The most notable thing about this new album from Jon Hopkins is how dancefloor-friendly it strives to be, the fluffly ambient electronica we’ve come to expect from the sometime Eno collaborator bolstered for the first time by firmly foregrounded, repetitive drum patterns.
They certainly give Hopkins’ dewy compositions some welcome momentum and forward-propulsion: ‘Disappear’’s Penguin Cafe-style pastoralism is powered by a genteel, Burial-aping 2-step sequence; the airy prog-trance of ‘Breathe This Air’ and ‘Open Eye Signal’ suggest Hopkins has been OD’ing on early Border Community 12”s. His customary reverbed piano lines are everywhere, enjoying most prominence on the beatless tracks, ‘Immunity’ and ‘Abandon Window’, both the kind of gauzy, broadly emotive pieces that BBC drama soundtrack supervisors dream about.
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The most notable thing about this new album from Jon Hopkins is how dancefloor-friendly it strives to be, the fluffly ambient electronica we’ve come to expect from the sometime Eno collaborator bolstered for the first time by firmly foregrounded, repetitive drum patterns.
They certainly give Hopkins’ dewy compositions some welcome momentum and forward-propulsion: ‘Disappear’’s Penguin Cafe-style pastoralism is powered by a genteel, Burial-aping 2-step sequence; the airy prog-trance of ‘Breathe This Air’ and ‘Open Eye Signal’ suggest Hopkins has been OD’ing on early Border Community 12”s. His customary reverbed piano lines are everywhere, enjoying most prominence on the beatless tracks, ‘Immunity’ and ‘Abandon Window’, both the kind of gauzy, broadly emotive pieces that BBC drama soundtrack supervisors dream about.
The most notable thing about this new album from Jon Hopkins is how dancefloor-friendly it strives to be, the fluffly ambient electronica we’ve come to expect from the sometime Eno collaborator bolstered for the first time by firmly foregrounded, repetitive drum patterns.
They certainly give Hopkins’ dewy compositions some welcome momentum and forward-propulsion: ‘Disappear’’s Penguin Cafe-style pastoralism is powered by a genteel, Burial-aping 2-step sequence; the airy prog-trance of ‘Breathe This Air’ and ‘Open Eye Signal’ suggest Hopkins has been OD’ing on early Border Community 12”s. His customary reverbed piano lines are everywhere, enjoying most prominence on the beatless tracks, ‘Immunity’ and ‘Abandon Window’, both the kind of gauzy, broadly emotive pieces that BBC drama soundtrack supervisors dream about.
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The most notable thing about this new album from Jon Hopkins is how dancefloor-friendly it strives to be, the fluffly ambient electronica we’ve come to expect from the sometime Eno collaborator bolstered for the first time by firmly foregrounded, repetitive drum patterns.
They certainly give Hopkins’ dewy compositions some welcome momentum and forward-propulsion: ‘Disappear’’s Penguin Cafe-style pastoralism is powered by a genteel, Burial-aping 2-step sequence; the airy prog-trance of ‘Breathe This Air’ and ‘Open Eye Signal’ suggest Hopkins has been OD’ing on early Border Community 12”s. His customary reverbed piano lines are everywhere, enjoying most prominence on the beatless tracks, ‘Immunity’ and ‘Abandon Window’, both the kind of gauzy, broadly emotive pieces that BBC drama soundtrack supervisors dream about.
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The most notable thing about this new album from Jon Hopkins is how dancefloor-friendly it strives to be, the fluffly ambient electronica we’ve come to expect from the sometime Eno collaborator bolstered for the first time by firmly foregrounded, repetitive drum patterns.
They certainly give Hopkins’ dewy compositions some welcome momentum and forward-propulsion: ‘Disappear’’s Penguin Cafe-style pastoralism is powered by a genteel, Burial-aping 2-step sequence; the airy prog-trance of ‘Breathe This Air’ and ‘Open Eye Signal’ suggest Hopkins has been OD’ing on early Border Community 12”s. His customary reverbed piano lines are everywhere, enjoying most prominence on the beatless tracks, ‘Immunity’ and ‘Abandon Window’, both the kind of gauzy, broadly emotive pieces that BBC drama soundtrack supervisors dream about.