Blog

  • Faint featured on Hard Format

    I’m very honored to have my album Faint featured on the Hard Format website. For those of you who aren’t familiar with Hard Format it is a website that features beautifully designed music packaging. I”m humbled to be included among all of this great work.

    http://www.hardformat.org/8436/taylor-deupree-faint/ 

  • My Year In Music

    2012 was a fantastic year in music for me. I seemed to listen to more and enjoy it more. I’m particularly thrilled, touched, honored and humbled by the output of 12k this year and, because of that, ironically, have decided to leave off any 12k releases from this year-end list as to try to remain more objective! Suffice to say, I would likely include all 10 of this year’s 12k releases on the list and there wouldn’t be room for any others. The Boats, Steve Peters + Steve Roden, Gareth Dickson, Simon Scott, Stephan Matheiu, Kane Ikin and the five us us who shared the tour in Japan to come up with the Between CD, including Marcus Fischer, Simon, and Corey and Tomo from Illuha. It was just a highlight year for me and 12k.

    But, moving past these label doors I found myself listening to a lot of sleeping music this year. The list below is in no particular order and also includes some older releases because I listened to this stuff constantly over the past 12 months.

    I hope you found this year as inspiring as I did and have continued to support your favorite artists and labels. We all greatly rely on our devoted, intelligent listeners to remind us why we do this and to help us move forward.

    Here’s to a creative, inspirational and peaceful 2013.

     

    Brian Eno “Lux” (Warp)
    I’m so happy to hear a new Brian Eno album that’s nearly as good as his ambient music from the 80’s. “Thursday Afternoon” is my favorite piece of music of all time so I can’t even begin to compare these two, but “Lux” is certainly the best thing Eno has done (to me) in 30 years.

    Neil Halstead “Palindrome Hunches” (Brushfire)
    A new Neil Halstead album always comes with great anticipation. The opener “Digging Shelters” is worth 10X the price of the album by itself.

    Ichiko Aoba “Utabiko” (Daichi Sound)
    I’ve felt so fortunate to get to know Ichiko over the past two years and to have performed and collaborated with her. She’s a gem, a true talent. starlight.

    Oren Ambarchi “Grapes From The Estate” (Touch)
    Introduced to me on the van tour in Japan. While I know Oren I have not spent a lot of time with his music. This album is right up my alley.

    The Boats “Do The Boats Dream of Electric Frtiz Pfleumer?” (Slaapwell)
    I think my favorite piece of music The Boats have done. Textural, beautiful and crumbling.

    Machinefabriek “Halfslaap” (from the album Diorama) (Power Shovel Audio)
    I kept gravitating towards this song in particular and had it on heavy rotation. A modern lullaby for sure.

    The Singing Skies “Routine and War” (Preservation)
    The Preservation label put out great music this year (I have to give a nod to Seaworthy’s “Bellow’s & Breath here, too) but this one really hit me in particular. A great, sometimes retro, sometimes folky, blend of voice and instrumentation.

    Billy Gomberg + Offthesky “Flyover Sound” (Experimedia)
    On its way to becoming a classic for me. I never cease to discover new sounds within this universe. Such a beautiful release. Highly, highly recommended. Came out in 2009.

    Stars of the Lid “And Their Refinement of the Decline” (Kranky)
    A nightime staple for sure. Music to dream to.

     

  • PIARS: International Sonic Arts

    I’m honored to be selected as jury member alongside Max Eastly and Robin Rimbaud for the Sound Art category of the PIARS International Sonic Arts Awards for 2013.

    You can read more about PIARS here.

  • Fluid Radio reviews Faint

    Fluid Radio reviews Faint

    Fluid Radio today published a wonderful review of my new album, Faint. Written by Pascal Savy the review goes into great detail and even uncovers connections in the album that I hadn’t even realized. The review on their site is here and I will paste it in below as well.

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    When Shoals was released back in 2010, Taylor Deupree questioned the direction he might take next; “I’m not sure what this means in terms of what my next album will sound like. Do I dig in and explore this even further or do I twist off onto a tangent?” Before working on this elusive next album, Deupree decided to embark on many different projects as if to test out various ideas before committing to a new solo work, releasing in the process a low-key 7-inch, the long form In A Place Of Such Graceful Shapes in collaboration with Marcus Fischer and touring with fellow 12k artists, most notably in Japan. In some respect the music produced within those two years more or less followed an aesthetic and compositional lineage initiated with Northern or Landing. Whilst there’s a clear danger in reducing an artist’s new work to a new coordinate within an abundant discography, it’s also important to see how it necessarily furthers a creative arc rooted within a larger artistic ecosystem.

    In a recent interview, Deupree indicated that he was interested in creating “a guitar and voice record as a solo project”, something he described as “some sort of abstract folk music” – surely a very interesting way to twist off onto a tangent. People expecting such a record will have to wait a bit longer as Faint is nothing like this elusive lo-fi guitar and voice album but follows more or less the organic abstract ambient realm he’s been exploring for a long time now. Saying that, Faint is also an album that manages to twist off on a tangent in very unexpected ways, but more on that later.

    Within the last 7 or 8 years, Deupree’s work has been dealing with themes of evanescence and impermanence, often echoing the cycles of nature. In Snow for instance, the physical EP was accompanied with images of Deupree’s own natural environment captured on pre-faded polaroids slowly decaying away because of the imperfect nature of the media itself, and as such acted as a powerful metaphor of the ephemerality of things. Faintquietly departs from those explorations and for the matter displays a much sparser and lighter sound palette than its predecessors. In Shoals for instance (but that can be said of most of Deupree’s ambient projects) the listeners were placed right inside a dense mesh of amorphous loops piled-up in harmonic constructions constantly evaporating away, so they could explore the music like silent witnesses of an habitat in permanent mutation. The verticality of such works seems in Faint to be shifting towards the horizontality of long tones sending tendrils as far as they can stretch, often until they crystallise like held together within a elusive sonic aether. On paper, it doesn’t sound too dissimilar to Brian Eno’s ambient work which, in essence, floats away in space, completely disembodied and seemingly eternal. But the music of Faint doesn’t fill the room like the pure light of Lux captured on film and slowed down to see it bouncing off the walls. Instead it’s bound by an internal tension that anchors it to human experience, a tension revealed negatively by the harmonic ecosystem in which it floats in being.

    Compared to the rest of what follows on the album, opener Negative Snow seems to function both as a bridge linking back to Deupree’s previous work and a point of departure towards new territories. It strongly recalls, in both sound design and composition, the music of Northern with its melodica motifs joined later by an anchoring bass line cutting through a hazy reverberated backdrop, but is very much reflective, albeit in reverse, of the image drawn two years ago by Snow, an image disappearing away like its corresponding faded polaroid. In Negative Snow though, the melodic fragments appear captured within a shallow depth of field which renders the landscape in the background completely blurred out, and as such those miniature figures clearly stick out of the main picture, as if Deupree was signaling a shift in his focus, quietly leaving the vertical immersion within the soundscape to create a plane of immanence where ‘pure’ sound can exist for and by themselves.

    In Dreams of Stairs, the music becomes less complex, losing its characteristic thickness and richness of sound but strangely enough turning into an even deeper and wider affair, where unhurried tones are held suspended in space, like dispersed sun-light leaking through holes in a log-cabin. Recordings of someone plugging and unplugging audio cables, generating delicate instrument noises in the background, perhaps recalling the solitary studio practice, are enveloped by long floating synth notes, seemingly sourced from frequency modulated sine waves, whose slow tremolo ripples on the surface of silence, the track very much exploring the emergence of a dream within the awaken state.

    Throughout the album, the music lies upon a thick bed of tape hiss, covering the overall sound with a translucent veil that clearly positions Faint within a hazy oneiric realm – Deupree himself reckons that this project was inspired by the “tiny fraction of time between waking and sleep, with no distinct perception of reality”. It’s maybe at this point that whilst reflecting on how Deupree’s music is evolving, one can find a clue. If, up to now, he’d been preoccupied with temporality, casting ephemerality and transience upon most of his musical output, he now seems more interested in examining the sheer phenomenon of transition where one exists in between states, a phenomenon devoid of duration where things just exist in flux, dispersed on the horizontal plane of change – a subtle but important evolution. The aptly named Thaw is perhaps a perfect illustration of this very question. In their transitions – for instance warmth liquidating frozen water – things become substance-less, like in a state of perpetual becoming, in continuation of their origin whilst always disappearing away. Transitions are silent transformations happening in front of us, but so slowly and overwhelmingly that one can’t grasp the totality of their reach. In essenceThaw embodies the very passing of things without us realising the immutable nature of their own disappearance, and as such it’s a powerful metaphor of Taylor Deupree’s oeuvre that have quietly moved from the rigidity of the grid to the ephemerality of the amorphous loop. The music is in flux, each tone ebbing and flowing but never coming back twice to the same point and over the course of the track, the elemental loops breathing life into the music never really congeal or dissolve away in the sonic aether. In the Deluxe Edition, the standard album comes with a 38min companion CD Thaw (Reprise), which is essentially a longer and pitched down version of Thaw, augmented with crystalline incidentals throughout. It perhaps helps reflecting even more strongly on the ontological theme of transition, whilst re-examining this very phenomenon in slow motion to possibly capture its elusive essence – an essence always receding as one tries to approach it.

    Penultimate track Shutter features the exquisite guitar work of Cameron Webb who has been a 12k regular for years now and comes here as a much welcome counterpoint to Deupree’s opaque droning clouds hanging over the landscape. Cameron’s playing is slow and liquid, floating between foreground and background as if bridging the gap between the two. Deupree utilizes a restrained number of layers and can thus examine the vivid expanse of the tone more thoroughly. Saying that, his drone work is so understated that it demands intense engagement from the listener to appreciate the sheer delicacy of its edifice, which, when cascading down within the feedback maze of delay pedals, turns the music into the floating hallucination of a dream long forgotten.

    Closer Sundown is perhaps Deupree’s best work to date and certainly a track that reveals its dark and austere beauty upon repeated listens. The hazy electronic strings hovering over a bed of static whilst long pads melt away on its surface are very much the anchor of the track but evolve in such a way that they seem to float like ink in water, volutes of colours undulating in slow motion. It’s the only time where the timbre of sound and the choice of a somewhat lower register give the music a sort of emotional weight and as such cast an oblique light upon the overall atmosphere. The resulting decayed obscurity brings a sheer sense of darkness and closure onto the whole album – something rarely heard (if ever) in Deupree’s music.

    Ultimately, how an artist evolves with time is maybe less the outcome of a conscious process and more the work of silent transformations operating in slow convective movements, well outside the framework of planned decisions. Taylor Deupree’s new album still takes root within the rich soil of his past oeuvre but manages to connect sideways with a dense rhizome of new creative possibilities. It thus demonstrates it’s always possible to dig further whilst twisting off on a tangent and as such Faint oscillates perfectly between forward motion and expansive stillness – the most delicate balance you could imagine.

    – Pascal Savy for Fluid Radio

  • Underexposed: Field (Beta)

    Underexposed: Field (Beta)

    This month I’m featured on Fluid Radio’s Underexposed gallery which features artists who work in both music and photography. The photographs I’ve chose to show here are images from the Faint photo sessions which did not make it to the final selection for the album. Additionally there is a piece of music, called “Field (Beta),” which I was working on for the album but ended up not including it.

    Please have a look and listen: UNDEREXPOSED: TAYLOR DEUPREE