Our album of the week (1st April 2010)
...according to our Brian on Thu 01 Apr, 2010.
Old Morr Music mucker Manual appears to have a new home, the communal DIY behemoth that is MMM; the talented Danes' first outing for this label is an absolute beauty. He kind of blurs the edges between the tentative post-cocteaus sway of early Yellow 6, classic dreampop, the gentler edges of Krautrock & kosmische synth exploration and the ecstatic wall-of-sound extremes of the shoegaze fraternity. One track explores similar lush territory to Axl Rose's best friend Ulrich Schnauss whilst the following number, the epic "Phainomenon", will have you weeping with joy at the memory of an acid trip you had whilst contemplating Tangerine Dream's latest (when you still had hair) before a spangled guitar line enters the equation, recalling Robin Guthrie's timeless shimmer and your head is transported to a magical womb-like paradise! There's so much absorbing detail in this album, words don't seem adequate enough to describe its soothing melodies, pulsating rhythms & post chill-out majesty. Existing beyond any pigeon hole, this recording straddles 40 years of blissed alternative sounds & is an absolute labour of love! It's also the first MMM release to be granted a vinyl edition! Gotta be AOTW surely?While completely unknown in his native Denmark, Munk is considered an influential artist in the circles of dreampop and electronica, touring all over the world, and collaborating, with artists including Ulrich Schnauss, Robin Guthrie (Cocteau Twins), Auburn Lull and, perhaps more surprisingly, members of Tortoise and Sunburned Hand of the Man.Aside from collaborations, two minimalist ambient albums and a rarities collection from 2007, “Drowned in Light” is the first Manual album in five years. It is also Manual’s first for Make Mine Music, the pioneering artist-led co-operative label that is also home to releases by Piano Magic, Library Tapes, July Skies and Epic45. On this latest album, drum machine loops and shimmering guitars (electric, acoustic, 12-string and flamenco) are bathed in analogue synth and modular effects, creating a lush, intoxicating sound that looks back to the 1970s and 1980s without a hint of the usual sleek irony or hip retro-revivalism, whilst simultaneously looking forward to a time when boundaries between programmed and played, and synthetic and organic, have become obsolete. The family tree of “Drowned in Light” begins with Harmonia, Ash Ra Temple and Ennio Morricone in the 1970s, Durutti Column and Cocteau Twins in the 1980s, through to Seefeel and Slowdive in the 1990s. Manual continues this lineage and pushes into new territories. A prime example is “Biarritz”, where analog synth sequences that could belong in a Tangerine Dream excursion blend with elements of modern electronica, exotica and echoes of 80s’ synth pop. In a similar fashion “Phainomenon” rolls along like a mid-70s Ash Ra Temple jam until halfway, where the mood breaks and the track enters classic dream pop territory, leading to a dizzying climax. “Blood Run” and “Afterimages”, meanwhile, arguably possess some of Munk’s finest guitar playing, whilst “Pulsations” is, without doubt, the most cosmic, distorted and swirling psychedelic moment in the Manual catalogue. In some ways “Drowned in Light” reaches back to the early Manual days of “Ascend”, a result of Munk’s rediscovered love of working with analogue gear. It is a diverse set, though, bound together by a warm, crystalline production and Munk’s signature guitar playing. Composition and craftsmanship on this level is such a rarity in an overcrowded sea of electronic music. This is the perfect album to accompany any journey into spring…
Tracklist LP: Side A 1/ Warm Circuits 2/ Afterimages 3/ Biarritz 4/ Sabishisa 5/ Blood Run Side B 6/ Phainomenon 7/ Drowned in Light 8/ Empty Inside 9/ Pulsations Tracklist CD 1/ Warm Circuits 2/ Afterimages 3/ Biarritz 4/ Phainomenon 5/ Drowned in Light 6/ Empty Inside 7/ Pulsations 8/ Morning Glass 1982 9/ Slow 10/ Blood Run 11/ Sabishisa 12/ Issa
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