Fieldhead - We’ve All Been Swimming (2017)
BAND/ARTIST: Fieldhead
- Title: We’ve All Been Swimming
- Year Of Release: 2017
- Label: Home Assembly Music
- Genre: Electronic, Ambient, Downtempo
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 32:10 min
- Total Size: 171 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Meet Me Somewhere Central 03:33
02. How Much I Love The Sea 03:46
03. We've All Been Swimming 03:15
04. (Mill Hawks) 01:10
05. Slowly Singing Your Name 03:41
06. Accents 03:52
07. Ton 03:40
08. (The Vermont Hotel Lift) 01:32
09. A Version 03:39
10. Druridge 04:02
01. Meet Me Somewhere Central 03:33
02. How Much I Love The Sea 03:46
03. We've All Been Swimming 03:15
04. (Mill Hawks) 01:10
05. Slowly Singing Your Name 03:41
06. Accents 03:52
07. Ton 03:40
08. (The Vermont Hotel Lift) 01:32
09. A Version 03:39
10. Druridge 04:02
Paul Elam returns to Home Assembly with a suite of immersive, pulsating, electronic reductions. Shifting arpeggios and minimal beats generate the forward motion, whilst the captivating violin playing of Elaine Reynolds helps to provide the narrative thrust.
‘We’ve All Been Swimming’ marks something of a shift for Fieldhead. Previous releases have seen Elam take a detached view from the hillsides of West Yorkshire and Western Canada, but with his latest full length release the subject matter is closer and more immediate.
Tensely wound synths lead throughout the album, shifting from the breathless momentum of the openingtrack through to pulses reminiscent of Colin Stetson on ‘Ton’. The unique violin playing of Elaine Reynolds glides sparingly across the record, tempering the constantly shifting arpeggios and accentuating the human elements within the record’s machine-like core. The haze found on previous releases still hangs, but now it’s the haze of a crowded street or the last train home.
‘We’ve All Been Swimming’ is a concise and inspired attempt to reduce electronica down to the things that matter, with a narrative and sense of longing pervading the album reminiscent of Clark or Boards of Canada. It’s the sort of work to be devoured in one sitting - that rarest of modern day beasts - where the tracks flow effortlessly into one another and finish leaving you wanting more.
‘We’ve All Been Swimming’ marks something of a shift for Fieldhead. Previous releases have seen Elam take a detached view from the hillsides of West Yorkshire and Western Canada, but with his latest full length release the subject matter is closer and more immediate.
Tensely wound synths lead throughout the album, shifting from the breathless momentum of the openingtrack through to pulses reminiscent of Colin Stetson on ‘Ton’. The unique violin playing of Elaine Reynolds glides sparingly across the record, tempering the constantly shifting arpeggios and accentuating the human elements within the record’s machine-like core. The haze found on previous releases still hangs, but now it’s the haze of a crowded street or the last train home.
‘We’ve All Been Swimming’ is a concise and inspired attempt to reduce electronica down to the things that matter, with a narrative and sense of longing pervading the album reminiscent of Clark or Boards of Canada. It’s the sort of work to be devoured in one sitting - that rarest of modern day beasts - where the tracks flow effortlessly into one another and finish leaving you wanting more.
Year 2017 | Electronic | Downtempo | Ambient | FLAC / APE
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