Afternoon chill out time comes courtesy of Celer with their Breeze Of Roses CD. This is somewhat of a contrast to the lush warm ambience of their recent engaged touches CD. It's all glacial tones drones and ambience occasionally reminding me of some isolationist stuff. What's fascinating is that many of the sounds are created from original acoustic recordings of live cello and mini piano made inside a small sailboat. The album plays as one continuous track but is split into 6 (imprecise) parts on the sleeve. There are some most pleasant moments on the disc as the tracks develop subtly as. Edition of 250 on LA's Dragon's Eye. Recordings. Maxi chill!
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What their label says...
Breeze of Roses began in late 2005 when Danielle Baquet-Long and Will Long (together known as Celer) spent a long weekend on the banks of Lake Attersee in Austria. During a break in a rainstorm, a one-hour recording was made in the belly of a docked sailboat, consisting of a mini-piano, whistles, and cello. A direct field recording, containing the thumps and thuds of water against the bottom of the boat and the wind howling outside of the open hatch, was also used. This recording was left untouched until 2007, when Celer picked up where they left off. Drawing Inspiration from the memories of Attersees’ rosewind the old recoding brought back, Celer restructured these cold and early sounds, through processing and editing, into something romantic, representative, and perpetual.
Presented in 6 imprecise parts, Breeze of Roses continues Celer's amazing ability to take simple tones and field recordings and create breathtaking emotional landscapes that echo the movement and romance of a classical composition without sacrificing a modern edge.
The photography accompanying this release are by artist Peter Lograsso. The cover image Night (2005), a silver rag print, and the inside cover is Last Seen (2005).