Articles
Andy Vaz Interview and Set
Mark O'Leary's Grønland

Albums
Acre
Arborea
Ólafur Arnalds
Kush Arora
Asura
bbcb
Steve Brand
Nick Chacona
Robert Curgenven
Cuushe
Daniell and McCombs
Delicate Noise
d'incise
Ecovillage
Danton Eeprom
Seren Ffordd
Paul Fiocco
El Fog
Koutaro Fukui
Corey Fuller
The Go Find
Ernest Gonzales
Koss
Francisco López
Ingram Marshall
Craig McElhinney
Minamo
My Majestic Star
Mystified
Nest
Nommo Ogo
Olive Oil
O'Leary - Passborg - Riis
Oy
[Post-foetus]
RPM Orchestra
Ryonkt
Richard Skelton
Slow Six
Sone Institute
Sousa & Correia
Stanislav Vdovin
Viridian Sun
Christian Zanési

Compilations / Mixes
Erased Tapes Collection II
Hammann & Janson
Leaves of Life
Music Grows On Trees
Phasen
Quit Having Fun
Scuba
Thesis Vol. 1

EPs
Aubrey
Be Maledetto Now!
DK7
Herzog
Hrdvsion
Mr Cloudy
Damon McU
Morning Factory
Neve
M. Ostermeier
R&J emp
Stanislav Vdovin

Asura: Asura
Non Projects

If there's one word to describe the inaugural release by Non Projects and the self-titled debut by Asura, it's mercurial. The thirteen-track collection of expansive electronica by LA-based musician and producer Ryan York resists easy pigeon-holing in its forty-one minutes. In drawing upon training in classical and jazz (as a bassist, cellist, guitarist, and trumpeter) and marrying it to computer-based production methodologies, York creates multi-dimensional miniatures that command one's attention despite their relative brevity.

Following “Asura I,” a prelude of cloudy textures, strings, and female voiceover, we get “Peptine,” an elegant electronica setting where neon lights pierce the late-night metropolis. The later “Asura II” offers a fireworks display of explosive electronic treatments, textures, and beats, while multi-layered trumpets in “Asura III” call to mind Jon Hassell's elephantine buzz. Four fully-developed compositions stand out: perched midway between radiant IDM and jaunty techno, “Saw You In Vice” (Anenon Birthday Remix) joyfully wraps itself in grainy textures as it spiritedly heads towards its destination; “Manzanita” augments uplifting vocal melodies with cello playing and grainy atmosphere; the 21st-century electro-ballad “Timber” is distinguished by the inclusion of Ana Caravelle's appealing voice; and “Feathers” spans multiple decades by embedding the emotive cry of an ancient chant within an electronic-tribal framework.

Whether the pieces in question are brief interludes, sketches, or full-fledged compositions, York brings a similar degree of attention to detail and sound design to all and digital treatments are applied plentifully but not gratuitously. If there's a downside to the release, it's that cohesiveness is the price paid for such diversity: it's difficult to get a clear sense of who and what Asura is when almost every one of the recording's tracks is something unique unto itself, despite the fact that an underlying concept—the experience of falling in love against the backdrop of modern-day Los Angeles, apparently—is on hand to tie things together on a thematic level.

February 2010