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Showing posts with label Epic45. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Epic45. Show all posts

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Epic45 – Weathering (2011) (AWESOME !!!)



















Genre : Electronica, Ambient, Cinematic, Shoegaze, Post-rock, UK
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Tracklist :

01. People Say This Place Is Slowly Dying [0:07:07.94]
02. The Village Is Asleep [0:06:37.89]
03. Evening Silhouettes [0:02:31.29]
04. With Our Backs To The City [0:06:22.04]
05. Summer Message [0:02:41.96]
06. Afternoon, Shadowed [0:01:49.68]
07. The Weather Is Not Your Friend [0:02:57.49]
08. These Walks Saved Us [0:03:05.18]
09. Ghosts I Have Known [0:02:34.18]
10. Weathering [0:08:40.94]
11. Washed Up [0:08:48.89]

There is a long tradition of pastoral music capturing a quintessential Englishness, running from Vaughan Williams through the English folk tradition to more recent names like Robert Wyatt and Talk Talk. Further down this line you'll find Epic45.

Ten years after their formation in a small rural Midlands village, a decade in which the nucleus of Ben Holton and Rob Glover have redefined and refined the band's sound, Epic45 release “Weathering”, their new album and definitive statement. Epic45's last full length album “May Your Heart Be The Map” in 2007 was described as “the best English summer album ever” by Word Magazine, and was
later included in their albums of the decade. “Weathering” takes the same elements, but is a more mature, reflective and subdued work with a far broader sonic palette.

The album mourns the loss of a way of life that Ben and Rob's generation were the last to witness. Over the last twenty or thirty years, many English villages have become subsumed by the growth of neighbouring towns and cities and their identity has been lost. It was the intention to convey a sense of the ravaging effects of time on places, objects and lives, and to reflect these ideas of change and decay through the textures and lyrical themes.

“Weathering” boasts an impressive set of guest singers and musicians. Stephen Jones of Babybird lends his trademark falsetto to the beautiful “With Our Backs to the City”, a track co-written with Jones after he contacted the band, impressed by a cover of his song “Losing My Hair” that Epic45 had been performing live. The track is unquestionably one of the album's highlights. Rose Berlin, the daughter of Curve's Dean Garcia, adds her delicate vocals to “Summer Message”, a duet she wrote and performs with Ben. Meanwhile, regular contributor Antony Harding of July Skies, sings and plays clarinet on the Durutti Column-esque “Ghosts I Have Known”. Instrumental contributions come from a wide cast including Richard Adams of The Declining Winter and Hood, who adds guitar and hammered dulcimer, electronic duo The Remote Viewer, EL Heath and Brave Timbers/Declining Winter violinist Sarah Kemp.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Epic45 - In All The Empty Houses EP (2009) (AWESOME !!!)



















Genre : Electronica, Ambient, Cinematic, Shoegaze, Post-rock, UK
Myspace
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Tracklist :

01 – We Were Never Here
02 – Daylight Ghosts
03 – In All The Empty Houses
04 – The Future Is Blinding
05 – Their Voices In The Rafters
06 – Ghosts On Tape

Epic45 joined together as a band in 1995 in high school but only began playing live and recording tracks to tape in 1998. From there they have gone on to record tracks for almost 20 releases (including splits with Laudanum, 100 Pets and Avaray) and done remixes for people such as Portal and Glider. They now have four full albums released, the latest being “May Your Heart Be The Map”, released on Make Mine Records in July 2007.

Trying to review ‘In All The Empty Houses’ by Epic 45 is a rather difficult exercise, a band it’s awfully hard to categorise. They straddle the divide between tender melancholy pop & chiming, atmospheric post rock, definitely within the realms of the sound universe created by bands such as Disco Inferno, Bark Psychosis & Hood but more dreamy, and less edgy with a very gentle dynamic. The bass lines thrum & bob searchingly as wistful, chiming guitarscapes & homely swathes of subtle electronics are enveloped by a wistful half-spoken vocal. They seem to me very sensual in their approach, creating mini…erm “epics” of melancholy, immaculately produced ambient rock with a very British sensibility. I can hear just how they’ve honed their particular brand of audio enlightenment to perfection and it’s quite affirming to hear a band of this calibre at the top of their game. I think the trick with them is to create something comforting & familiar but still distinctive & magical, imbuing their twinkly, chiming structures with a really soothing, layered majesty which at times sounds like the calm after say, 65daysofstatic’s storm, a very satisfying blend of rock & electronic instrumentation with a certain finess. ~NormanRecords

[me]Whoa.. this new EP is beautiful. They changed a lot in this new stuff. A good change. Sounds like a combination between the radio dept. and boards of canada.