In surprising and enigmatic fusions of synth and vocoder, ‘Aether’ marks the first union of Efterklang’s Casper Clausen & pivotal Lisbon artist André Gonçalves, recalling everything from Popol Vuh to Jóhann Jóhansson and earliest Goodiepal
The seven-part session came together in just two nights during the weeks prior to Portugal entering lockdown in 2020. Operating in an alien tonal language of sheering, bittersweet synths that never touch the ground, and more literally thru Clausen’s plangent vocoder, the airborne sounds are elusive as a dream, following melodic lines of thought that may never quite resolve themselves yet lead the mind off into sublime spaces and create lushest light shows on the back of eyelids. As the label prompt, there’s a sense of Twin Peaksy oddness to proceedings, as well as the lingering dreamlike feel of Popol Vuh’s Herzog scores, essentially cultivating a sort of romance and seductive melancholy that really gets up the pharynx and under the skin with gently intoxicating subtlety that rewards repeats plays.
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In surprising and enigmatic fusions of synth and vocoder, ‘Aether’ marks the first union of Efterklang’s Casper Clausen & pivotal Lisbon artist André Gonçalves, recalling everything from Popol Vuh to Jóhann Jóhansson and earliest Goodiepal
The seven-part session came together in just two nights during the weeks prior to Portugal entering lockdown in 2020. Operating in an alien tonal language of sheering, bittersweet synths that never touch the ground, and more literally thru Clausen’s plangent vocoder, the airborne sounds are elusive as a dream, following melodic lines of thought that may never quite resolve themselves yet lead the mind off into sublime spaces and create lushest light shows on the back of eyelids. As the label prompt, there’s a sense of Twin Peaksy oddness to proceedings, as well as the lingering dreamlike feel of Popol Vuh’s Herzog scores, essentially cultivating a sort of romance and seductive melancholy that really gets up the pharynx and under the skin with gently intoxicating subtlety that rewards repeats plays.
In surprising and enigmatic fusions of synth and vocoder, ‘Aether’ marks the first union of Efterklang’s Casper Clausen & pivotal Lisbon artist André Gonçalves, recalling everything from Popol Vuh to Jóhann Jóhansson and earliest Goodiepal
The seven-part session came together in just two nights during the weeks prior to Portugal entering lockdown in 2020. Operating in an alien tonal language of sheering, bittersweet synths that never touch the ground, and more literally thru Clausen’s plangent vocoder, the airborne sounds are elusive as a dream, following melodic lines of thought that may never quite resolve themselves yet lead the mind off into sublime spaces and create lushest light shows on the back of eyelids. As the label prompt, there’s a sense of Twin Peaksy oddness to proceedings, as well as the lingering dreamlike feel of Popol Vuh’s Herzog scores, essentially cultivating a sort of romance and seductive melancholy that really gets up the pharynx and under the skin with gently intoxicating subtlety that rewards repeats plays.
In surprising and enigmatic fusions of synth and vocoder, ‘Aether’ marks the first union of Efterklang’s Casper Clausen & pivotal Lisbon artist André Gonçalves, recalling everything from Popol Vuh to Jóhann Jóhansson and earliest Goodiepal
The seven-part session came together in just two nights during the weeks prior to Portugal entering lockdown in 2020. Operating in an alien tonal language of sheering, bittersweet synths that never touch the ground, and more literally thru Clausen’s plangent vocoder, the airborne sounds are elusive as a dream, following melodic lines of thought that may never quite resolve themselves yet lead the mind off into sublime spaces and create lushest light shows on the back of eyelids. As the label prompt, there’s a sense of Twin Peaksy oddness to proceedings, as well as the lingering dreamlike feel of Popol Vuh’s Herzog scores, essentially cultivating a sort of romance and seductive melancholy that really gets up the pharynx and under the skin with gently intoxicating subtlety that rewards repeats plays.