Showing posts with label ambient. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ambient. Show all posts


Album Review: James Holden - The Inheritors


A work of strange and subtle ambition, James Holden's The Inheritors is a cosmically-minded, world beat-inflected, Space Age fever. Like an artifact from an alien civilization that has fallen through our atmosphere into the ears of unsuspecting listeners, the British electronica producer's ambient album merges the extraterrestrial with the earthly. Each tick, squeal, laser zap, organ tone, and recorded chant is crafted into a wider, sonically absorbing vision.

The frenetic drum-machine breakdown of "Renata" stands as an early album apex, bringing bursts of raging chaos that allow the ominous swell the record maintains to reach frightening, but sublime, heights. Yet even during steadier, duller, repetitive moments, as in "Inter-City," where clicking percussion marches alongside scattered horns, there is a sense of Holden as a postmodern composer with a measured approach to pacing and dynamics. The slow build of "Seven Stars" may require patience, but such patience is greatly rewarded by Holden's mindful sound-tinkering.

Although The Inheritors is ostensibly an album that warrants private listens only (unless your choice of club also happens to be an art gallery), the work's lack of public appeal is not of detriment to its inherent value. Intimate, carefully constructed, and containing fully immersive sci-fi soundscapes, The Inheritors is a rich addition to humanity's musical inheritance.

Grade: B+






Blackmill: Melodic dubstep to transcend reality



Listening to Blackmill sparks visions of vast scenic landscapes and to me are the sounds of falling in love and heartbreak. It is melodic dubstep where you can thrive in solace or relish in ecstasy. Not the most well-known producer, his tracks deserve even more recognition then they already get. The ambient nature of his music makes it perfect for almost any minute moment in your day-to-day.

A quotation from the Scottish producer himself, Robert Card explains “Blackmill is the name of the house where my Grandad and Grandma use to live. I'm hoping to get enough support and the funding to be able to buy this house back. Since they passed away we had to sell the house. It's the place where I grew up and loved more than anything so I'm making this music to help get a part of my childhood back that should of never been missing.”

It is not the heavy, grating and sometimes exhausting dubstep that is seeping into the pores of the mainstream. The overall feel is euphoric and energizing. Some of his tracks, for example “Evil Beauty”, has magical elements that may bring about a feeling of longing for something lost. The journey of emotions that his music can take you on will bring smiles or maybe tears. It may have you closing your eyes and nodding along. It’s emotional. While at the same time uplifting your consciousness, it brings you face to face with yourself, and the core of your heart. It may make you content with the world around you, but it may at the same time have you day dreaming about another beautiful world. It makes me want to fall in love again.











Alicia Greco