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Music Reviews

Celer: Capri (Remastered Deluxe Edition)

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Artist: Celer (http://www.celer.jp/)
Title: Capri (Remastered Deluxe Edition)
Format: 12" x 3
Label: Two Acorns (http://www.twoacorns.jp/)
Rated: * * * * *
When Celer released "Capri" in 2009, ambient music was already crowded with artists trying to evoke places they had never quite visited, memories they may never have had, and sunsets that somehow lasted forty-seven minutes. Yet even within that landscape, "Capri" felt unusual. Not because it was grand, but because it was so deliberately small.

Now reissued in a remastered and expanded deluxe edition by Two Acorns, with mastering from the ever-sensitive ears of Stephan Mathieu and the restoration of material omitted from the original CD, "Capri" emerges not as a forgotten relic but as a completed sketchbook. It remains one of the most delicate works created by the original duo of Will Long and Danielle Baquet, whose partnership defined the project's formative years before Baquet's untimely passing in 2009.

To call "Capri" a concept album is technically accurate, though it risks suggesting narrative coherence. This is not an album that tells a story. It behaves more like a box of postcards found in a drawer decades later, each image disconnected from the next, yet somehow contributing to a larger emotional geography. The Capri of the title is less a destination than a state of perception: sea air translated into texture, sunlight dissolved into memory, architecture reduced to atmosphere.

The brevity of the pieces is crucial. Many ambient records stretch ideas toward infinity, often mistaking duration for profundity. "Capri" does the opposite. Thirty-six miniature compositions drift by in fragments, some barely lasting a minute, refusing to settle into permanence. They appear, shimmer softly, and disappear before the listener can fully grasp them. Like trying to remember a dream while simultaneously waking up and searching for your glasses.

Tracks such as "Mouthfeels Of Capreae", "Polaroid Family Portrait", and "Ascensionaires" establish the album's peculiar language. Piano traces emerge and recede beneath soft drones, environmental echoes, and tape-like imperfections. Nothing insists on being noticed. Everything seems content to exist at the edge of perception.

Throughout the record, Long and Baquet demonstrate an extraordinary understanding of negative space. Silence is not merely an absence between sounds; it becomes a compositional material in itself. Pieces such as "A Pause" and "Op.0" function almost like breaths between thoughts, creating the sensation that the album is remembering itself as it unfolds.

There is also a fascinating tension between warmth and dissolution. "Red Elements" and "Lint White" are among the longer pieces, allowing motifs to linger slightly longer before fading into ambiguity. Yet even these tracks avoid emotional certainty. The music remains suspended between comfort and melancholy, between presence and disappearance. The listener is never entirely sure whether they are arriving somewhere or leaving it.

That ambiguity has become one of Celer's defining artistic virtues. Across an enormous discography, Will Long has often explored themes of impermanence, distance and memory, but "Capri" captures those concerns in unusually concentrated form. Knowing the historical context inevitably adds another layer. Recorded during the final years of the original duo's collaboration, the album now feels almost prophetic in its preoccupation with fleeting moments and vanishing traces. Not tragic, exactly, but deeply aware of transience.

The remastering serves this material beautifully. Rather than modernizing it, Mathieu reveals additional depth within its fragile architecture. The sounds breathe more freely; subtle details emerge without disturbing the original intimacy. The expanded running order also strengthens the album's identity as a collection of interconnected vignettes rather than a conventional sequence of tracks.

What remains most striking, however, is how little "Capri" demands from its audience. In an age where even ambient music occasionally feels compelled to announce its significance with conceptual manifestos and cinematic ambitions, this album remains content to whisper. It trusts the listener to meet it halfway.

Seventeen years after its original release, "Capri" still resembles sunlight reflecting off water: impossible to hold, impossible to examine directly for long, yet somehow unforgettable. It is a work of remarkable modesty, one that understands a rare artistic truth: sometimes the most enduring impressions are left not by monuments, but by passing shadows on a summer afternoon.



Juli Deák: Brisk

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Artist: Juli Deák (@)
Title: Brisk
Format: CD & 12" + Download
Label: Thanatosis Produktion (@)
Rated: * * * * *
For centuries, classical musicians have been engaged in a curious conspiracy: convincing audiences that breathing is merely a logistical inconvenience between notes. The ideal performance often seems designed to erase evidence of the body altogether, transforming flesh, lungs, effort, and imperfection into the illusion of effortless beauty. On "Brisk", Polish-Hungarian flutist Juli Deák dismantles that illusion with remarkable elegance. Rather than hiding the mechanics of performance, she places them front and center, turning breath itself into both subject and instrument.

Based in Budapest and active across contemporary classical music, jazz, improvisation, and folk-inspired projects, Deák represents a generation of musicians increasingly uninterested in preserving disciplinary borders. Her debut album emerges from years of exploring the expressive possibilities of the flute beyond its conventional role. The result is neither a contemporary classical recital nor an experimental manifesto. Instead, "Brisk" feels like a carefully observed study of human presence, rendered through seven solo flute pieces recorded in a church and captured entirely in single takes.

The album's title refers to circular breathing, the demanding technique that allows wind players to sustain sound without interruption. Yet the word also describes the music itself. There is movement everywhere, not necessarily fast movement, but the constant circulation of air, pulse, and energy. Listening to these pieces often feels less like hearing melodies unfold than observing a living organism regulating itself.
From the opening title track, Deák establishes her aesthetic priorities. Key clicks become percussion. Breathy tones become texture. Harmonics and overblown notes multiply the instrument's voice until a single flute seems inhabited by several personalities at once. The effect is fascinating because it never feels like a technical demonstration. Many experimental instrumental records can resemble laboratory reports disguised as concerts. Here, technique serves expression rather than the other way around.

The church acoustic plays a crucial role throughout. Space becomes an active participant, stretching sounds into delicate halos and allowing even the smallest gestures to resonate. Silence is not empty territory but fertile ground where each inhalation acquires significance. One becomes acutely aware that every phrase begins with a breath and eventually returns to one.

Tracks such as "Depict" and "Trace" showcase Deák's ability to balance structural rigor with improvisational freedom. Her classical training remains evident in the precision of her execution, yet the music resists the polished certainty often associated with conservatory culture. Notes wobble. Air escapes. Tones fracture. Small instabilities become expressive events rather than mistakes requiring correction. In an era obsessed with optimization, there is something quietly radical about allowing vulnerability to remain visible.

Perhaps the album's most intriguing achievement lies in how it transforms physical limitation into compositional material. The listener becomes aware of muscles working, lungs expanding, concentration tightening and releasing. Music here is not detached from the body; it is the body thinking out loud. The flute ceases to function merely as an instrument and becomes a kind of respiratory extension, translating biological necessity into sound.

"Steam" and "Contact" particularly emphasize this relationship. Rhythmic key noises create an almost mechanical pulse beneath flowing lines, generating an interplay between machine-like repetition and organic irregularity. The contrast is subtle but powerful. It is as if Deák is simultaneously performing with the instrument and negotiating with it.

For all its conceptual sophistication, however, "Brisk" remains surprisingly lyrical. Beneath the extended techniques and experimental textures lies a distinctly pastoral sensibility. There are moments that feel windswept, almost folkloric, as though distant landscapes occasionally emerge through the abstract architecture of the compositions. The music never abandons melody entirely; it simply approaches it from unusual angles.

The closing pieces, "Float" and "Tamed", offer perhaps the clearest glimpse into the album's emotional core. After exploring the flute's more volatile and unpredictable qualities, Deák allows the music to settle into something gentler, though never entirely stable. Resolution remains partial. The breathing continues. Many musicians spend years perfecting control; Deák seems equally interested in what happens when control encounters its limits. Every inhale, every fluctuation of pitch, every grain of air moving through metal becomes part of the composition. The result is music that feels startlingly alive.

In the end, "Brisk" is less about the flute than about attention itself. It invites listeners to notice sounds that are usually edited out, ignored, or dismissed as incidental. And in doing so, it arrives at a quietly profound observation: perfection is rarely what makes a performance memorable. More often, it is the evidence of a person breathing on the other side of the sound.



Anenon: Dream Temperature

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Artist: Anenon (@)
Title: Dream Temperature
Format: LP
Label: Tonal Union (@)
Rated: * * * * *
For more than a decade, Brian Allen Simon has occupied a curious territory between ambient composition, jazz sensibility, field recording, and electronic experimentation. Under the name Anenon, the Los Angeles-based saxophonist and producer has steadily built a catalogue that refuses easy categorisation. If 2023's "Moons Melt Milk Light" felt like a deliberate retreat into acoustic intimacy, "Dream Temperature" marks a return to circuitry and signal processing, though not in the form of technological spectacle. Instead, Simon uses technology as an extension of breath itself, shaping electronic textures through a wind synthesizer whose sounds are literally activated by his lungs. The result feels less like programming and more like exhalation.

The album takes its title from the strange sensation of carrying a dream into waking life, not its narrative but its climate. That elusive emotional residue becomes the guiding principle of these eleven miniature environments. Across just over half an hour, Simon constructs a sequence of pieces that seem suspended between memory and perception, as if reality has not yet fully loaded and the world remains slightly pixelated around the edges.

The opening tracks establish this unstable terrain immediately. "June Gloom" and the wonderfully overdescriptive "Piano Haze Bass Melt Cry" drift through blurred electronic vapours where melody appears only briefly before dissolving back into atmosphere. Simon has always understood that ambiguity can be more powerful than resolution. Here, sounds emerge like thoughts remembered halfway through forgetting them.

What distinguishes "Dream Temperature" from much contemporary ambient music is its physicality. Many artists working in this field seem intent on erasing the human presence altogether, polishing their drones until they resemble architectural renderings of calm. Simon does the opposite. Every electronic current feels inhabited by a body. The wind synthesizer wheezes, sighs, and bends in ways that reveal the lungs behind the machine. The album breathes. Literally.

The short piano interludes "Last Sun 1" and "Last Sun 2" act as emotional anchor points amid the digital fog. Their fragile, processed harmonies recall the kind of late-night solitude that belongs neither to sadness nor comfort but to some awkward middle ground where both coexist. They arrive quietly, say almost nothing, and somehow linger longer than many compositions three times their length.

Elsewhere, "Nulle Part 1+2" introduces Simon's tenor saxophone into the electronic landscape with fascinating results. The instrument sounds less like a jazz voice than a message attempting to travel through damaged communication lines. Notes surface, distort, disappear, and reappear as though struggling against interference. The effect is unsettling without becoming hostile, melancholy without surrendering to despair.

The album's centrepiece may be "When The Light Appears, Boy", where field recordings gathered across Sardinia, Japan, California and elsewhere drift through the composition like fragments of geographical memory. Simon has long excelled at integrating environmental sound into his work, but here these recordings function less as documentary evidence than as emotional coordinates. They suggest places remembered imperfectly, locations transformed by distance and time.

There is also an understated humour hidden beneath the album's solemn surface. Not overt jokes, but the quiet absurdity of trying to archive dreams using electronics and saxophones. Humanity has built satellites, artificial intelligence, and quantum computers, yet remains completely incapable of explaining why a dream about losing your keys can ruin an entire morning. Simon seems fascinated by that contradiction. His music inhabits the gap between technical sophistication and emotional mystery.

By the time "Toyama" and the closing "Postscript" arrive, the album feels less interested in guiding listeners toward revelation than in teaching them how to remain inside uncertainty. The final piano notes do not resolve anything. They simply open a window and let the air move through.

"Dream Temperature" succeeds because it never treats ambient music as wallpaper or wellness product. Instead, it embraces ambiguity as a fundamental condition of being alive. Simon captures those strange moments when consciousness feels porous, when memories, dreams, places, and emotions leak into one another without clear borders. The result is a deeply personal record that quietly rewards repeated listening.

Some albums ask to be understood. "Dream Temperature" asks to be inhabited. For thirty-one minutes, Brian Allen Simon offers a place where waking life and dreaming overlap like two imperfect transparencies. The view may be blurry, but that is precisely where its beauty resides.



Oonagh Haines: Not Not Pretending

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Artist: Oonagh Haines
Title: Not Not Pretending
Format: 12" + Download
Label: moli del tro
Rated: * * * * *
The title "Not Not Pretending" immediately announces its intentions by refusing to announce anything clearly at all. It is a phrase caught in a hall of mirrors, simultaneously denying and affirming itself, the linguistic equivalent of staring at your own reflection until it begins looking back with independent thoughts. Fittingly, Oonagh Haines' debut album inhabits precisely that territory: a place where sincerity and performance, intimacy and detachment, humour and melancholy continually exchange clothes.

Raised between London and Grand-Fort-Philippe near Dunkirk, Haines arrives at this debut by way of an unusually eclectic artistic path. Before embarking on her solo work, she performed in street bands, experimental pop duos, multimedia projects, and object theatre productions. Her background in visual arts and performance clearly informs the music. These songs do not simply unfold; they stage themselves. Every vocal inflection, every electronic texture, every carefully measured pause feels placed within an imagined scene whose boundaries remain intriguingly blurred.

The album sketches a nocturnal landscape populated by damaged romantics, cosmic drifters, accidental philosophers, and people attempting to navigate emotional vulnerability while maintaining at least a minimum level of irony. Which, admittedly, is one of the more common survival strategies of modern life.

Musically, Haines operates in a compelling intersection of deconstructed synth-pop, minimal wave, spoken-word performance, and experimental electronics. Comparisons to the cool detachment of early post-punk vocalists are understandable, but they only tell part of the story. Beneath the surface restraint lies a surprisingly tender emotional core. The distance is real, but so is the longing.

"Loaded Gun" opens the album with a darkly comic monologue that immediately establishes Haines' peculiar gift for balancing absurdity and discomfort. The song's narrator keeps a weapon by the bed, not for protection but to avoid the horror of social interaction. Beneath the deadpan humour lurks something recognisable: the anxiety of modern existence exaggerated just enough to become funny again. The production mirrors this tension, with electronic textures circling around the vocal like thoughts that refuse to settle.

The brilliant "Perfect Date" pushes this approach even further. A Ford Focus filled with candles, a burning car, declarations of romance delivered amid looming disaster. It plays like a parody of cinematic love stories while somehow remaining strangely romantic. Haines understands that desire is often ridiculous. The best relationships frequently begin with two people pretending not to be absurd while being profoundly absurd together.

Throughout the album, humour functions less as comic relief than as a way of approaching difficult subjects indirectly. "Kindness" appears deceptively simple, almost naïve in its catalogue of hopes for human connection. Yet its straightforwardness becomes radical in a cultural environment increasingly dominated by cynicism. The song quietly suggests that empathy, time, laughter, and affection might still be worthwhile ambitions. Revolutionary material, apparently.

Elsewhere, the record turns increasingly existential. "Dust" transforms natural cycles into a meditation on impermanence, linking bodies to leaves, ash, sand, and light. The imagery remains simple but effective, allowing the song to float between folk-like reflection and dreamlike abstraction. Haines avoids grand declarations. Instead, she observes transience with a mixture of curiosity and acceptance.

"Emptiness" and the two-part "Vacuum" sequence form the album's emotional centre. Here, Haines' detached vocal style becomes particularly effective. Rather than dramatizing absence, she inhabits it. The sparse electronic environments surrounding her voice create a sense of psychological space where memories, identities, and desires drift without clear anchoring points.

The recurring references to light, space, black holes, and cosmic distance might suggest a fascination with science-fiction imagery, but they function more as emotional metaphors. Haines seems less interested in outer space than in the vast interior distances people maintain from one another and from themselves. The vacuum is psychological before it is astronomical.

One of the album's greatest strengths is its handling of repetition. Electronic motifs return in altered forms, phrases echo across tracks, and emotional themes resurface from different angles. This creates a subtle sense of continuity without imposing a rigid narrative. The songs feel connected by atmosphere rather than storyline, as if documenting different rooms within the same dream.

The production deserves particular praise. Mixed by Renaud Carton and mastered by José Guerrero, the record achieves a delicate balance between clarity and ambiguity. The electronic elements never overwhelm the songs, nor do they settle into predictable patterns. Instead, they create shifting environments where Haines' voice can move between character, narrator, and confessor.

The closing "Meet Me" offers one of the album's most beautiful moments. Light becomes both destination and transformation. Identity becomes fluid. Conversation dissolves into smoke. The song leaves many questions unanswered, which feels entirely appropriate. Albums obsessed with certainty tend to age poorly. Albums comfortable with ambiguity often linger.

What makes "Not Not Pretending" particularly impressive as a debut is its confidence in incompleteness. Haines does not attempt to explain herself fully. She leaves gaps, contradictions, and unresolved tensions throughout the record. The result feels remarkably human. After all, most people spend their lives performing versions of themselves while simultaneously hoping someone will see through the performance.
The title turns out to be less paradoxical than it first appears. Haines is pretending, and she is not pretending. She is performing, but the emotions are real. She is detached, but deeply invested. She is ironic, yet sincere.

Like the best contemporary art-pop, "Not Not Pretending" understands that authenticity is rarely a matter of removing masks. More often, it emerges from choosing the right mask and wearing it honestly.

In a world increasingly addicted to declarations, Oonagh Haines offers something rarer: uncertainty rendered with elegance, humour, and considerable grace.



Fauna: Taiga Trans

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Artist: Fauna
Title: Taiga Trans
Format: LP
Label: Glitterbeat (@)
Rated: * * * * *
Some albums invite the listener into a room. Others open a window onto a landscape. "Taiga Trans", the debut full-length from Gothenburg collective Fauna, feels more like stumbling upon a gathering deep inside a forest where nobody bothers explaining what is happening because explanation would only ruin it. There are drums. There is dancing. There may be a ritual underway. There is certainly a flute. Beyond that, certainty becomes negotiable.

Fauna arrive carrying an unusually rich cultural baggage, though they wear it lightly. Emerging from Sweden's fertile underground scene, the collective brings together musicians with roots stretching across Syria, Turkey, France, Finland, Poland, and Sweden. In lesser hands, such diversity might become a marketing slogan. Here it becomes a living process. The music does not present itself as a fusion of traditions so much as a place where traditions have forgotten where they came from and started building something new together.

The band's origins lie in informal jam sessions between guitarist Tommie Ek and bassist Ibrahim Shabo, two musicians who had spent years operating within more conventional rock settings. Eventually they reached that familiar point in a creative life where established formulas begin to feel like well-furnished cages. The answer was experimentation: hand drums, unusual guitar sounds, repetition, improvisation, and a gradual opening of the musical doors to a larger community of like-minded explorers.

The result is "Taiga Trans", an album that occupies a fascinating space between psychedelic rock, krautrock, folk traditions, acid house, trance music, and something much older than any of those categories. Listening to it often feels like hearing several centuries of musical history negotiating a temporary peace treaty.

The opening "Bland stenar" immediately establishes Fauna's method. A saz introduces a taut melodic framework while percussion and bass begin assembling a groove sturdy enough to survive minor geological events. Electric guitars enter less as lead instruments than as weather systems. The track moves forward with the patient inevitability of roots finding cracks in stone. There is propulsion, but not urgency. The music trusts repetition to reveal its secrets gradually.

This faith in repetition links Fauna to a lineage stretching from the motorik experiments of German kosmische music to traditional trance practices found across multiple cultures. Yet the band avoids nostalgia. The rhythms may be ancient in spirit, but the production feels unmistakably contemporary. Electronic textures drift through the arrangements like invisible currents, subtly reshaping the landscape.

"En munfull sand" and "Dunans torka" deepen this approach. Layers of percussion interlock with hypnotic bass figures while voices emerge and disappear within the mix. Shabo's multilingual lyrics, delivered alongside Alexandra Shahbo and flautist Fauna Buvat, function less as narrative vehicles than as additional textures. Language becomes rhythm. Meaning dissolves into atmosphere. Anyone hoping for clear semantic explanations may need to consult a different department of human activity.

One of the album's most impressive achievements is its handling of tension. Many trance-oriented records rely on predictable cycles of build and release. Fauna prefer subtler methods. "Bland trÄden", one of the album's longest pieces, evolves through incremental shifts so gradual that one barely notices the transformation until suddenly realizing they have arrived somewhere entirely different. The experience resembles walking through a forest and discovering that dusk has arrived without announcing itself.

The instrumental colours deserve special mention. Buvat's flute often serves as the album's secret weapon, weaving through the dense rhythmic structures with an elegance that recalls both ancient folk traditions and contemporary experimental music. The darbuka and saz bring textures rarely encountered in modern psychedelic rock, while never feeling ornamental. These instruments are not exotic decorations; they are fundamental voices within the conversation.

"Boreala Ändlösheten" acts as a brief atmospheric pivot before "Du ska få se" introduces one of the record's most overtly dance-oriented moments. Here, the group's fascination with techno and rave culture surfaces most clearly. Yet even at its most club-adjacent, the music retains an earthy quality. This is dance music for people who occasionally stop dancing to stare thoughtfully at moss.

That moss receives its own frozen monument in "Frusen mossa", a track that perfectly captures the album's strange balance of movement and stillness. The groove remains hypnotic, but there is also a contemplative dimension, a sense that the repetition is designed not merely to energise but to alter perception itself.

The closing "Blodröda rubiner" serves as a fitting culmination. Nearly eight minutes long, it gathers many of the album's recurring themes into a final ecstatic procession. Voices, percussion, guitars, and electronics converge into something that feels simultaneously ancient and futuristic. One can imagine the track being played around a campfire, inside a warehouse, or during some post-apocalyptic harvest festival. It would probably work in all three situations.

What ultimately distinguishes "Taiga Trans" is its sincerity. In an era where genre-crossing often arrives packaged as calculated eclecticism, Fauna sound genuinely committed to exploration. Their music emerges from curiosity rather than strategy. The collective nature of the project reinforces this impression. No single voice dominates. The album feels less like a statement from individual musicians than the document of a community discovering itself in real time.

There is also something quietly hopeful in the record's construction. Here are musicians from different cultural backgrounds creating a shared musical language without erasing their differences. The result is neither utopian fantasy nor political manifesto. It is simply evidence that collaboration remains one of humanity's more productive habits, despite centuries of contradictory evidence.

By the end of "Taiga Trans", the listener may not know exactly where they have been. Somewhere between forest and dancefloor, between ritual and rave, between memory and invention. Fortunately, certainty was never the point. Fauna are interested in transport rather than destination.

And for forty-three remarkable minutes, they make getting lost feel like a perfectly reasonable plan.