Articles
Spotlight 10
Ten Favourite Labels 2013

Albums
52 Commercial Road
Chantal Acda
David Åhlén
Daniel Bortz
Peter Broderick
Brass Mask
bvdub / bvdub & loscil
Colorlist
Dale Cooper Quartet
Cuushe
Jack Dangers
Deco
Deetron
DFRNT
Egbert
The Foreign Exchange
Nils Frahm
Bjarni Gunnarsson
Robert Haigh
Marihiko Hara & Polar M
John Heckle
Arve Henriksen
Joy Wellboy
Kaboom Karavan
KILN
Land of Kush
Jessy Lanza
Last Days
L.B. Dub Corp
Lights Dim with Gallery Six
Livity Sound
Moskitoo
MUfi.re
Oddisee
Om Unit
Ø [Phase]
Raudive
Matana Roberts
Sakamoto + Deupree
Secret Pyramid
Quentin Sirjacq
Sleeper
Sonicbrat
Special Request
Stratosphere & Serries
Thisquietarmy
Ricardo Tobar
Tom Trago

Compilations / Mixes
Foundland
In The Dark
Mathias Kaden

EPs / Cassettes / Singles
Anduin
Anile / Lm1 & Kharm
Cursa
Gerwin & Nuage ft. 2Shy
Hessien
Jon McMillion
Miaou

CD-Vinyl-DVD
Seaman and Tattered Sail

Lights Dim with Gallery Six: Between Spaces
Kaico

On their polished collaborative effort Between Spaces, Poland-based soundsculptor Marek Kaminski (aka Lights Dim) and Hiroshima, Japan-based composer Hidekazu Imashige (aka Gallery Six) present a luscious, forty-five suite of electro-acoustic soundscaping. Par for the genre course, the duo constructs its graceful neo-ambient settings using samples, field recordings, computer-generated sounds, and acoustic instruments, most conspicuously piano and electric guitars.

Credited to Kaminski alone, “Echoes of the Ongoing Riot” establishes the recording's soothing character, with electric guitar shadings softly intoning against a dense backdrop of warm synthetic design. Whatever violent activity alluded to by the title is absent in the piece itself, which unfurls at a slow and stately pace. As the album unfolds, a narrative begins to declare itself, one perhaps having to do with the fate of the last survivors of an apocalypse (for which humanity's to blame), and in keeping with that an elegiac character permeates the album in places, as intimated by titles such as “After the End” and “All Went Quiet.”

The presence of acoustic piano and electric guitars gives the material a grounded, real-world quality that connects its sound, instrumentally speaking, to post-rock. In that regard, “Dancing Beneath the Ocean” and “We Could Finally Rest” exude a graceful, cathedral-esque character reminiscent of Hammock and Sigur Ros in their instrumental writing. Samples and field recordings figure heavily into some pieces (seaside sounds in “Long Distance Call,” for example), whereas others are purer examples of abstract electronic ambient music. In the recording's other solo piece, Kaminski ends the album memorably by adding electric piano and a blurry spoken word contribution by one Penny Lane to the chiming ambient swoon of “Voyagers.”

While Between Spaces is a largely satisfying affair, sometimes the duo's enthusiasm gets the better of them, and the listener longs for a more restrained handling of the material. It's a shame, for instance, that “Sea of Tranquillity” is overburdened with an excess of electronic noise textures, as with those stripped away it would register as a perfectly lovely piano-based setting. “Mission Time,” on the other hand, doesn't suffer in the same way, despite the preponderance of robust electronic combustion, because said elements constitute the very essence of the constantly percolating piece.

November 2013