'Barbara' is the eagerly-awaited next deployment from Voice Actor, who drapes her soporific, dream-diary recitations over fittingly horizontal, dubbed-out reverberations from Welsh producer Squu. RIYL Mica Levi, Dean Blunt, Lolina or Rat Heart.
After astonishing us with the massive 'Sent from my Telephone', Noa Kurzweil returns with the next installment of the Voice Actor project, this time flanked by Squu, whose smoked-out tones you might have come across if you've been tuned into Kurzweil's 'Breaking People' show on NTS.
'Barbara' strikes a darker chord than we've come to expect from Voice Actor; Squu's muddy, hypnagogic atmosphere - all soupy, granulated pads and undulating low-end bumps - provides Kurzweil with a fittingly shadowy canvas, over which she recites her surreal narrative. "I have zero respect for Barbara Walters," she recalls, referencing a patronizing interview with Dolly Parton. "No one has the right to disrespect people, Dolly is a national treasure and a great... humanitarian." And when her voice disappears, Squu's beat fractures even further, its rhythms coagulating into a ruff, subby womp that only just peers thru the whirlwind of wordless vocal tics.
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'Barbara' is the eagerly-awaited next deployment from Voice Actor, who drapes her soporific, dream-diary recitations over fittingly horizontal, dubbed-out reverberations from Welsh producer Squu. RIYL Mica Levi, Dean Blunt, Lolina or Rat Heart.
After astonishing us with the massive 'Sent from my Telephone', Noa Kurzweil returns with the next installment of the Voice Actor project, this time flanked by Squu, whose smoked-out tones you might have come across if you've been tuned into Kurzweil's 'Breaking People' show on NTS.
'Barbara' strikes a darker chord than we've come to expect from Voice Actor; Squu's muddy, hypnagogic atmosphere - all soupy, granulated pads and undulating low-end bumps - provides Kurzweil with a fittingly shadowy canvas, over which she recites her surreal narrative. "I have zero respect for Barbara Walters," she recalls, referencing a patronizing interview with Dolly Parton. "No one has the right to disrespect people, Dolly is a national treasure and a great... humanitarian." And when her voice disappears, Squu's beat fractures even further, its rhythms coagulating into a ruff, subby womp that only just peers thru the whirlwind of wordless vocal tics.
'Barbara' is the eagerly-awaited next deployment from Voice Actor, who drapes her soporific, dream-diary recitations over fittingly horizontal, dubbed-out reverberations from Welsh producer Squu. RIYL Mica Levi, Dean Blunt, Lolina or Rat Heart.
After astonishing us with the massive 'Sent from my Telephone', Noa Kurzweil returns with the next installment of the Voice Actor project, this time flanked by Squu, whose smoked-out tones you might have come across if you've been tuned into Kurzweil's 'Breaking People' show on NTS.
'Barbara' strikes a darker chord than we've come to expect from Voice Actor; Squu's muddy, hypnagogic atmosphere - all soupy, granulated pads and undulating low-end bumps - provides Kurzweil with a fittingly shadowy canvas, over which she recites her surreal narrative. "I have zero respect for Barbara Walters," she recalls, referencing a patronizing interview with Dolly Parton. "No one has the right to disrespect people, Dolly is a national treasure and a great... humanitarian." And when her voice disappears, Squu's beat fractures even further, its rhythms coagulating into a ruff, subby womp that only just peers thru the whirlwind of wordless vocal tics.
'Barbara' is the eagerly-awaited next deployment from Voice Actor, who drapes her soporific, dream-diary recitations over fittingly horizontal, dubbed-out reverberations from Welsh producer Squu. RIYL Mica Levi, Dean Blunt, Lolina or Rat Heart.
After astonishing us with the massive 'Sent from my Telephone', Noa Kurzweil returns with the next installment of the Voice Actor project, this time flanked by Squu, whose smoked-out tones you might have come across if you've been tuned into Kurzweil's 'Breaking People' show on NTS.
'Barbara' strikes a darker chord than we've come to expect from Voice Actor; Squu's muddy, hypnagogic atmosphere - all soupy, granulated pads and undulating low-end bumps - provides Kurzweil with a fittingly shadowy canvas, over which she recites her surreal narrative. "I have zero respect for Barbara Walters," she recalls, referencing a patronizing interview with Dolly Parton. "No one has the right to disrespect people, Dolly is a national treasure and a great... humanitarian." And when her voice disappears, Squu's beat fractures even further, its rhythms coagulating into a ruff, subby womp that only just peers thru the whirlwind of wordless vocal tics.