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It’d be dangerously easy to breeze past this new Portico Quartet album. Its three tracks of viscous synth and string layers, coaxed along by delicate rides and wistful tuned percussion, are unobtrusive, graceful things, more babbling brook than cresting wave. But that’d be a mistake: pay attention, and you’ll find real beauty here.
On
Terrain, the London jazz group lean into the minimalist and ambient textures that have lurked beneath the surface of much of their work for some time, not to mention the sound of the band members’ various side projects and collaborations (2018’s Szun Waves album and last year’s Paradise Cinema record in particular). The scope of the album is broad, and widescreen (as, indeed, they describe themselves), but there’s more to this stuff than the kind of bland universalism one might often hear soundtracking nature documentaries, and that’s due to the small details that are woven into the record’s every seam. The close, insistent toms on ‘III’; the gluey bass that underpins ‘II’ almost imperceptibly; the just-so application of reverb to the cymbals in ‘I’ that transforms them from rolling percussion to crystalline harmonic foundation, each stroke a ray of light breaking through the watery, looping textures above.
LondonCity-ofUnited-kingdomPortico-quartetParadise-cinemaTerrain-portico-quartetFast-showலண்டன்நகரம்-ஆஃப்ஒன்றுபட்டது-கிஂக்டம்போர்டிகோ-குவார்டெட்Home > new music > theartsdesk on Vinyl 62: Nick Mulvey, Off The Meds, Black Keys, Kreator, Oneohtrix Point Never, Sam Cooke and more
theartsdesk on Vinyl 62: Nick Mulvey, Off The Meds, Black Keys, Kreator, Oneohtrix Point Never, Sam Cooke and more | reviews, news & interviews theartsdesk on Vinyl 62: Nick Mulvey, Off The Meds, Black Keys, Kreator, Oneohtrix Point Never, Sam Cooke and more
theartsdesk on Vinyl 62: Nick Mulvey, Off The Meds, Black Keys, Kreator, Oneohtrix Point Never, Sam Cooke and more
The largest, loudest, longest reviews of music on plastic
Green for go© Patrick Perkins
The top-selling vinyl at independent UK record shops in 2020 was Idles' latest album (closely followed by Yungblud, which is impressive, given his only came out in December!). The Top 10 is dominated by indie, rock and retro but, actually, the bigger picture is that limited runs by music in all styles are selling across the board.
SambeDiourbelSenegalLouisianaUnited-statesBurkina-fasoAustraliaAlabamaKologoUpper-eastGhanaUnited-kingdomGondwana Records · October 9, 2020
Jack Wyllie, under the moniker Paradise Cinema, released his first full-length album. The eight-track album was recorded in Dakar, Senegal, and offers a taste of the thriving music scene there. Specifically, the album hints at the mbalax dance music of Senegal and Gambia. This genre originated from the sabar music of the Wolof people, but now includes influences from a vast array of other African popular music. In the album’s release notes, Wyllie explains that the mbalax influence is paired with subtle electronic elements that suggest “utopian ideas about [Dakar’s] potential futures.” With
Paradise Cinema, Wyllie has created an ambience that reflects traditions of the past alongside a sense of anticipation for the future. He explains that while in Dakar, the music would often be heard all through the night—until about 6 a.m. In his notes he writes, “I could hear this from my bed at night and it all blended together, in what felt like an early version of the record.”
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KOLKATA: One of the most important things that a treacherous 2020 robbed from us is touch. You can't touch your own face, let alone that of others, all because a vicious virus has taken over mankind.
The city of Kolkata, like the rest of the world, went into a complete four-month-long lockdown in March, severing our ties with the outside. Initially, everyone made fancy coffee and baked a cake, but as the weeks passed, a sense of loneliness crept slowly into our lives and made its way into our hearts, refusing to leave. More so for the LGBTQ community.
KolkataWest-bengalIndiaBengaluruKarnatakaAlisha-rahaman-sarkarJyoti-dasOlivia-laingRobert-putnamSupreme-courtAlisha-rahamanParadise-cinemaThe good, the bad and the trashy: The pop culture viewing that helped us escape 2020
From Real Housewives to real depression, Anne T. Donahue and Peter Knegt dare to take a look back.
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From Real Housewives to real depression, Anne T. Donahue and Peter Knegt dare to take a look back
Posted: Dec 16, 2020 12:45 PM ET | Last Updated: December 16, 2020
Left to right: Lisa Vanderpump in Vanderpump Rules, Elle Fanning in The Great, Shea Couleé in RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars.(Bravo/Hulu/VH1)
Anne T. Donahue and Peter Knegt each write regular columns for CBC Arts, and they decided to join forces to reflect on what the pop culture they consumed to get them through 2020.
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