| title: |
the silence was warm vol.2 |
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label: |
symbolic interaction |
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| format: |
cd |
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| release date: |
05.11.08 |
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cat. no.: |
sic010 |
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tracks: |
november |
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| reviews: | ||
"features tracks from offthesky,
cheju, moskitoo, lowriders deluxe, aus, geskia!, ontayso, absent without
leave, david newlyn, yellow6, quiroga... need i say more? thought not.
beautiful double cd album." - smallfish,
10.08 |
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"the silence was warm volume 2
cd is here!! volume one shat out of the towers as you all loved it's
chilled out mix of electronica and neo classical tracks. volume 2 continues
the same formula but this time it's a 2 disc set!! this one features
bitcrush, ontayso, absent withut leave, yellow6, d_rradio, aus, cheju,
david newlyn, quiroga, lowriders deluxe and tons more. mix electronica,
neo classical gear and post rock shenanigans into one mixing pot and
serve as a 2 disc set on a bed of rocket. the symbolic interaction label
is a bit useful as they've done a handful of great releases now so do
keep an eye on the labels output. this continues the trend of goodness.
oh yes... i like this lots and lots. the cover has a blurry photo of
a tree taken by maps & diagrams guru tim martin which is very hood/
make mine music like. a thoroughly pleasant way to spend a couple of
hours... " - norman
records, 11.08 |
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"nothing but contributors' names
and track titles accompany symbolic interaction's latest compilation,
but the double-disc's title, the silence was warm vol. 2, perhaps functions
as a sufficient indication of the release's character with nearly all
of the twenty pieces being of the gentler persuasion, and delectably
so. certainly hiroshima-born kashiwa daisuke's elegant opener “coto,”
five gorgeous minutes of solo piano playing, establishes not only a
beautiful mood but sets the bar high for the tracks that come after.
the range of styles is broad, and it's a global affair, too, with many
artists from japan, naturally, contributing but figures from the us
(kentucky) and the uk (leicestershire), belgium, napoli, greece, and
berlin appearing too. no doubt purely by coincidence, the strongest
tracks place either piano or guitar at their centers. an early highlight
is bitcrush's (n5md head mike cadoo) “a place of exits,”
a dreamy, guitar-centered blend of post-rock and shoegaze; a plangent
electric guitar melody courses repeats over the song's midtempo lilt,
with strings adding drama and intensity during the song's second half.
also memorable is yellow6's (jon attwood) “kulturhuset”
which exudes desolate, lonely character in its ever-so-delicate electric
guitar playing and is powerful in an understated way. the almost nine-minute
running time gives attwood sufficient time to increase subtly the piece's
intensity, so much so that its distorted guitar component emerges almost
subliminally. euphoria's wistful waltz, “december” is likewise
lovely in its deployment of lyrical electric guitar playing. absent
without leave (athens, greece-based george mastrokostas) also contributes
a pretty, stately ballad in a hybrid ambient and post-rock style with
electric guitars the dominant voice (“following a trembling star”).
picking up where daisuke leaves off, david newlyn, recording artist
as well as manager of october man recordings, contributes a sterling
piano piece of his own (“always drawing pictures,” augmented
by electronic atmosphere and field elements) which complements the album's
theme perfectly. piano is also the central voice in phon°noir's
(matthias grübel) lilting “untitled miniature #2” but
it's by no means the only one, with percussive clatter, guitars, and
electronics also dotting the tune's path. in its marriage of pretty
piano melodies and electronic sweetener (synthesizers, beats), cheju's
(wil bolton, co-owner of boltfish recordings) “november”
offers a refined example of his electronic-acoustic sound. a collagistic
potpourri of voices, electronic flourishes, and head-nodding swing,
quiroga (walter del vecchio)'s “capolinea” proves to be
a welcome addition to the oft-beatless collection. elsewhere, ontayso
(u-cover's esther santoyo and koen lybaert) adds its signature ambient
dub-techno fingerprint to the collection with the restlessly churning
“ghostrun,” while offthesky (jason corder) sprinkles found
sounds, field elements, and natural instrument sounds (bass, guitar,
flute, percussion) over a crawling blues rhythm in the ultra-atmospheric
“geist heist of tomb room 18.” the sweeping, rhythmically
forceful electronica of lowriders deluxe's (electronic producers mark
streatfield, simon thomas, clive burns, and joseph auer) “dreams
of the offworld colonies” proves memorable, as does moskitoo's
(sanae yamasaki) “melting universe,” a peaceful, sound-sculpted
aviary of tinkling keyboards, whirring electronics, and whispered vocals.
tracks by naono and melorman (laid-back melodic electronica in “seems
like the place”), d_rradio (“nothing like home,” a
placid pool formed from gentle streams of flutes and electronic waves),
and pawn (hideki umezawa) (chattering electronic noises flutter over
glistening piano and synthesizer melodies in “bird cage”)
also appear, with the collection's only questionable moments coming
from yaporigami, whose “mist” oddly juxtaposes gleaming
music box melodies with the rat-tat-tat of skittering beats, and cheekbone,
whose closing mix of widescreen ambient and funky beat elements “remembrance”
exemplifies little of the subtlety and nuance cultivated so methodically
in the preceding tracks. neverthless, the weak moments are few on this
consistently satisfying and eclectic compilation from the japan-based
symbolic interaction imprint." - textura,
12.08 |
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