Florida's Wave Temples follows a grip of Not Not Fun deployments with this hazy new single of reworks that loop woody, ferric percussion and fourth world atmospheres into fuzzed-out, marooned bliss.
Wave Temples' last few records have explored the idea of imaginary ethnomusicology; Spring's 'Panama Shift' was dedicated to Japanese-born US anthropologist Yosihiko H. Sinoto, and January's 'Another Night in Peru' imagined a link between the Bermuda Triangle and the Swedish coast. On 'Taboo II' he continues the thought, revisiting the latter album's stand-out highlight and manipulating its stems into four breezy, saturated new cuts.
Beginning with an extended version of the title track, the EP splutters into 'Bikini Oracle', a light-hearted synth jam that sets the scene perfectly. Then on 'Forbidden Ritual (Jungle Desire)', Wave Temples shifts into Jon Hassell territory, melting warbling horn sounds and rainforest atmospheres into his cadaverous, bone xylophone rhythms. The final track 'Oceans in the Sky' isolates a ritualistic drum loop that's over far too soon - but rather leave us gasping for more than bore us to death, eh?
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Florida's Wave Temples follows a grip of Not Not Fun deployments with this hazy new single of reworks that loop woody, ferric percussion and fourth world atmospheres into fuzzed-out, marooned bliss.
Wave Temples' last few records have explored the idea of imaginary ethnomusicology; Spring's 'Panama Shift' was dedicated to Japanese-born US anthropologist Yosihiko H. Sinoto, and January's 'Another Night in Peru' imagined a link between the Bermuda Triangle and the Swedish coast. On 'Taboo II' he continues the thought, revisiting the latter album's stand-out highlight and manipulating its stems into four breezy, saturated new cuts.
Beginning with an extended version of the title track, the EP splutters into 'Bikini Oracle', a light-hearted synth jam that sets the scene perfectly. Then on 'Forbidden Ritual (Jungle Desire)', Wave Temples shifts into Jon Hassell territory, melting warbling horn sounds and rainforest atmospheres into his cadaverous, bone xylophone rhythms. The final track 'Oceans in the Sky' isolates a ritualistic drum loop that's over far too soon - but rather leave us gasping for more than bore us to death, eh?
Florida's Wave Temples follows a grip of Not Not Fun deployments with this hazy new single of reworks that loop woody, ferric percussion and fourth world atmospheres into fuzzed-out, marooned bliss.
Wave Temples' last few records have explored the idea of imaginary ethnomusicology; Spring's 'Panama Shift' was dedicated to Japanese-born US anthropologist Yosihiko H. Sinoto, and January's 'Another Night in Peru' imagined a link between the Bermuda Triangle and the Swedish coast. On 'Taboo II' he continues the thought, revisiting the latter album's stand-out highlight and manipulating its stems into four breezy, saturated new cuts.
Beginning with an extended version of the title track, the EP splutters into 'Bikini Oracle', a light-hearted synth jam that sets the scene perfectly. Then on 'Forbidden Ritual (Jungle Desire)', Wave Temples shifts into Jon Hassell territory, melting warbling horn sounds and rainforest atmospheres into his cadaverous, bone xylophone rhythms. The final track 'Oceans in the Sky' isolates a ritualistic drum loop that's over far too soon - but rather leave us gasping for more than bore us to death, eh?
Florida's Wave Temples follows a grip of Not Not Fun deployments with this hazy new single of reworks that loop woody, ferric percussion and fourth world atmospheres into fuzzed-out, marooned bliss.
Wave Temples' last few records have explored the idea of imaginary ethnomusicology; Spring's 'Panama Shift' was dedicated to Japanese-born US anthropologist Yosihiko H. Sinoto, and January's 'Another Night in Peru' imagined a link between the Bermuda Triangle and the Swedish coast. On 'Taboo II' he continues the thought, revisiting the latter album's stand-out highlight and manipulating its stems into four breezy, saturated new cuts.
Beginning with an extended version of the title track, the EP splutters into 'Bikini Oracle', a light-hearted synth jam that sets the scene perfectly. Then on 'Forbidden Ritual (Jungle Desire)', Wave Temples shifts into Jon Hassell territory, melting warbling horn sounds and rainforest atmospheres into his cadaverous, bone xylophone rhythms. The final track 'Oceans in the Sky' isolates a ritualistic drum loop that's over far too soon - but rather leave us gasping for more than bore us to death, eh?