Ambient Sunday with: Sensitive Chaos, Noumo, The Balmer Series, and Nikolay Pashkovets #Ambient #Drone #Downtempo #Electronic

•May 16, 2021 • Leave a Comment

A bumper edition of Ambient Sunday this morning. Think of it as your own personal ambient mixtape with tracks from Sensitive Chaos, Noumo, The Balmer Series, and Nikolay Pashkovets.

Sensitive Chaos is from the US and is an ever changing grouping led by Jim Combs. For the album Closer To Home, Jim was backed by Ryan P. Taylor on guitars and bass, Josie Quick (Perpetual Motion) on violin, Brian Good on soprano saxophone, Mitchell Sosebee on drums and percussion, and Brian Donohoe (Snarky Puppy, Progger, One O’Clock Jazz Band) on alto & tenor saxophone, clarinet, flute, and keyboards.

If that line up makes it sound like you’re in for a jazz experience think again. Watching Embers Glow is gossamer delicate ambient which is less drone than drifting along on a breeze. The synthesisers are the focus and all the organic instrumental have been looped about so that all that’s left is a beatless, liquid sound that comes in lapping waves. Gorgeous.

Staying in the USA we have The Balmer Series. I wasn’t aware before but Wiki says, “The Balmer series, or Balmer lines in atomic physics, is one of a set of six named series describing the spectral line emissions of the hydrogen atom.” However, the biog for this artist takes a fantasy approach to things offering, “The Balmer Series was born on a remote island in a private universe where a woman whose earth name is “Elisabeth Balmer” could only exist as an orb of light with the ability to perceive all creative possibilities. There she reunited with a faceless, fantastical humanoid who represented all she loved about being an orb of light: a ceaseless ability to explore her vast innermost realms and soar to the highest peaks, the same places where dreams are made.” Ummm… right.

The track is Ultraviolet from the Sublimatum album. It’s a three and a half minute organ dream. Opening with twittering birdsong it soon becomes a celestial organ that chimes its way into your heart. It manages to deliver an almost crystal clarity to things, eschewing beats as it goes. And there’s a poignancy of life and light here in the edgeof drone. Of it The Balmer Series says, “This is a gilded dream in which you occupy as an orb of light, filtering through consciousness—your memories like some abstracted vision through water, suddenly more clear. Almost a return to form, but rather, a recapturing of a lost essence.”

https://www.tiktok.com/music/Ultraviolet-6951502883212756993

Switching to Germany we have Noumo who says, “I’m a Berlin based music producer, influenced by a variety of genres. I write my own Singer-Song-Writer songs and will also release a Rock-Metal project by the end of the year. The foundation of my musical development was always the classical music genre though. Apart from that i work as a medical doctor.”

But Let Me Repair Your Heart is none of those genres. It’s an ambient cum study beats. This manages a wonderfully wobbly approach to the tune which just beautifully evokes the fragility and frailty of existence and emotion. It’s all about processed guitar and piano vying with synthetic beats. Everything is a bit slowed down and gentle. The guitar wants to repair through doses of loving hooks. It’s all terribly lofi and the better for it.

And so to Russia for Nikolay Pashkovets. He humbly offers as biog, “I’m an ordinary guy from Russia, my job is not related to music, so music is a hobby for me, or my reflection.” His work is mostly in the ambient genre with bits of neo-classical and post-rock.

We have I Will Stay Invisible Present With You from the album Hands To Heaven which is ambient but has a little neo-classical tinge. It opens with a long drone of sound, allowing found sound of people to come through as if in a dream. Cymbal washes come from a distance and give it a neo-classical touch. This track is all about tones, rather than tune but does so without in any way sounding forced. But there is a sense of everything being seen from far away. A sense of disconnectedness and ghostly presence. As Nikolay says, “When I am gone, I will remain present with you in the form of my music.”

Saturday is having a prog house moment with: Kerpner, and Hausman & Wynnwood #ProgHouse #DeepHouse #House

•May 15, 2021 • Leave a Comment

Too tired to start Saturday with a bang. But awake enough to go for something bright and cheering in the form of prog house variants from Kerpner, and Hausman & Wynnwood.

Kerpner is a Stockholm based DJ and producer. He (I assume it’s a he) says he, “Found underground music while studying at university and has never left it since. Heavily influenced by old disco and house bangers!” Thankfully, Your Step isn’t a banger. But it is a lovely progressive house / deep house track.

Your Step comes over all bright eyed and bushy tailed. There are crisp opening beats and dreamily toned synths. This is a vision of dappled sunlight and ascending tones. It’s about the joy of life and crisp cold Spring air. The half seen sight of your breath in the morning and boiler vapour trails drifting upwards. A cheering sense of summer’s far off promise. Quite deliriously delightful.

Hausman & Wynnwood go for something where the prog house has a buzzy synthwave edge. Wynnwood says, “This is the first track that Devon (Hausman) and I wrote together, and my second release with Monstercat. The inspiration for the track came from the combination of our different styles and sounds and from being able to work together on the track in person in Boston.”

Catharsis is the track. The title means the process of releasing, and thereby providing relief from, strong or repressed emotions. But the root of the word is the Greek for purification or cleansing. And that’s pretty much what you get here. There’s a sense of sloughing off an older skin and the track emerges new and clean. The wordless slightly ethereal vocal element adds to that sense of wonder.

The opening has a slightly dirty bass synth edge to it all despite the vocal. But as the track grows and builds it becomes purer and brighter. This is positively uplifting in the clever phases that build one upon another. Never cliched, always clever and inventive. Salvation available here.

Need a pre-Friday lift? Check out: Vince Schuld – Fuzzy Memories #OrganicHouse #Downtempo

•May 13, 2021 • Leave a Comment

I don’t know about you but for me it’s been a long week already. And it’s only pre-Friday. Here’s Vince Schuld with some organic house to convince me everything is going to be alright.

Vince is from Arizona and says, “I make trance and ambient music.” Which is fine. But Fuzzy Memories is neither of these things.

Fuzzy Memories is a lovely melodic and yet clattery battery organic house track. Vince says, “I can remember being five years old. I missed being 3. Being 20 years old and missing be 10. The pattern continues…” Away from the past the melodies wander about in an almost wilfully downtempo manner. They have a very slightly off kilter sense that delivers on the fuzziness of the title. The beats meanwhile are more urgent and insistent shifting pattern of clatter and tumble. The two parts of this equation work together brilliantly well. As refreshing and invigorating as a cold shower.

Midweek ambient: Pan Agiotis – Insomniakos #Ambient #Epic

•May 12, 2021 • Leave a Comment

You’ve limped through to the middle of the week. You deserve something soothing. Let’s have some ambient. Except that this isn’t very soothing from Pan Agiotis. It’s all quite dramatic and agonised.

Pan Agiotis is from Greece but I know no more than that. Google isn’t helping here given it’s a popular Greek name. So let’s focus on the music. The track is Insomniakos (insomnia, I assume). This is a dramatic piece of ambient with a bit of classical or cinematic heft. Chords are drawn out with taut strings dominating. Meanwhile, in the background, big bass synths rumble like gathering war clouds. The whole thing is really quite tense and has a way of setting you on edge. The balance between ambient and drone and cinematic and classical is all deftly handled. A ppowerful mood piece.

Bright future garage with: Jacana People – Second Story Sunlight #Chill #Downtempo #FutureGarage

•May 11, 2021 • Leave a Comment

UK duo Jacana People are back here after a year’s gap with Second Story Sunlight.

Jacana People’s work is described as, “caught halfway between city noise and rural British landscapes.” And that applies well to Second Story Sunlight. Even if the inspiration for the track is American painter Edward Hopper’s painting of the same name. In the 1960 painting, there are two women of different ages on the second-story balcony of a white house. The older woman reads a newspaper while the younger woman sits on the railing. On Wiki it says “According to Hopper, the painting was “an attempt to paint sunlight as white with almost no yellow pigment in the white”, and “any psychological idea will have to be supplied by the viewer”. “

As for the track, it opens with a tumble of almost harp or kalimba sounds before the stuttery garage beats come in. That sets the tone as mixing urban and rural. But it also sets the template for the track as bright and energetic. This is folktronica given a kick in the pants and with everything turned up to eleven. And that delivers the white sunlight of the painting. It’s all fused onto your retina as much as your eardrums.

Prog house start to the week with: Eva Forte – Waiting For You #ProgressiveHouse

•May 9, 2021 • Leave a Comment

I want a positive start to the week and that’s going to be provided by Eva Forte on her light progressive house track Waiting For You.

Eva Forte is the Progressive House project of Veronika Fotieva or Vero, a Russian – Dutch music producer. She says that she was, “a bass player in rock bands in Russia and Netherlands, some of which were famous.” But after a sabbatical she’s doing dance music. And you wouldn’t know she hadn’t been doing it for ages.

Waiting For You is an unashamedly light and perky progressive house track. It skates across progressive house with a bit of melodic techno touches. It’s not trying to be new or radical. It’s trying to make you dance and smile. And it does both these things extremely well. There’s a slight wrong-footed air about the dark opening bass but when the piano chords come in everything breaks out into sunshine. It’s all hazy, lazy, wave your hands in the air stuff. But so skilfully delivered.

Ambient Sunday with: Sunbeam42, and Amir #Ambient #Drone #Chill @iamamiramine

•May 9, 2021 • Leave a Comment

This Ambient Sunday we have the returning drone of Sunbeam42 and new to these parts artist Amir with some chill.

Suunbeam42 is returning here for a third time with Discovery. She’s an American producer who describes music “an intensely spiritual experience.” And you get that intensity on Discovery from new album Hope. A bit of a contradiction perhaps calling such a fragile drone track intense. But it is. Like her previous work there’s a sense of space and vastness. Tones are hazily held for ages. But it also has a focus and that personal spiritual quality that she talks about. That adds a layer of delivers something that’s less Eno’s wallpaper and more precisely aimed at you for your experience.

Next, Amir a new artist from the Lebanon. He says of himself, “I’m a photographer, music producer, and a computer engineering student at the Lebanese American University.” But he also says, “I chose music and photography as a form of expression to the overwhelm of my thoughts and as a reaction to the current state of youth of my country, therefore my art and the art of thousands of youth of the same state of mine.”

And yet Depths from his album Rise, from Depths, of a Preliminary State of Youth: A Change Within One in Worlds doesn’t seem to contain anything that’s overwhelming. In fact, it’s all rather lovely. A five minute track of hope and renewal. Chords are soft and reassuring. There’s a little background drone but only to add a little washed out background. The beauty of the soft focus as chords tumble on by. Beats come but late and even then can’t overwhelm the chords. Beautiful chill.

Relax into the weekend with: Unknown Operative – Undercover Love #Chill #StudyBeats @unknownopmusic

•May 8, 2021 • Leave a Comment

Did you ever want to be James Bond? I’m not sure I did, despite enjoying the films. He got beaten up too often and that looked too painful. Explains a lot about my career as a bureaucrat. Unknown Operative on the other hand clearly did and shares the more seductive side of the films with the sophisticated hip hop lounge of Undercover Love.

Unknown Operative discloses little about himself other than he’s from the UK and, “combines a love of vintage television, ambient electronics and beats into a unique brand of lofi hip hop/study beats.” Undercover Love is the first in a planned series of twelve monthly releases. Let’s hope he can keep the quality up over time.

Undercover Love is pitched as, “Music for James Bond to chill to.” And that’s pretty much spot on. Opens with a bit of guitar that has the slight twang of the famous opening Bond music. But adds some soft chords for that dimly lit late lounge seduction. And beats to keep things from getting too relaxed as there’s baddies to be fought, a mission still to complete, and world domination to be avoided.

What’s your flavour this time? Pomme Rouge – Honey Crisp (Etyen Remix) #House #Techno

•May 7, 2021 • Leave a Comment

We had Pomme Rouge here last summer. They’re back with more energetic leftfield techno house in the form of a remix from Etyen.

Last time it was Cosmic Crisp. This time it’s Honey Crisp. I’m still sticking with more traditional cheese and onion or ready salted. As a reminder, Pomme Rouge are a duo from Beirut, Lebanon. They’ve a new Cut In Half EP out now on Thawra Records, with two new tracks and two remixes. It’s the Etyen remix from Thawra label founder that I’m featuring.

Honey Crisp is halved in length in the remix being cut down to a manageable three and a half minutes. It starts with an almost 80s synth tumble before some awkward kinda IDM beats come in a rush. They have a glitched breakbeat style. Gives the track a permanently off-kilter and awkward style. But it’s also a lovely headrush of those older synths with their analogue styling and the more recent beats. This is the thrill of the backroom and the leftfield but still with an instinct to dance. Powerful stuff.

Pre-Friday election techno with: Weska – Meru #Techno

•May 6, 2021 • Leave a Comment

Here’s a track just right for the heart-pumping tension of going to the shopping centre community hall to vote today. It has all the high octane thrill of choices between Count Binface, Burning Pink or Brian Rose. Meanwhile, I postal voted a few days ago. But let that not stop us celebrating an uplifting techno track from Weska.

Originally from Toronto, Weska is now located in Berlin after working across Europe, including Ibiza. His sound is that of main room and big dance floors. There’s a totally confident use of dynamics here. Meru from his new EP of the same name is “named after one of the most treacherous mountains to climb in the Himalayas, a goal he’s pinned to the top of his bucket list.”

The track is brilliantly accessible techno but with a bit of welcome Berlin darkness. There are big beefy beats from the outset allied to a bass line that has just enough leftfield edge to give a little shiver. It’s modern but with enough of techno’s 90s heyday to be totally accessible to all. The track offers sections that lift and sections that offer temporary pauses. This is a track for hedonistic abandon and a side order of sleaze. Proper club techno.