Sunday, August 18, 2013
VIDEO// Oceania: Wires
Surreal are the images painted here. A boy hanging as a bat might hang, his yellow overcoat shimmering beneath a light, light as a feather yet weightless not. Periods of intermittent darkness dilute murky film, rewound tape fast-forwarded and nervous frames put under. Water. Smoke. And phone-lines racing to deliver fruitless talk to fruitless trees. "Wires in your eyes" caught in shallow lashes, the inside of an eyelid the gloomy palette of an overcast sky. The soundtrack is electronic, beats lonely in their abundance and choral synths a dreamy respite from the dream-like banality of life. 'Wires' is all these things and more, yet all these things and nothing. Our zenith and our nadir.
Oceania's EP 'Eyes of Glass' will drop later this summer, but check out his Soundcloud for now!
Labels:
Nick Kostylew,
Oceania
Sunday, August 11, 2013
TRACK// Haim: The Wire

Labels:
Haim
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
ALBUM// M. Lockwood Porter: Judah's Gone

Labels:
M. Lockwood Porter
Monday, August 5, 2013
ALBUM// Delphine Dora: Multitudes II

This isn't Delphine Dora's latest release. That can be found here, and is far better produced. It's better mixed and better recorded, but I find the spontaneous improvisation on display here far more intriguing. Based on the poetry of Walt Whitman, Dora's piano playing and strained vocals retain a certain child-like imperfection. Ofttimes they bounce and skip along long passages of lawn, and at others they seem to age, sighing and struggling to recite unsettled lines of constructed verse. They echo at points and seem swamped at others, overwhelmed by the Satie-inspired minimalism of her piano. Like a poem the tracks twist and change, exploring avenues of darkness and dappled light. It's a wonderfully thoughtful probing of both Whitman's poetry, and the uncertain fickleness of man.
Download the whole thing from Delphine Dora's Bandcamp.
Labels:
Delphine Dora
VIDEO// Angel Olsen: Some Things Cosmic
Angel Olsen sings like no-one else. Her voice quivers with emotion like she's about to cry, and it honesty brings a tear to my eye. Her performance is perfect, from that wry mid-track smile to her beautiful middle-distance stare. The audience at her feet is quiet, the final shuddering notes leaving her lips and floating up into the warm summer air. This moment is strange and full and fleeting.
Labels:
Angel Olsen
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)