Author: taylordeupree

  • Something That Looks Like Stars

    Something That Looks Like Stars

    The latest track from Eev, leading up to the full EP release on August 18th, is available now and being premiered by Stationary Travels.

    STREAM SOMETHING THAT LOOKS LIKE STARS

    Artist is a term we often casually throw around when featuring the creators of new music, but if there is anyone who embodies the fullness of the term, it is Taylor Deupree. Working across multiple disciplines, Deupree has amassed an impressive body of work not only as a composer & musician, but as a producer, studio engineer, and founder & runner of the revered 12k label, not to mention his work as a photographer which has appeared in numerous books and design anthologies. In addition to his solo work, which has quietly carved out a distinctive and influential niche in the realm of electroacoustic ambient music, Deupree has also been an enthusiastic collaborator with an international array of other luminaries of the genre including Ryuichi Sakamoto, Stephen Vitiello, Marcus Fischer, Arovane, Federico Durand, and Christopher Willits to name but a handful.

    And while one might rightly define Deupree’s work by its “attention to stillness” and “inherent quietude”, there is no denying the presence of a drive that is clearly fueling his creative engine and pushing him to evolve and explore new directions and opportunities including with labels other than his own. This includes his recent signing with Nettwerk Music Group where Deupree has begun to release some really lovely new material.

    Following the single “Eev” which showed up last month, this week will see the release of “Something That Looks Like Stars“, a succinct and beautifully crafted meditation on the uncertainty of life and ambiguity of perception.

     

  • Nettwerk Records signing

    I’m very happy to announce that I’ve joined the Nettwerk label’s roster of artists. After some months of negotiations and organizing I’m super proud to be part of this family of artists, with a label I’ve been listening to since my teenage years.

    My first release with Nettwerk will be an EP on July 21st called Eev. The first single, “Eev,” is available now. Here are some links:

    BANDCAMP
    SPOTIFY
    APPLE MUSIC

    Later this year will be a new/old album that’s been in the works for about a year with a very talented collaborator and that will be followed next year by a new full length release.

    I’m really excited for what lies ahead, the new path before me, and want to thank all of my listeners for many many years of support and Nettwerk for the opportunity to carry forward.

  • Pitchfork reviews Harbor

    Pitchfork reviews Harbor

    The 14th solo release from the ambient musician and 12k label head is a refined display of his impeccable devotion to his craft.

    If the title of Ambient Musician Laureate existed in the United States, Taylor Deupree would be a shoo-in. He’s not an indie-crossover success story like Grouper or William Basinski, nor does his work tend to challenge preconceptions of what ambient music can be, but he’s one of the genre’s most consummate professionals. As founder and head of the 12k label and engineering studio in New York, he’s the guy that people who master ambient albums hit up to master their own records. You can also find him working with David Sylvian and Ryuichi Sakamoto, composing music for photography installations and outdoor tea gardens, or releasing pristine-sounding, artfully crafted ambient albums united by his faded, organic visual aesthetic.

    Harbor is the 14th and latest of these releases, and Deupree’s sound design ensures it feels as pristine as anything he’s released while creating an intriguing wrinkle. The surfaces of these eight tracks sparkle with effervescent leads clearly played on a synth but not far removed from the Rhodes pianos beloved by the Album Leaf. Meanwhile, a heavy, ominous low end weighs these tracks down and keeps them from floating into the ether. It adds fearful tension to this largely optimistic music. If Harbor is meant to evoke its title, it’s easy to imagine an idyllic surface of beaches and sailboats perched above the murky depths of the ocean.

    But Harbor is less effective as a travelog than as a sculptural object, and the way the different layers of sound interact is more interesting than what they’re supposed to represent; it’s easy to marvel at all the individual noises as they flit about the stereo field. There are some wonderful effects here, like the fleck of Pastorian bass on “Mihto” and the moment when the gnarly low end takes over “Desaturation” and turns it into a rather vicious noise-drone. You get the sense that Deupree has been doing this for so long that sound is like bread and butter in his hands.

    Deupree loves textural grit, and each track has a slightly different assortment of burbles and hisses emanating out of the depths of the mix. The effect is less to make it sound as if it’s glitching, as in the work of fellow Y2K-era sound explorers like Vladislav Delay and Oval, and more to capture “the imperfect beauty of nature” Deupree cites as essential to both his music and his photography. It’s as if Deupree has taken these eight finely-sculpted objects and left them outside for a while so the rain and wind can work their magic. (Leave this stuff outside for a little longer and you’d have Mike Cooper.)

    At times, Harbor sounds uncannily similar to some of the music currently being put out by the West Mineral stable of musicians, especially last year’s self-titled debut from Picnic. But while those artists emphasize mystery and obscurity, as if their music is concealing all manner of shadowy secrets, there’s the sense with Harbor that what we’re hearing is what we’re seeing. This music is so high-definition, each element so precisely mixed and clearly emphasized, that there’s never a sense of anything hidden or left to the imagination. Luckily, what’s already there is more than sufficient to stir it.

  • The Oldest Colors

    The Oldest Colors

    The Oldest Colors was a tour-only album released on cassette with private download codes. It debuted in Tokyo on November 13th, 2022 at a 12k anniversary event and was made available at subsequent shows until the tape sold out. There are no credits or track listing for the album and it will not appear for sale or streaming online.

  • Small Winters

    Small Winters

    Puremagnetik is pleased to release Small Winters from accomplished electronic musician and multi-media artist Taylor Deupree. More than just an album, the release is a collaboration between Deupree and Puremagnetik label owner Micah Frank, who developed a plugin—called Small Winters—that was fundamental to making the music.

    Don’t be misled by the title; Small Winters has a warmth that feels more like the stirring of earth and sky than it does the stasis of winters. But small it is, at least in components, as Deupree crafted the music out of a minimal set of tools: an ARP 2600 synthesizer, a glockenspiel, cassette loops, and the Small Winters plugin.

    Small Winters brought Deupree to Small Winters. As Frank explains, “Taylor suggested that a custom device might be an interesting way to constrain the album’s sonic palette. We bounced some ideas back and forth and came up with this concept of a broken Tascam 4-track from the future.” Small Winters is a 3-track recorder, looper, and splicer, with unlimited overdubbing on each track, and the audio on each track can further be processed on a granular and virtual tape effect bus (the plugin comes in AU/VST/VST3 for use on multiple platforms and in multiple DAWs for any listener who makes their own music).

    The crackling, saturated sound of the album glows, it’s the source of that warmth, a diffused sonic back-lighting that surrounds the chiming notes, the sonic equivalent of dust motes floating in a sunbeam. This is a sound that comes out of Deupree’s interest in sonic “degradation.” He says, “I’m interested in a sort of melancholic and ‘pretty’ (for lack of a better term) sound,” one that he likes to take “to the edge of fragility … to sound like it could break at any moment, like walking on a beautiful but questionably frozen lake.”

    That metaphor is the winter of Small Winters, especially as heard on the substantial side-A track, “Long Winter.” The balance between the air suffused through the album and the modest musical details is what Deupree says creates “tension in my music … and this is what I’m using the imperfections for and what I’m listening for, the moment when I feel the balance between the two sides is right.”

    The Small Winters plugin helped create that tension and balance, as did what Deupree describes as guitar pedals and “some cassette tapes.” The context transforms the classic sounds of the ARP 2600 and the metallic chiming of the glockenspiel into floating, glowing sonic objects, with the tactile surface feeling of gauze and burlap. In “Long Winter,” these sounds drift like a mobile, while in the series of shorter tracks on side-B, they form pulses and rhythms like dance tunes imagined in daydreams.

    Through delicate tracks like “air” and “elm,” the music shimmers into existence and then loops around itself. The patterns repeat and build deep impressions and complex rhythms, one pattern against others. Deupree says these sound like “polymetrics … loops of differing lengths that combine to form non-repeating patterns.” He adds that “starting out as a drummer, rhythm is important for me, so I’m always listening, if not for precise rhythm, then for timing and durations.”

    String those together, put them into order, and pulse and rhythm appear. Sequence patterns, play percussion, and degrade that, and warm, complex sound appears. Assemble all these elements in Small Winters, and an album like Small Winters emerges.