Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Jasper TX. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Jasper TX. Afficher tous les articles

samedi 10 avril 2010

Jasper TX - A Voice From Dead Radio (Under The Spire, 2010)




1-1 Jasper TX - Harrisburg Pt. 1 4:15
1-2 Jasper TX - Harrisburg Pt. 2 15:17
1-3 Jasper TX - D 10:03
1-4 Jasper TX - A 9:56
1-5 Jasper TX - A Beacon To Lead Us There 3:12
1-6 Jasper TX - The Glow Of Minerals 2:58
1-7 Jasper TX - Through Dusk... And Falling Leaves 7:17
1-8 Jasper TX - Our Way Through The Field 3:55
1-9 Jasper TX - A Quiet Gloom 3:45
2-1 Jasper TX - Harrisburg Pt. 1 7:01
Remix - Pillowdiver
2-2 Zelienople - Harrisburg Pt. 2 16:52
2-3 Jasper TX - D 6:36
Remix - Jefre Cantu-Ledesma
2-4 Jasper TX - A 8:42
Remix - Xela
2-5 Jasper TX - A Beacon To Lead Us There 3:30
Remix - Peter Broderick
2-6 Jasper TX - The Glow Of Minerals 3:59
Remix - Simon Scott
2-7 Jasper TX - Through Dusk... And Falling Leaves 7:52
Remix - Steinbrüchel*
2-8 Jasper TX - Our Way Through The Field 4:06
Remix - Aaron Martin
2-9 Jasper TX - A Quiet Gloom 3:12
Remix - Alex Cobb
2-10 Jasper TX - A Voice From Dead Radio 15:27
Other [Assembled By] - Seaworthy

Compilation & Remixes double CDs....

according to label site already sold out! visit Jasper TX & Under The Spire

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mercredi 31 décembre 2008

Jasper TX - Closet Ghosts (Fenêtre Records, 2008)


1 I’m Asleep On The Floor While Sunbeams Grace My Tired Head
2 Gone, Away…
3 Warmth
4 And When We Die, God Makes Angels Of Us All
5 Golden
6 To Felixstowe

Dernière production en date de Dag Rosenqvist, toujours d'excellents drones où s'immerger....

A six-track EP release on new label Fenetre Records, Closet Ghosts follows on from Dag Rosenqvist's Black Sleep album, released six months or so back via Miasmah. These compositions call upon a similar blend of sensitive acoustics and immersive electronics, although at times Rosenqvist seems to unplug from his computer altogether and opt for bare, spartan purely instrumental interludes like 'Golden', which leaves a lonely piano figure to its own devices, stretching out loose chords and contemplative exchanges over the course of a frozen minute. 'Gone Away...' brings to mind the more post-rock oriented aspects of Rosenqvist's work, isolating acoustic guitar passages so clean they might be equally at home in a De La Mancha record as in a Jasper TX outing. Eventually the music weaves itself into droning spirals of distortion and delay, fizzing below the surface and petering out almost as quickly as they built up, leaving a lonely acoustic guitar to wend its way to the ending. In terms of the more drone-like pieces on the disc, 'I'm Asleep On The Floor While Sunbeams Grace My Tired Head' is indicative of the powerful, unsentimental driving force behind this music: these aren't fluffy, lightweight drones but coarse, clanking outpourings of sound. You have to look beneath the surface to find any glimmers of emotional resonance, but there's always a real depth lurking behind that stark, abrasive facade. 'Warmth' stays true to its title and opens up, revealing stretches of infinite tone and glacial tunefulness, but the two finest pieces here are 'And When We Die, God Makes Angels Of Us All' and the stunning closing track 'To Felixstowe'. Both represent a finely harmonised union of faded electronic sustains and carefully plotted out, organic melodies, with the former sounding like a Jewelled Antler take on Mogwai while the latter is like a slowed-down Loren Connors blues solo. Closet Ghosts is a great way to spend twenty minutes of your life. Highly recommended.
Boomkat

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Jasper TX - This Quiet Season (Slaapwel Records, 2008)


1 Things Could Stay (11:05)
2 Moments (2:44)
3 A String Of Broken Lights (5:21)
4 Home (4:49)
5 Twilight (8:27)
6 Embers (7:14)

Drones dont la texture est renforcée par une ligne de guitare simple... Evolution lente mais résolue.... Mélancolie et calme....

Not dissimilar to his previous releases This Quiet Season is full of minimal melancholic ambient music. Dag Rosenqvist builds up soft drones with guitar sounds running through effects. In a familiar approach, that is not so much different as that from his partner in crime Rutger Zuydervelt (machinefabriek), he is not so much a computer musician as someone playing around with analogue instruments and effect pedals. Sounds from guitars are stretched and looped and as such an organ like drone files the room. Slowly the sound evolves and more tones are added. By this soft melodies appear. Though, Jasper TX is about more than this. In Moments for example there are no drones at all but it’s a soft piano piece with field recordings in that background. It’s a welcome break with the familiar sound that so much of these artists have.

As a whole This Quiet Season makes me think back to the times when I was a young boy playing out in my parent’s garden in the snow or going ice-skating in the nearby park. Not because it’s such a playful album, because it’s not. It is dense melancholic music. Instead, it sounds so winterlike, which apparently is becoming more and more some Scandinavian thing.
Musically seen This Quiet Season doesn’t give us anything we didn’t know yet, but as not everything has to be new and refreshing, it actually is a really nice album and my favourite so far by this young musician from Sweden. I do hope in the future he will develop more his style and keeps surprising us with different approaches and takes a step into a new direction.

Recommended late in the evening while reading a good book or just dreaming away on the music.

EARLabs

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Jasper TX - Pilgrims (self release, 2007)


1 A Beacon To Lead Us There (3:15)
2 The Glow Of Minerals (1:57)
3 Through Dusk... And Falling Leaves (7:19)
4 Our Way Through The Field (3:58)
5 A Quiet Gloom (3:42)

Côté sombre des drones de Jasper TX, long cheminement comme le titre l'indique...

It does feel very nice indeed getting in these special releases, and it feels even nicer when they're as lovely as this latest from Swedish droney feller Jasper TX (known to his friends as Dag Rosenqvist). 'Pilgrims' is the latest chapter in the producer's career, and as each release sidles out of almost nowhere the bar seems to be set that little bit higher. This time Rosenqvist has opted to explore his darker side, and as the track titles calmly dictate, we are on a quiet road to doom. Of course this isn't the sort of misanthropic, blackened offering you'd expect to hear from any of the Southern Lord folks, but there is a sense that Rosenqvist is more than aware of the acoustic griminess of a certain Svarte Greiner as he begins his shadowy journey with 'A Beacon to Lead us There'. Through guitar crackle and ear-pummelling drone we hear what sounds like very distant screaming voices and small animals scratching at the floor around us as the earth's surface readies itself for an earthquake. There is the sense throughout that something is ready to happen, something dangerous but at the same time exciting, a change, and when the track builds into static and splutters into the second piece 'The Glow of Minerals' we realise that the change has happened and lasted merely seconds. This track is where the doom escapes whole heartedly and is a seismic bass-heavy slice of terror, through this however is a glimmer of hope, a feeling that this producer is merely showing his hope in a different way than we might usually expect. This sentiment is confirmed when mid way through the EP the gloom turns to gorgeous, melancholic ambience without feeling jarring or unwelcome. Rather it feels like we always knew this was going to happen, it was always part of the story but it hadn't quite happened yet. The twenty-minute disc ends with the lo-fidelity hum of 'A Quiet Gloom', and never has a track been so aptly titled as this - it might be Rosenqvist's vision of acoustic meltdown, but it is a quiet, sensitive vision and one which can be absorbed by anyone. Absolutely beautiful and without a shadow of a doubt the finest Jasper TX offering to date....
Boomkat

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Jasper TX - I'll Be Long Gone Before My Light Reaches You (Lampse, 2005)


1 Blown Out To Sea, I'm Never Coming Back (9:53)
2 Braille (5:03)
3 Letting Go (The World Is Coming To An End) (10:22)
4 Help Them Die (4:14)
5 Rounds (3:52)
6 My Heart Is Broken, I've Lost My Way (9:28)
7 All Those Broken Birds Singing Winter Into Spring (12:14)

Lampse, label suédois de musiques novatrices et audacieuses, présente cette année un panel d’artistes dont l’effet ressemble à celui d’une re-découverte totale du monde des sons. Jasper TX, alias Dag Rosenqvist, et son premier album, I’ll be gone before my light reaches you, en appelle à écouter sa musique comme on écoute les bruits de l’intérieur de son corps dans une chambre sourde.

Plongé d’emblée dans une nappe de souffle chuintant, on perçoit le rapport aux instruments comme très lointain. Il s’agit en effet de faire comme si chaque timbre était entendu pour la première fois, en enveloppant les évolutions mélodiques dans une respiration quasiment indissociable du corps qui perçoit la musique. Le thème répétitif à la guitare, très serein, creuse à chaque fois la régularité d’une forme de vitalité qui a pour première particularité de s’étendre sans discontinuer dans le temps, et pourtant de varier en même temps à l’infini. Les bruits de fond du micro, augmentés de manière à faire le cadre de toute la progression musicale, se mèlent à tel point avec le corps qui perçoit, qu’on finit par avoir l’impression que c’est le bruit de la salive qu’on avale, dans l’étonnement d’une musique qui rend mon corps sonore. Les phases d’intro sont remplies de ces bruits que d’habitude on considère comme polluant le silence. Les distorsions sont extrêmes, agressives, les sons sont à l’image de la diversité des affections possibles du corps, tant dans l’agréable que dans le difficilement supportable. Ainsi, Jasper TX nous fait osciller entre le plaisir et la douleur, en supportant ces variations de plans de guitare spatialisés, qui font comme de grandes inspirations devant l’horizon infini de la pure sensation d’être en vie.

D’une certaine manière, les bruits qui constituent le fond sonore creusent dans le corps un tunnel, qui permet à la mélodie de s’incorporer véritablement au corps. Ainsi cette musique s’impose comme une expression de l’intérieur, elle s’immisce en nous de manière incoercible, à tel point que quand elle s’arrête… On éprouve de la douleur, comme si le tunnel se vidait tout d’un coup de quelque chose d’étranger, qui faisait violence à l’intériorité, et qui a réussi à se fondre avec elle suffisamment vite pour qu’on en ressente un manque, lorsqu’elle cesse.

Jasper TX, tombé dans la marmite des sons quand il était petit, d’abord avec une basse, ensuite avec un quatre-pistes, et finalement un diplôme d’ingénieur-son, présente ici un monde très personnel, mélancolique, qui n’en finit pas de prendre des formes diverses au fur et à mesure des écoutes et des mélanges de cette lo-fi minimaliste avec le corps de l’auditeur.
DMute

The most recent full length release from the avant-garde experimental Lampse label is Norwegian Dag Rosenqvist's grim, lonely mood piece I'll Be Long Gone Before My Light Reaches You. There are obvious parallels to be drawn with the work of outfits such as Sigur Ros (particularly in the opening and closing pieces) both in style and in the heavily extended nature of the seven tracks included here, but Jasper TX chooses an altogether more esoteric direction with his sonic palette.

Perhaps the finest (and, tellingly, the most accessible) moment on the album is the deceptively simple "Braille," which begins with searing distortion shrouding a lilting, piano lullaby and acoustic guitar arpeggios that gradually decreases in intensity until only the acoustic elements remain. "Letting Go (The world is coming to an end)" begins with a tinkling music box melody and the imagining of a guitar played by someone in the corner of a small, chilly room as people pace back and forth across creaky floorboards. This movement terminates four minutes into the ten minute piece, and the remainder of the track consists of nothing more than a drifting, misty drone: yes, that's right, over six minutes of it. This extended section is clearly designed to sedate the listener in preparation for the somber nature of the pieces that follow, and at least in this sense it is very successful.

The peculiar, desolate and isolated seaside shanty-town atmosphere the album seems determined to evoke is heightened by "Help them die" and "Rounds," the former featuring mournful accordion melodies underneath more acoustic guitar and the distorted sounds of heavy, gusting winds, the latter another drone piece that conjures images of dark, wind-swept and rain-soaked wooden buildings, sickly yellow light seeping from filthy windows into the half-light of the late evening. The imagery is followed through in the next piece, and would add up to a seamless and immersive experience if it weren't for one thing: mid-way through the nine and half minute "my heart is broken, I’ve lost my way," Rosenqvist irrevocably ruins the entire experience with several minutes of horrendous, scratchy and distorted noise that tears the listeners nerves to shreds. This section is excruciating: impossible to listen to it destroys the credibility of the album and actively discourages further listening of the work as a whole.

An album that is experienced more than enjoyed, I'll Be Long Gone Before My Light Reaches You is perhaps rather too personal a body of work, fatally damaging its accessibility. Desolate, stark, introspective and manipulative, this fascinating album will reward on those occasions in which you feel the need to sit and brood; it's just a shame that many listeners will most likely be woken from their reverie by the aforementioned minutes of aural torture and forced to scrabble for the remote control.
Igloo Magazine

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dimanche 28 décembre 2008

Jasper TX - Harrisburg (self release, 2007)


1 Pt I (04:15)
2 Pt II (15:08)

jolis drones de guitare mélancoliques....

This little gem of a release sidled out on limited 3" cdr a couple of months ago and of course sold out in an afternoon, I guess when you press up copies in increments of a handful you can't expect to please everyone, but we're very happy to be able to offer 'Harrisburg' now as an UN-limited digital release for you, the consumer. Dag Rosenqvist has been a busy man of late and with cdr EPs popping up all over the place and a fresh new album (the gorgeous 'A Darkness') it seems the fans are the winners. This twenty minute EP is split into two 'parts' and explores Rosenqvists fascination with melancholic guitar drone, now this might not sound particularly interesting given the sheer amount of people doing this at the moment but the more discerning among you will already be aware of the man's command of the humble drone. Hidden in tides of tape noise, hiss and environmental recordings distant cascades of harmony float through your consciousness like ghosts through a moonlit forest, teasing you with their incredible half-seen beauty. I honestly don't know how he does it, but Rosenqvist composes music using just a guitar that manages to be as beautiful and as simultaneously moving as Arvo Part and yet we never get coaxed into sugared sentimentalism. There are still shards of the post-rock genre in there somewhere, but what's great about this EP is that Rosenqvist has clearly moved on from this, defining his own sound rather than re-treading the messy footsteps of others. Neither rock, experimental nor electronic but a meeting of so many fractured subgenres, 'Harrisburg' is the perfect example of why we're all frothing at the mouths about Jasper TX right now...

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dimanche 21 décembre 2008

Jasper TX - D + A (self release, 2007)


1 D (10:08)
2 A (9:58)

Drones de guitare, accompagnés au glockenspiel, nous transportant vers des paysages de rêve...

We all like a limited edition, and leave it to Sweden’s Dag Rosenqvist (better known to Boomkat readers as Jasper TX) to make such a mouth watering micro-run as this. It probably won’t surprise you that Rosenqvist is best buds with none other than his label mate Machinefabriek, another feller known for his crucial limited editions, so that would probably be a good frame of reference. The EP is made up of two ten minute tracks, both of which plumb the murky depths of Scandinavian guitar drone. I say Scandinavian because unlike Dutchman Machinefabriek, Rosenqvist has a very different outlook on the genre indeed. In place of grimy darkness and creaky floorboards we are treated to floating dreamscapes and glacial glockenspiels – this is the shoegazing end of droning ambience and is all the better for it. We witnessed Rosenqvist’s sense of delicate beauty on the wonderfully realised ‘I’ll Be Long Gone…’ album a couple of years back, but here he has refined his sound carving down the rough edges to produce something truly wonderful. Those of you who enjoy Rameses III, Stars of the Lid or Tim Hecker will no doubt fall head-over-heels for this incredible little EP...
Boomkat

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vendredi 28 novembre 2008

Dag Rosenqvist & Rutger Zuydervelt - Vintermusik (self release, 2006)


Dag Rosenqvist et Rutger Zuydervelt, deux noms qui peuvent intriguer. Il s’agit là des vrais noms d’artistes plus connus respectivement sous les noms de projets Jasper TX et MachineFabriek, tout deux ayant sortis des albums sur Lampse et tout deux ayant déjà fait l’objet d’articles sur ces pages. Pas de label derrière cet album, il s’agit juste d’un CD-R de plus dans l’immense discographie de MachineFabriek, limité à 200 exemplaires.

Présenté comme la bande son de l’hiver passé avec six pièces composées autour de cette thématique, ce sera pour nous l’occasion de rafraîchir notre été (si le besoin se faisait sentir). Histoire de se mettre dans le bain, l’album débute avec une pièce de 13 minutes de pure ambient. Mais dans le genre, on fait guère mieux !! Notes répétitives hypnotiques, lente montée du volume, sonorités qui se décomposent et fusionnent tout en gardant leur identité propre, impression de fourmillement, mouvements denses, impression d’être immergé dans le son. Des field recordings doivent être de la partie, apportant micro-bruitages, grésillements, frétillements. On n’est pas très loin du meilleur de Biosphere, si ce n’est mieux.
Difficile d’attribuer telle composante à tel ou tel artiste, Rosenqvist et Zuydervelt oeuvrant à peu près dans le même registre, à savoir les guitares traitées au profit de musiques ambient. Justement, les guitares on les trouve très présentes, mais noyées, sur Gräs Som Bryts Och Går Av : accords réguliers, répétitifs, grosse réverb, cela fonctionne mais reste anodin. On préférera ce son proche de la harpe, les chuintements rythmiques, l’abondance de bruitages, et la profondeur des basses de Blåsa Rök ou la violence des textures granuleuses et la gravité des drones de Ljus I November même si le long passage au piano et voix d’enfants lui fait perdre de sa force. Comme il a commencé, l’album se termine avec une pièce de près de 13mn d’ambient polaire à base de drones de guitare, quelque peu réchauffés par des choeurs variés flirtant avec les chants traditionnels scandinaves.

Le tout prend place dans un joli packaging, carton plié en deux rangé dans une pochette plastique. Bel objet, sublime musique.

Fabrice Allard
Etherreal, le 25/07/2007

To close the week I’m bringing in a couple of guys from a territory that knows a lot about winter. Dag Rosenqvist and Rutger Zuydervelt are both veterans of the worldwide ambient scene, Rosenqvist being the guy behind Jasper TX and Zuydervelt of Machinefabriek. Together, they’ve created an album whose glacial tones are reflected in its stark, self-explanatory name: Vintermusik. The most impressive thing about this collaboration, to me, is the sonic depth it possesses. The duo’s songs have a habit of building achingly slowly until they reach a rumbling stasis, forever on the edge of overflowing the cups of your headphones. Haphazard guitar strumming drifts up out of the depths of the white noise, its faint signal growing stronger at an infinitesimal rate. This is, essentially, the sound of watching ice form.

Vintermusik is a limited release of only 200 copies, so if you like the sample below, you’d better get on it with the quickness. Previously you could get your CD lovingly hand-mailed by Mr. Rosenqvist, but unfortunately those sold out.

Girlpants

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samedi 15 novembre 2008

Jasper TX - Black Sleep (Miasmah, 2008)


Black Sleep Part I (9:13)
Black Sleep Part II (3:58)
Black Sleep Part III (5:32)
Black Sleep Part IV (4:52)
Black Sleep Part V (8:56)
Black Sleep Part VI (19:10)

Ultra fécond, le suédois Dag Rosenqvist a fréquenté a peu près autant de labels qu'il a accouché d'albums et de maxis (Lampse, Kning disk, Lidar, Pumpkin seeds in the sand, Slaapwel). C'est désormais avec une certaine logique qu'on le retrouve chez l'obscur Miasmah, label développant une esthétique qui sied à merveille aux thèmes développés sur ce bien nommé Black sleep.
S'attachant à tisser des ambiances reflétant ces états de demi-sommeil où la conscience s'égare et se dissout, Jasper TX joue beaucoup sur les va-et-vient incessants de drones nocturnes, de souffles légers et nappes saturées, le tout ponctué de quelques pulsations sourdes et lointaines.
Là ou bien d'autres se seraient terrés dans un obscurantisme cérébral tourné vers le " tout drone ", Jasper TX modère son propos en explorant les différentes phases du sommeil. De ce fait, le climat s'allège à intervalles réguliers, les nappes se font mélodiques, une guitare en apesanteur égrène paisiblement quelques notes pensives, soulignées d'un trait d'orgue et quelques micro-parasites, nous ramenant alors aux plus belles heures de Labradford. Comme tout sommeil qui se respecte, celui-ci connaît ses moments d'agitation, se concrétisant trois minutes durant par un magma de cordes dissonantes et de carillons déréglés qui vient ouvrir le longuet sixième et dernier chapitre.
Une petite heure d'ambiant vespérale et somnolente, ponctuée de quelques moments de grâce.

Sébastien Radiguet
, Ondefixe

NCREDIBLE ALBUM COMBINING THE EMOTIVE INSTRUMENTAL WORK OF THE COCTEAU TWINS WITH A DARK LINE IN DENSE REDUCTION REMINISCENT OF DEATHPROD WITH A DEEP, HARROWING CINEMATIC QUALITY* Returning to his solo work after assisting in the triumphant post-rock of De La Mancha's Atlas, multitalented Swede Dag Rosenqvist arrives at the Miasmah imprint with a sound that's been greatly honed and refined since it last graced our ears. 'Black Sleep' lives up to the dark, dreamscape suggestions of its title, sounding more concerned with beautifully crafted drones than previous entries into the Jasper TX discography, introducing itself with the resonant glare of soft feedback on 'Pt.I', a piece led by a kind of rhythmic pulse, beating quietly and impatiently in the background, only to eventually dissipate into a wash of noise frequencies and unassuming acoustic guitar arpeggiations. Next, 'Pt.II' explores Oren Ambarchi-like low frequency tones and engine room rumble, only for 'Pt.III' to switch things around, approximating the Twin Peaks theme via a guitar and organ arrangement, the end result of which provides one of the album's most sweetly melodic, yet implicitly unnerving moments. You can hear Rosenqvist's sound design expertise blossoming on the tactile electroacoustic textures of 'Pt. IV', a composition that introduces itself with two minutes of quiet, evocatively rendered creaking and muddied crackling sounds before opening up into a sea of sustain and drifting, distant harmonic signals. Finally, Black Sleep reaches its creative peak during the nineteen-minute climax of 'Pt.VI', which sees some of the most ambitious and fully realised music of Jasper TX's career to date, marrying processed instrumental passages (most notably some spiralling, dulcimer-like phrases towards the beginning) with carefully pieced together field recordings and the kind of intangible, completely immersive drones that only the very finest purveyors of the art can summon up. Absolutely first class - and another amazing release from the Miasmah label.

Boomkat

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samedi 25 octobre 2008

Jasper TX - In a Cool Monsoon (Pumpkin Seeds in the Sand, 2007)



1
Still A Tiny Light? (1:24)
2
Bending Spoons (6:44)
3
Summer (6:00)
4
I Will Be Birds When I Die (8:58)
5
Waking Up (11:55)
6
And Still A Tiny Light (7:26)
7
Falling From The Sky Like A Flock Of Burning Birds (11:39)

A serious contender for his best album so far, Jasper TX's In A Cool Monsoon is possibly his most varied and accessible work to date, appropriating a more pop-oriented sound than on prior outings. There's a heightened attention to song structure on this album, with Dag Rosenqvist's multi-instrumental sound tapestries more clearly defined, penetrating the electronic mist. The Fennesz /Tim Hecker comparisons are still there to be made, and 'Still A Tiny Light?' certainly invites that, but pieces like the beautiful 'Bending Spoons' demonstrate that Rosenqvist has outgrown merely being a sum of his influences. Scrappy drums back up reverberating melodica lines while guitars plot out an atmospheric tension, it's not quite post-rock, but nor is it discernibly electronica. The organic drones and haunting chord sequences of 'Summer' are similarly charged with a sense of mod and location, functioning as an acoustic counterpart to the elegiac digital resonance of 'I Will Be Birds When I Die', which takes its shape from swathes of shimmering synthesizer and muddy field recordings. At around twelve minutes 'Waking Up' is the longest piece here, and perhaps as a result of this, one of the weaker contributions. No major damage is done, but the key to much of the album's success is in its focus and clarity, but in this instance you get the sense that Rosenqvist is placing too great an emphasis on the repetition of a floating tremolo guitar motif which isn't necessarily enough of a foundation for such a lengthy piece. Far, far more successful is the gorgeous 'And Still A Tiny Light', a delightful tangle of noise, glacial melodies and understated glockenspiel melodies - it's the kind of thing you'd expect to hear as an instrumental interlude on a Sigur Ros album. As a follow-up, and grand finale, 'Falling From The Sky Like A Flock Of Burning Birds' makes for a wonderful, extended coda. After a deep grey, nebulous beginning, shards of sonorous sparkle effervesce from the mix in the form of tiny glockenspiel gestures, only for the piece to suddenly accumulate a more direct sense of momentum and purpose by a final few moments of escalating guitar phrases. Excellent.

Boomkat

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mercredi 15 octobre 2008

Jasper TX - A Darkness (Lidar, 2007)




Coming only moments after the lovely (and now long gone) EP 'D+A', this is the second full-length album from Sweden's Dag Rosenqvist aka Jasper TX. Following-up the hugely acclaimed 'I'll Be Long Gone When my Light Reaches You' was never going to be easy, but somehow Dag has rustled together the perfect sequel, continuing themes he only began to explore, throwing new ideas into the mix and showing serious development as an artist. I think the secret to Dag's sound is his honesty - everything you hear is 'as it is', he avoids overdone computer effects in favour of crumbling tape recordings and the buzzing of badly wired circuit boards and everything is recorded on his trusty 8-track machine. It's this 'as it is' sentiment that separates for me his work and the work of so many attempting a similar sound - we've no shortage of lonely guitarists making music for barely-seen horizons and gauzy sunsets, but where Dag differs is that the music sounds somehow as old as time. His recording style, as dirty and as 'lo-fi' as it might be, sounds as if the tracks have been dubbed to a wax plate and buried under the sea for an eternity before being discovered by visiting explorers. It's as if you're listening to transmissions from times past or listening to the audio equivalent of damaged black and white photos falling out of a browned photo-book. The record begins with 'Better Days to Come', a song as hopeful as the title, one which begins with the dust and flicker of ancient tape recordings before building into something altogether more life-affirming with organ, guitar and glockenspiel. Elsewhere Dag follows this theme of distance and memory with the echoing field recordings in 'Destroy Detroit' and the endangered clattering dronescape of 'Nightbirds' (probably the albums most haunting moment, listen for the phonecall moment.), but the record truly comes into it's own with it's final piece, the 20 minute 'Some Things Broken, Some Things Lost'. With this track Dag does what many artists try a lifetime to achieve, he comes up with a piece of music that totally defines him as an artist - this is Jasper TX in one, simple moment. With guitar, touching field recordings and glorious, triumphant drones Dag creates a segment of pure musical perfection - something like Windy and Carl, Stars of the Lid, Mogwai, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Machinefabriek and Cliff Martinez all rolled into one and in that it manages to be a totally singular experience. Here is an artist unafraid to express himself, unafraid to take risks and able to rise to the challenges of making music in a post millennial slump - it's music that makes us glad we're here. Absolutely stunning stuff, and totally unmissable!

Bomkat Review


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