Madeleine Cocolas follows up "A Memory, Blown Out" and "Nothern Storm" with a beautiful and restrained album of gentle piano melodies and evocative ambience.
Aussie composer Cocolas' third record this year is a personal self-investigation that's rooted in stillness, observation and perception. The set's backbone is her piano playing, but "Spectral" is far from a solo piano exercise. As we've witnessed from her last run of records, Cocolas is a confident producer and engineer, and she builds gaseous structures around her solo piano performances that shuttle them into very different realms.
Sometimes it's delicate and subtle processes - like on the mistral 'Ghostly', where faint vocals can just about be made out - while sometimes Cocolas' treatments are more heavy handed. On the lengthy 'And Then I Watch it Fall Apart', her piano melodies are swallowed by whirring oscillations, treated field recordings and low, resonant bass whooshes, and 'Presence' hides them almost completely beneath billowing drones.
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Madeleine Cocolas follows up "A Memory, Blown Out" and "Nothern Storm" with a beautiful and restrained album of gentle piano melodies and evocative ambience.
Aussie composer Cocolas' third record this year is a personal self-investigation that's rooted in stillness, observation and perception. The set's backbone is her piano playing, but "Spectral" is far from a solo piano exercise. As we've witnessed from her last run of records, Cocolas is a confident producer and engineer, and she builds gaseous structures around her solo piano performances that shuttle them into very different realms.
Sometimes it's delicate and subtle processes - like on the mistral 'Ghostly', where faint vocals can just about be made out - while sometimes Cocolas' treatments are more heavy handed. On the lengthy 'And Then I Watch it Fall Apart', her piano melodies are swallowed by whirring oscillations, treated field recordings and low, resonant bass whooshes, and 'Presence' hides them almost completely beneath billowing drones.
Madeleine Cocolas follows up "A Memory, Blown Out" and "Nothern Storm" with a beautiful and restrained album of gentle piano melodies and evocative ambience.
Aussie composer Cocolas' third record this year is a personal self-investigation that's rooted in stillness, observation and perception. The set's backbone is her piano playing, but "Spectral" is far from a solo piano exercise. As we've witnessed from her last run of records, Cocolas is a confident producer and engineer, and she builds gaseous structures around her solo piano performances that shuttle them into very different realms.
Sometimes it's delicate and subtle processes - like on the mistral 'Ghostly', where faint vocals can just about be made out - while sometimes Cocolas' treatments are more heavy handed. On the lengthy 'And Then I Watch it Fall Apart', her piano melodies are swallowed by whirring oscillations, treated field recordings and low, resonant bass whooshes, and 'Presence' hides them almost completely beneath billowing drones.
Madeleine Cocolas follows up "A Memory, Blown Out" and "Nothern Storm" with a beautiful and restrained album of gentle piano melodies and evocative ambience.
Aussie composer Cocolas' third record this year is a personal self-investigation that's rooted in stillness, observation and perception. The set's backbone is her piano playing, but "Spectral" is far from a solo piano exercise. As we've witnessed from her last run of records, Cocolas is a confident producer and engineer, and she builds gaseous structures around her solo piano performances that shuttle them into very different realms.
Sometimes it's delicate and subtle processes - like on the mistral 'Ghostly', where faint vocals can just about be made out - while sometimes Cocolas' treatments are more heavy handed. On the lengthy 'And Then I Watch it Fall Apart', her piano melodies are swallowed by whirring oscillations, treated field recordings and low, resonant bass whooshes, and 'Presence' hides them almost completely beneath billowing drones.
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Madeleine Cocolas follows up "A Memory, Blown Out" and "Nothern Storm" with a beautiful and restrained album of gentle piano melodies and evocative ambience.
Aussie composer Cocolas' third record this year is a personal self-investigation that's rooted in stillness, observation and perception. The set's backbone is her piano playing, but "Spectral" is far from a solo piano exercise. As we've witnessed from her last run of records, Cocolas is a confident producer and engineer, and she builds gaseous structures around her solo piano performances that shuttle them into very different realms.
Sometimes it's delicate and subtle processes - like on the mistral 'Ghostly', where faint vocals can just about be made out - while sometimes Cocolas' treatments are more heavy handed. On the lengthy 'And Then I Watch it Fall Apart', her piano melodies are swallowed by whirring oscillations, treated field recordings and low, resonant bass whooshes, and 'Presence' hides them almost completely beneath billowing drones.