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Ambient Music Thread Genre • Page 63

Discussion in 'Music Forum' started by bedwettingcosmo, Jul 1, 2016.

  1. Ferrari333SP

    Prestigious Supporter

    This is bliss

     
    Haruni likes this.
  2. Ferrari333SP

    Prestigious Supporter

  3. Gjpeace

    Regular Supporter

    New Clarice Jensen!

     
    OotyPa likes this.
  4. mesi

    Regular

    This is amazing.

    Claire M Singer - Trian
     
    Ferrari333SP and Haruni like this.
  5. Gjpeace

    Regular Supporter

    Woah. I've been checking for new Claire M Singer stuff every few months for the past year or two now. I love her first album. So excited!
     
  6. Horrorca

    Trusted

    this is awesome
     
    Ferrari333SP likes this.
  7. mesi

    Regular

    This is more of a compilation though, it regroups all the tracks from the first album and adds an extra track, which has also been previously released. So no new music unfortunately.
     
  8. 0rb

    is this a dream? ✫・゜

    I don't have time to post on chorus anymore, but this is good shit.

     
    OotyPa and Haruni like this.
  9. Ferrari333SP

    Prestigious Supporter

    These three albums from BT are pretty fantastic





     
  10. OotyPa

    fall away Supporter

    Y'all are doing God's work lately. Loving it, especially the Leo Svirsky and Iona Fortune albums.
     
  11. Ferrari333SP

    Prestigious Supporter

    New album finally announced from the only group I've ever nearly cried to - A Winged Victory For the Sullen



    "
    Purveyors of contemporary ambient and electronic inspired music, A Winged Victory for the Sullen make a bold return on new album “The Undivided Five”. The pair, made up of Dustin O’Halloran and Adam Wiltzie, have created iconic film scores and forward-thinking ambient groups, releasing a series of game-changing records for Erased Tapes and Kranky. On “The Undivided Five” they rekindle their unique partnership for only their second piece of original music outside of film, TV and stage commissions, creating an album that channels ritual, higher powers and unspoken creative energies. Their fifth release (following their debut album, two scores and an EP), they embraced the serendipitous role of the number five, inspired by artist Hilma af Klint and the recurrence of the perfect fifth chord.

    This album sees them create bold new work built on their foundations in ambient and neoclassical. Since their 2011 self-titled debut, the duo have emerged as part of a much-lauded scene alongside peers like Max Richter, Hildur Guðnadóttir, Tim Hecker and Fennesz. Their 2014 album “Atomos” was the product of a commission to score a new performance by Royal Ballet choreographer Wayne McGregor, while 2016’s “Iris” was the score for director Jalil Lespert’s thriller, “In the Shadow of Iris”. They count the likes of Jon Hopkins among their fans, who included ‘Requiem For The Static King Part One’ on his 2015 Late Night Tales compilation. They composed the score for Invisible Cities, a specially-created performance to herald 2019’s Manchester International Festival, and have played some of the world’s most celebrated venues, including a sold out Boiler Room performance at London’s Barbican, and a 2015 BBC Proms show curated by Mary Anne Hobbs at the Royal Albert Hall.

    They were first introduced by mutual friend Francesco Donadello in 2007, a close collaborator who’s gone on to mix all of the AWVFTS records. O’Halloran launched his reputation with two acclaimed solo piano albums, attracting the attention of director Sofia Coppola, who asked him to score her 2006 film Marie Antoinette, and he has since won an Emmy for his 2015 theme song for Jill Soloway’s Transparent series, and been nominated for an Oscar and Golden Globe for his 2017 score with Hauschka for Garth Davis’ Lion. Wiltzie, meanwhile, founder of iconic drone outfit Stars of the Lid, has scored Hollywood films including Kevin MacDonald’s “Whitney”, Jake Scott’s “American Woman” and collaborated with Jóhann Jóhannsson for 2014’s The Theory of Everything.

    This album sees them pay greater heed to the small details in their sound than previously, something they say has been encouraged by the move to a new label. It’s been their first opportunity since their debut to create something that’s solely guided by their ideas, and it represented an opportunity to call back to that first outing while also building on the various ways in which they’ve grown. “We understand that times have changed,” they say. “We have evolved, but we also didn’t want to forget the beginning.”

    They channel influences such as Debussy, nodded to in the opening track, whose big chords and complicated arrangements inform a lot of their approach – parts that sound simple but require great skill to execute. Likewise, the artist Hilma af Klint – one of the first abstract Western artists – informed their ideas about drawing on spiritual influences to shape their work. “It’s like an invisible hand guiding things,” they say.

    The start of recording sessions for the album were marred by the death of one of their closest friends. Within weeks after the funeral O’Halloran found out that he would be expecting his first child, and it was soon after that a visit to see the art of af Klint brought home a profound realisation of life, death, the afterlife, and the spaces in between. She belonged to a group called "The Five", a circle of five women with a shared belief in the importance of trying to make contact with spirits, often by way of séances. This chimed with the duo’s unspoken approach to collaboration, and nudged them to return to their writing process centered around the harmonic perfect fifth; the five senses, the divine interval – The Undivided Five.

    The album was also shaped by the breadth of locations in which it was created, helping to shape its nuanced sonics. In addition to O’Halloran and Wiltzie’s respective Berlin and Brussels studios, the record took shape across six different sites. They recorded orchestral samples in Budapest’s Magyar Rádió Studio 22, re-recorded album parts in Brussels’ Eglise Du Beguinage’s unique, reverb-heavy surrounds (where Wiltzie has performed with Stars of the Lid and, in 2018, organised a tribute concert for Jóhann Jóhannsson), experimented with overdubs in Ben Frost’s Reykjavik studio, and recorded grand piano parts in a remote woodland studio in northern Italy. The duo pay close attention to the micro-level of sound, and each of these places was chosen for the qualities which could enrich the finished product. And it’s in Francesco Donadello’s studio in Berlin, where all of the previous AWVFTS material has been mixed, that the album was run through the studio’s analog board, binding the record’s different parts together.

    It was their connection to Jóhannsson which partly shaped the direction of their new album. They were asked to create a remix for him, which he heard before his death in 2018, where they unlocked a new process in terms of how they work. They recomposed the strings, using modular synthesis, old synths and string and piano arrangements, a method they applied to album opener ‘Our Lord Debussy’. “It’s about going into the DNA of music and taking different strands,” they say.

    The album is their debut for Ninja Tune, and comes as change is underway for O’Halloran, moving from Berlin – hence the title of ‘Keep It Dark, Deutschland’ – after a decade in the German capital. He’s headed to Iceland, the country where the pair shot their latest press photos and which is an important locale for both of them. The wide-spanning connections which have shaped the record are testament to their deep roots as artists. This album’s powerful energy is driven by the deep-rooted bond between them.
    credits
    releases November 1, 2019"
     
    coleslawed and mesi like this.
  12. 0rb

    is this a dream? ✫・゜

    OotyPa and Ferrari333SP like this.
  13. 0rb

    is this a dream? ✫・゜

  14. OotyPa

    fall away Supporter

    I’m just shocked that you’ve only cried to one artist. I can’t even remember the names of the artists I’ve shed tears to haha there are far too many.
     
    coleslawed likes this.
  15. 0rb

    is this a dream? ✫・゜

    New Alessandro Cortini is out tomorrow as a heads up.
     
    OotyPa likes this.
  16. OotyPa Sep 26, 2019
    (Last edited: Sep 26, 2019)
    OotyPa

    fall away Supporter

    utterly gorgeous record. ambient-jazzy vibe, lots of instruments.



    this one's got a jon hassell vibe y'all will love.

     
  17. Gjpeace

    Regular Supporter

    This thread continues to deliver. Thanks, you all. Excited to hear the new Cortini. I have vivid memories of listening to his last one during the winter; it was gorgeous.
     
    OotyPa likes this.
  18. OotyPa

    fall away Supporter

    New Olan Mill record is cozy.

     
  19. 0rb

    is this a dream? ✫・゜

    I have Mp3s of the Christina Vantzou six cellos stuff, DM me if you want them.
     
  20. 0rb

    is this a dream? ✫・゜

  21. mesi

    Regular

    New Ian William Craig collaboration out today, more vocal-heavy than his own work though:

     
  22. Gjpeace

    Regular Supporter

    This day keeps getting better and better.
     
  23. OotyPa

    fall away Supporter

    If y'all liked the Kankyō Ongaku: Japanese Ambient, Environmental & New Age Music 1980-1990 collection, check this out. Synth-heavy pastoral, dreamy vibes from ambient legends.

     
    local_corn likes this.
  24. Horrorca

    Trusted

    amazing
     
  25. OotyPa

    fall away Supporter

    Ambient day today. Be prepared for a few more posts after this one (but this deserves its own post) ;-)

    Damn psyched for this to release next week. Collab album with Marielle Jakobsons (fender rhodes, organ, synthesizers) and Chuck Johnson (pedal steel guitar and treatments).

     
    mesi and Haruni like this.