Ben Chatwin - Drone Signals (2018)
BAND/ARTIST: Ben Chatwin
- Title: Drone Signals
- Year Of Release: 2018
- Label: Village Green – VGLP039
- Genre: Ambient, Experimental
- Quality: lossless (tracks)
- Total Time: 35:06
- Total Size: 171 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
A1 – Burning Witches
A2 – Unravel
A3 – Chiral
A4 – Nordsjøen
A5 – Dendrites
B1 – Lost At Sea
B2 – Coruscate
B3 – Bone
B4 – Tail
Unlike ‘Staccato Signals’ where Ben started with a blank slate and built the music up layer by layer, finishing with the string quartet, this time the process began with everything on hand. The task became dismantling the tracks – stripping them apart to see what was left, letting certain sounds or instruments become the focus, and then rebuilding the arrangements around them.This allowed elements to breathe, yet also to become more static. The less chaotic and more ambient nature of these pieces suggested a related album of versions, a conceptual sibling –‘Drone Signals’.
Using the final element of the previous album, recording the strings, as a starting point to feedinto his machines, Ben developed a central conceptual tool of his previous album – giving upcontrol – even further. The result is a fractured and dissembled interpretation of ‘Staccato Signals’as performed by modular synthesisers.
In this way, ‘Drone Signals’ might best be understood as the aftermath of ‘Staccato Signals’,retaining much that made the latter such a rewarding album – it’s mournful beauty, the tense,ambiguous relationship between electronic and acoustic elements, and a delicate if not volatile balance between elegance and intensity. This time, however, the palette is broader, more static –concerned more with monolithic structures than with sharp edges.
Accordingly, the hectic energy of ‘Hound Point’ and ‘Knots’ from the former melt and decay in to the slow, gradual burns of ‘Nordsjœn’ and ‘Unravel’, while the strings on ‘Black Castle’, prominent and stirring on ‘Staccato’, reappear only in strangled, muted gasps on album-opener ‘Burning Witches’ – occasionally flickering through the smouldering distortion. Where ‘Staccato’ is urgent,dynamic and chaotic, ‘Drone’ is expansive, dispersing its harmonic identity over much wider spaces, requiring more of a vertical listening experience than its predecessor.
A1 – Burning Witches
A2 – Unravel
A3 – Chiral
A4 – Nordsjøen
A5 – Dendrites
B1 – Lost At Sea
B2 – Coruscate
B3 – Bone
B4 – Tail
Unlike ‘Staccato Signals’ where Ben started with a blank slate and built the music up layer by layer, finishing with the string quartet, this time the process began with everything on hand. The task became dismantling the tracks – stripping them apart to see what was left, letting certain sounds or instruments become the focus, and then rebuilding the arrangements around them.This allowed elements to breathe, yet also to become more static. The less chaotic and more ambient nature of these pieces suggested a related album of versions, a conceptual sibling –‘Drone Signals’.
Using the final element of the previous album, recording the strings, as a starting point to feedinto his machines, Ben developed a central conceptual tool of his previous album – giving upcontrol – even further. The result is a fractured and dissembled interpretation of ‘Staccato Signals’as performed by modular synthesisers.
In this way, ‘Drone Signals’ might best be understood as the aftermath of ‘Staccato Signals’,retaining much that made the latter such a rewarding album – it’s mournful beauty, the tense,ambiguous relationship between electronic and acoustic elements, and a delicate if not volatile balance between elegance and intensity. This time, however, the palette is broader, more static –concerned more with monolithic structures than with sharp edges.
Accordingly, the hectic energy of ‘Hound Point’ and ‘Knots’ from the former melt and decay in to the slow, gradual burns of ‘Nordsjœn’ and ‘Unravel’, while the strings on ‘Black Castle’, prominent and stirring on ‘Staccato’, reappear only in strangled, muted gasps on album-opener ‘Burning Witches’ – occasionally flickering through the smouldering distortion. Where ‘Staccato’ is urgent,dynamic and chaotic, ‘Drone’ is expansive, dispersing its harmonic identity over much wider spaces, requiring more of a vertical listening experience than its predecessor.
Year 2018 | Electronic | Ambient | FLAC / APE
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