyn Pook, and as contrary to her debut, this is a much stronger original piece of art.
[ allmusic.com 3,5 / 5 stars ]