Ten Million Down to Two

May 27 2011 Published by under Internet/Media, Music, Personal

drm1mk3_front_540

Creating music on computers is an exercise in parsing.  There are limitless ways to combine sounds and instruments, mixing and matching and guessing and fussing and tweaking.  Main software programs like ProTools, Live, and Logic all come with their own instruments and sounds and effects.  Companies like Native Instruments and Waves and Camel Audio sell more instruments and sounds and effects.  There are analog and digital external devices to add even more flexibility.  Plus, recording new sounds has never been easier–a fantastic digital recorder is only a few hundred dollars, thus putting every sound within the grasp of even the most pedestrian musical adventurer.

All of this is, of course, duh.  And equally duh is the fact that those choices end up being more of a curse than a blessing, since unlimited choice means unlimited uncertainty that YOUR choice is the right one.  I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve spent hour upon hour fiddling with the settings on an instrument, continually second-guessing my choices, convinced that THIS or THAT tweak will result in the perfect sound, only to rethink that change in favor of yet another change, and on and on until, again, duh.

And so I know that the #1 job for an electronic musician is to forcibly reduce those choices.  Don’t use every instrument or sound or effect.  Focus on a few.  That’ll not only save time but will save sweat and blood, as well.

And so I did that: I limited myself to certain tools and tried not to go outside those tools.  The trouble was, I started to create a song, and suddenly there was a sound I wanted that my limited tools could not provide.  So I went back and tweaked, tweaked, tweaked, or I broke my rules and used new instruments or effects and tweaked, tweaked, tweaked.

In other words, I was addicted to the post-scarcity musical universe.

However, I found a solution to my addiction, and it came in an interesting way.  I created an album, Riverrun.  It’s available now.  I really enjoy the songs on that album, and I hope you do too.  But one thing struck me recently while listening to those tracks for the 47th time: there was too much variety.  The drums sounds were different on every track.  The bass and lead and pads all changed from one song to another.  The is a consistent mood and feeling to the album, but within the songs, there was too much variety for my taste.  I didn’t think the album really fit together as well as it could have, and I think this was caused by my unlimited choices.  Since each song could use different sounding drums or whatnot, each song did use different sounding drums or whatnot.

I compared Riverrun to recent albums by some of my favorite artists–Jon Brooks’ Music for Dieter Rams, Pye Corner Audio’s Black Mills Tapes, The Caretaker’s An Empty Bliss Beyond This World, Leyland Kirby’s Sadly, the Future… These are all different in a number of ways, but the thing they have in common is each works from a singular sonic map.  The songs on each album feel connected to one another, and that sense of connectivity is due largely to the fact that the songs are using only a handful of instruments, and those instruments can be heard and felt all the way through.

And, yes, you’re thinking, duh.  What did you expect?  When Bruce Springsteen records an album, he uses the same instruments he always does–drum, bass, guitar, keyboard, some sax, a few other things thrown in.  Each album uses those elements, yet each of his albums is unique.  Most artists do this–heck, almost all.  But it’s easy to forget that fact when surrounded by choice after choice after choice in a computer-based environment.

So the lesson I learned was simple: treat electronic music the way that all other music is treated.  Use a few instruments, and use them well.

Another side-duh I discovered recently came courtesy of a Dubspot video I was watching about some electronic artist (I don’t even remember his name now).  But the video spoke about this guy’s virtuosity with a particular Roland synth.  The guy is a self-taught musician, and all the music he creates comes from this synth.  He’s learned how to use that instrument so well that he doesn’t need anything else.  The video also mentioned how the electronic artist Squarepusher only used this one type of sampler and his bass guitar to create all his weird, wild stuff.  Then I remembered that Moon Wiring Club only uses samples and some Playstation music game to create his stuff, Monolake uses only Ableton Live’s Operator synth to create a lot of his music, Pan Sonic use only analog synths they create themselves (along with a sampler), Augustus Pablo used a melodica to create most of his music, and I could go on and on.  Artist after great artist pick an instrument, learn it, and use it.

Abundance was getting in the way of mastery.  I had too many choices.  I tried to learn too many different things instead of focusing on really learning a few.

So my plan was set: find some instruments, master them, and then use them.

The first step was finding the right instruments.  And here I have decided to do a full about-face with computers and use actual hardware with real knobs and everything.  I’ve found that using hardware instead of software not only limits the choices down for sound selection, but it also allows for better and more interesting improvisation.  I can use automation in Ableton Live to create a semblance of improvisation, but every time I do improvise something using a softsynth, I end up editing it to death before I create a mix, and that effectively kills the spontaneity of it all.

So, what instruments?  Well, first I wanted a drum machine to help me create popping noise like Pan Sonic.  I wanted a real drum machine, an analog one.  I found it in the Vermona DRM1 mkIII.  It’s an awesome beast, and you can read all about it if you want to know more.  The second had to be a synth, and here I had my choice.  I ultimately went with a Meeblip, a monophonic device that creates crackly, crunchy sounds that can go anywhere from harsh noise to soft bass lines.  I picked it for two reasons: it was cheap and it was simple to use.  It was only an added bonus that it produces awesome sounds.

Meeblip

So those are my instruments.  Now, bear in mind that I am still learning these instruments; I’m nowhere near mastery.  And part of that process is discovering what I can and cannot do with these instruments.  I have been a little concerned that the Meeblip won’t be able to generate as many of the softer, richer tones that I’d prefer to include in my music, so I have considered adding a third instrument to my collection in the form of a polyphonic hardware synth (perhaps the OP-1 by Teenage Engineering).  But I’m holding back for now because I really don’t know what the limits are for the Meeblip.  I know I can’t create chord progressions too well, but it can create a lot of complex sounds.  How many sounds?  Do they work for the music I want to create? I’m not sure yet.  That’s what the learning stage is all about.  The same goes for the DRM1.  It only has 10 sounds total, but there are so many knobs that create so many different variations that 10 sounds might as well be 10,000,000, and while I’ve tweaked the knobs on that instrument over and over, I still find myself amazed by the variety of sounds I can produce.

I’ve started creating some music with these instruments, and I’ll be showing it off soon enough.  I like where I’m headed, at least, though it has been a bit difficult to stick to my rules.  I’ve actually sampled sounds from the Meeblip, put those sounds into Ableton’s Simpler or Camel Audio’s Alchemy and modified the sounds to into softer, more sustained tones.  And I like the results of those songs.  However, when I listen to those songs against others that used only the DRM1 and the Meeblip, I find that they don’t quite mesh the way I’d prefer, the way Pye Corner Audio’s music all meshes together so nicely.  So I won’t be using those other programs any more, and I think my music will be better for it.

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Blake’s Seven at Its Hauntological Best

Apr 23 2011 Published by under Film/TV, Hauntology, Music, Technology


This is from the penultimate episode of Blake’s Seven, “Warlord.” I love the distorted music in the first half (matched with images of drugged drones on a Federation-controlled world).

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And…It’s Here!

Apr 10 2011 Published by under Internet/Media, Music, Personal

Cover of Michael Heumann's Riverrun

Yes, that is correct: Riverrun is available now at Bandcamp and will be available soon at iTunes, Amazon, Emusic, and other online music stores.  If you go to Bandcamp, you can listen to every song for free and buy whatever you’d like–and two tracks are available for free (including the title track).  A bonus song, “Spell Dignity,” is also available there.

Additionally, my new website, MichaelHeumann.com, is now up and running.  You’ll see a link at the top of this page.  It takes the place of the Haunted Ink Records website and contains all sorts of information about my music.

Finally, while you’re visiting Bandcamp to buy my new album, make sure to stop by Pye Corner Audio’s Bandcamp page to purchase their wonderful new album Black Mill Tapes Vol. 2 (and, by “new,” I mean hours old).  Vol. 1 was one of the best releases of 2010, and Vol. 2 is more of the same wonderful analog wonderfulness.  It’s £4.99, which is about $8 USD.  Riverrun is $5.  That means you can get two albums for a fraction of the cost of a season of Glee on DVD, and you can guarantee that all proceeds will go to the artists themselves (unlike, say, Glee).  So go Bandcamp, and thank you for reading my blog and listening to my music!

Michael Heumann (aka The Inkbottle)

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RIP Trish Keenan

Jan 14 2011 Published by under Music, Obituary, Personal

The announcement came from Warp:

It is with great sadness we announce that Trish Keenan from Broadcast passed away at 9am this morning in hospital. She died from complications with pneumonia after battling the illness for two weeks in intensive care.

Our thoughts go out to James, Martin, her friends and her family and we request that the public respect their wishes for privacy at this time.

This is an untimely tragic loss and we will miss Trish dearly – a unique voice, an extraordinary talent and a beautiful human being. Rest in Peace.

In trying to process this news, I’m reminded of how seminal Broadcast’s music is to me today.  When I create music, I seek to capture the playful, eerie, haunting qualities that make their work so distinct (the answer is always: not even close).  When I seek out new music, I always look for artists who possess these Broadcast-like qualities.  But there is no other Broadcast, and there is no other Trish Keenan–an incredible voice that grounds Broadcast’s music so that it can go in every direction at once and still make sense.  I will miss that voice.


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Top 10 Albums of 2010

Dec 20 2010 Published by under Feature, Music, Personal

Emeralds cover To me, 2010 will stand out as the year musicians returned to the 70s and early 80s, stole the synths, and came back to play them for us.  The Wire magazine coined the phrase “hypnagogic” to refer to the music of Rangers, Emeralds, Arial Pink’s Haunted Graffiti, and the like, music suffused with warped nostalgia.  But Boards of Canada did the same thing 15 years ago, and Ghost Box has been doing the same thing for years, and they’ve been calling THAT “hauntology” for quite a while, so I don’t know why they needed a new term.  Oh wait, these groups are mostly American, so we have to separate them from the proper British groups.  Well, that’s just stupid. And it doesn’t matter.  What matters is the quality of the music, and the quality of the music this year was as good as it has been in quite a while.  Emeralds’ album is ethereal, lush, and overwhelming.  It took me a while to get it, but once I got it, I couldn’t let go.  But the same can be said for the other works on this list–works that I have examined and celebrated both here and in my car (and between my ears) for the bulk of the year.

I love end-of-year lists not for the competition of seeing who is on top; rather, these lists always give me ideas for music to buy, since there’s no way to hear everything in a given year (unless you are paid to do this, which I’m not).  So hopefully this list will have one or two suggestions for you as you go shopping for new music in the new year.  I’ve provided links to each work to help facilitate that end. Happy holidays, and have a great 2011.

  1. Emeralds, Does It Look Like I’m Here — Unbelievably beautiful, captivating synth music from a band I’d not even heard of when the year began.  If the 80s had sounded like THIS, perhaps we wouldn’t have needed so much hair gel.
  2. Joanna Newsom, Have One on Me — I waited a long time for this album to come out, but it did not disappoint.  It’s very long, and it is hard to get through it all in one sitting (I don’t bother), but there’s enough here to study and dissect for a lifetime, and Joanna is just getting started!
  3. Pye Corner Audio Transcription Services, Black Mill Tapes Vol. 1: Avant Shards — This is just wonderfully muddy, trippy, eerie music that captivated me from the moment I first heard it.  Wire magazine called it “evil,” which made no sense unless “evil” is British for “awesome.”
  4. North, Darkside — This has been a fixture in my car for a few months now.  It’s the best thing Hyperdub has released since the last Burial CD, and that’s saying something.  Wonderful, weird, twisted synthpop.
  5. Rangers, Suburban Tours — Each song on this guitar-swirl album sounds like the engineer pushed “record” halfway through.  If there is such a thing as “hypnagogic,” then you’ll find it here–AOR radio from the 80s squished into knots and reimagined by punks.  Awesome.
  6. Pan Sonic, Gravitoni — Pan Sonic’s last, great work was too much like their earlier music to place any higher on my list, but this is a band who redefined electronic music and whose output will be respected and revered long after the concept of “electronic music” has been shelved.  A final, great summary of a truly great band.
  7. Ghost Box Study Series (Vol 1-4) — This was the Ghost Box filler year, when they released a bunch of singles that, together, make one of the best albums of the year.  The Broadcast & the Focus Group single is of particular note–a continuation of their 2009 collaboration that is every bit as wonderful.  I can’t wait for 2011 and a new Broadcast album (perhaps?  perhaps?).
  8. Philip Jeck, An Ark for the Listener — As always, Touch records stands at the top of the mountain in electronic and experimental music.  This was a wonderful, inspiring work from one of the label’s stalwarts–an artist who manages to create symphonies using only turntables.
  9. Frank Bretschneider, EXP — I’ve always loved Bretschneider’s music for its grooviness, but this year’s effort was wonderful because it pared down the grooves into their component elements and turned dance music into an abstraction (which is what it always has been anyways).  Yes, clicks & cuts live!
  10. Arcade Fire, The SuburbsI know that this is the only album on this list that anyone has actually heard of, but don’t let that fact diminish the quality and inventiveness of this Canadian group’s third effort.  If the world is lucky, they are the band of the future, and this was only the beginning.

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Top 10 Albums of the 1990s

Nov 17 2010 Published by under Feature, Internet/Media, Music, Personal

In the Aeroplane over the Sea album cover

It’s been over ten years, so I think enough time has lapsed to look at the music of the 90s objectively.  But that’s not really what this list is about.  I culled this list from my own listening habits over the past decade-plus.  The criteria is simple: to make the list, the work had to have been released in the 9os (duh), has to be in my iTunes directory today (before I conceived of this list), and it has to be something I continue to listen to on a regular basis.  So that’s why there’s no Nirvana or Nine Inch Nails here.  Sorry, dudes, your music is great, but it’s not in my catalog right now.  Oh, and I wanted to include The Conet Project’s Recordings of Shortwave Numbers Stations, and while it is on my computer, I honestly don’t listen to it on a regular basis (though its importance is even more obvious now).

So it’s a biased and a (somewhat) arbitrary list of great music from the 90s.  But isn’t every list biased and arbitrary?  At least I own up to it.

One final thought: most of the music here was released in 1997 and 1998, two of the best years for music in decades.  No one talks about this fact, but those years are right up there with 1968, 1977, and 1984 for sheer volume of amazing music.

  1. Neutral Milk Hotel, In the Aeroplane Over the Sea
  2. Boards of Canada, Music Has the Right to Children
  3. Tricky, Maxinquaye
  4. Massive Attack, Mezzanine
  5. Pan Sonic, A
  6. Radiohead, Ok Computer
  7. Belle & Sebastian, If You’re Feeling Sinister
  8. Portishead, Portishead
  9. Chris Watson, Outside the Circle of Fire
  10. The Caretaker, Selected Memories from the Haunted Ballroom

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Pye Corner Audio Transcription Services

Oct 30 2010 Published by under Internet/Media, Music

Pye Corner

Stop what you are doing right now, go to http://pyecorneraudio.bandcamp.com/, and buy a copy of Black Mill Tapes Vol. 1.  It just came out today, and it’s fantastic.  It’s warbly, stuttering synth music of the highest order.  Think Tangerine Dream rerecorded by William Basinski’s decaying tape-loop machine.  Think Delia Derbyshire if she were in a late 70s synth band.  More than anything else, think awesome because it’s awesome.  Get it now.  It’s only ₤4.99, which is about $8 US.  Download it and play it for yourself or your friends as a Halloween present.  Heck, if you’re in Mexico, play it on Monday for Dia De Los Muertos.  The dead will love it–because the dead probably created it!

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Children of the Stones

Oct 12 2010 Published by under Feature, Film/TV, Internet/Media, Literature, Music, Personal, Random

Children of the Stones

Derrida coined the term hauntology during a lecture at my alma mater, the University of California Riverside.  He used the term to suggest that the present only understands itself in and through the past (and that the future haunts the present in the same way).  It’s a term used here and there in philosophy and critical theory circles, but its main use is in the realm of music.  Initially, it was used in the 90s to describe trip hop and ambient music; then it was used to describe the Ghost Box label and the weird, unsettling British Information Films sound of The Advisory Circle and The Focus Group; more recently, it has been applied to any music that combines nostalgia and weirdness (like Boards of Canada, The Caretaker, Mordant Music, Moon Wiring Club, among others).  The concept has always had a decidedly English feel to it–to the point that The Wire magazine coined a different term, hypnagogic, to describe American music that shares some hauntological themes (like Emeralds, Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti, Pocahaunted, and so on). A lot of people absolutely hate these two terms for the same reason they hate all labels applied to music–because they deprive unique artists of their very uniqueness.  And I think that is true.  But I have a soft spot for hauntology for a few reasons.  First, I really like English weirdness (or really British weirdness–I’m part Scottish and part Welsh, so the Celtic is important to me), especially when it is coated with pagan sensibilities (which comes easily in the UK since it’s hard to throw a dead cat without hitting a henge or standing stone).  Second, labels have a way of giving attention to music that might otherwise be under-appreciated, and anything that gets more people to listen to Belbury Poly or William Basinski is a good thing in my book.  Finally and most importantly, hauntology (and my listening to and reading of anything connected to the concept) helped me rediscover something from my childhood that had been buried in the nether reaches of my unconscious for 20 years: Children of the Stones.

I have a vague, almost unreal sense of watching Children of the Stones in the early 80s.  Apparently, it was on Nickelodeon in the United States, but I don’t remember watching it on that channel.  In fact, I only have fleeting, fragmented memories of my original viewing.  I remember being disappointed that I only caught one or two episodes (the empty, unfulfilled sense of “what will happen next?” pervading my mind).  I remember being scared and a little creeped out, but I don’t know why.  I also remember my parents not liking the series because it seemed vaguely satanic (in their minds; they were quite religious).  The most significant memory, however, is of the standing stones (the show was filmed at Avebury).  I probably had no idea what a standing stone was back then, and I probably didn’t really care much.  But they left an impression of ancient mysteries that percolated in the back of my mind for many, many years, only to resurface when I actually went to England and Ireland and I suddenly realized how amazing and fascinating these stones really are.

So these memories were buried in my mind like a time capsule waiting to be opened at the right moment.  That moment came when I stumbled across a reference to the series in a hauntology-based article somewhere, which led to a quick YouTube search (followed by a trip to Amazon to buy the DVD).  The moment I heard the strange music of the opening, the memories came flooding back–the weirdness, the paganness, the surreality:

I’ve heard this music sampled in several different works by Mordant Music, Moon Wiring Club, and others (hell, I’ve used it too).  Honestly, I’m amazed that Trunk Records hasn’t released the OST for this series (they did The Tomorrow People, so why not this?).  The reverb-rich moaning voices, matched with the images of standing stones, bring a chill to my ears and eyes–and drive my wife crazy (she can’t stand the series).  It’s truly spooky music that is designed to frighten children, and while I was probably too old to be truly frightened by these sounds when I first heard them (I must have been 13-14), the true otherness of the music must have struck a chord. Added to this odd music was the very odd behavior of the people in the fictional village of Milbury (where the story is set).  The villagers are always happy and over-polite in a way that immediately raises red flags in the minds of the protagonist and his son (visitors to the town–the father played by none other than Roj Blake himself, Gareth Thomas).  These people were odd precisely because they were too normal, an impression that anyone who grew up in a suburb (like I did) can instantly identify with.  Add to this the fact that all the happy children in the town are (somehow) super geniuses at math, even smarter than the protagonist’s astrophysicists son who is otherwise quite bright, and it doesn’t take long for our heroes to sense trouble.  As the plot unfurls, we learn the source of the town’s happy normality, and I don’t want to give it away to anyone who hasn’t gone to YouTube to watch it, but suffice to say that the stones are involved (along with druids [for some reason--druids came long after the stones were erected, but whatever], psychic energy, ley lines, and black holes). Watching today, I am impressed by the acting in the series (especially Thomas, though the kids could use a few more lessons) and the intelligence of the show (they don’t dumb down kids programs in the UK the way they do in the US).  Really, though, what stands out is the nice way that the show manages to link the everyday strangeness of the people with the very extraordinary world of ancient Britain and the Avebury standing stones.  As a student (and teacher) of mythology, I really appreciate the emphasis that is placed on linking the past with the present.  As a music fan, I enjoy how the series uses sound to convey so many deep, dark, unsettling feelings–and I like the fact that the majority of the music is created using only human voices (reminiscent of Ligeti).  But I love the series mostly because it gives me a window into my own past, a past of a teenager who lived in a strange world of happy people and wondered why they were happy, what made them happy, and why wasn’t I happy too? And I think that’s what hauntology is all about–not so much celebrating all things weird and (mostly) British but exploring epiphanies of weirdness from the past in order to better understand what makes the world so damn weird to begin with. And perhaps the very Britishness of Children of the Stones helps me better understand my own fascination (or is it obsession?) with the UK: why my favorite TV shows are from the BBC, why my favorite musical artists are British, why my plans for vacations always begin in London, and why–especially why–I spent 12 years getting a PhD in English with a focus on 20th century British and Irish authors. To think: despite all that British stuff, I still ended up in a small desert town on the Mexican border.  Now that’s weird.

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Arcade Fire Gives Me Hope

Aug 05 2010 Published by under Internet/Media, Music, Personal

Arcade Fire

The world sucks.  Republicans are trying their best to lie their way back into power again.  Oil is killing entire ecosystems in the Gulf. Global warming is starting to really come into its own.  Some sub-human idiots from New Jersey are celebrated by everyone.  It’s one day before the 65th anniversary of Hiroshima.  It’s August and I live in a place where we’re excited if the temperature is only 102°, where no one has a job, where the economy is stagnating, and where earthquake recovery continues without any help from the outside world.  Oh, and apparently the Mayans are coming.  Really, is there anything good out there?  Can someone give us even a peek at hope–even for a second?

Enter Arcade Fire.  During their Madison Square Garden concert tonight (broadcast live online), my life didn’t suck–and I’m guessing that’s true of all the other people who attended or watched from a distance.  And it wasn’t just the concert, either–though that was quite an amazing, spellbinding, celebratory event (watch it yourself if you want proof–it’s well worth your time).  It was the unreal realization that a band like this isn’t supposed to succeed in America–yet they have, and this concert is proof.

While I was watching, I told my wife (who wasn’t watching–since they’re not Depeche Mode or Weird Al), “They’re all kind of ugly looking–so you know they’re good.”  She concurred.  I was exaggerating, of course–they’re not ugly at all (some are quite fetching, in fact).  But they’re not Katy Perry or Usher, either.  And here they are with a #1 album, selling out MSG, and blasting a concert online that shuts down Twitter.  This is a band of Americans and Canadians and Hatians, men and women, multi-instrumentalists all, singing and playing complex, convex music that has caught the attention of teenagers and older dudes like me in a way that very few artists are capable.  In a musical world filled with banality and self-delusion, Arcade Fire are more than just a breath of fresh air–they’re a hurricane that demonstrates why everyone else sucks (see: Radiohead at the 2009 Grammys).

I should add that I’m not even a particularly devout fan of Arcade Fire.  I really like Funeral, and I’m beginning to discover their other music (including their new album, The Suburbs, which I’m listening to now).  It’s beautiful, fascinating music, but I haven’t studied it or LISTENED to it to any serious extent to really have a lot to say about it (though Funeral is right up there with In the Aeroplane Over the Sea, and that’s the highest praise I can give an album).  But I know quality when I hear it, and they’re quality–and their very existence as a popular band, a band celebrated and listened to by all shapes and sizes and ages, gives me hope that the world won’t suck forever.

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Best so far of 2010 is…

Jul 26 2010 Published by under Music

Sadly, The future is no longer what it was

It’s past the midpoint of 2010 by about a month.  A lot of great music has been released in the past 7 months: Joanna Newsom’s Have One on Me, Pan Sonic’s Gravitoni, Flying Lotus’s Cosmogramma, Frank Bretschneider’s EXP, Emeralds’ Does It Look Like I’m Here? Dolphins into the Future’s The Music of Belief, and Autechre’s Oversteps, to name just the stuff I’ve been listening to.

But one work stands above all these, has invaded my listening space like on other…and it came out in 2009.  It’s Leyland Kirby’s Sadly, The Future Is No Longer What It Was.  I’ve reviewed it already, but I thought I’d reassert the magnitude of this work again.  It’s easily the best album of the current decade, even if it was released in the tail end of the last.  It’s a long, difficult album, but it overwhelms me at every turn.

Absolutely essential listening.

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