The Music Box.
Entries about the music I like.
Talk Talk – Spirit of Eden
Of course it isn’t fair that if you were to split the world’s population in two halves, you would find 4 billion people, on the one hand, who give more than they’re given in return, and 4 billion, on the other, who are given more than they give. Of course it isn’t fair that there’s no real reason for this except the inherent unfairness of the world, what it means to be.
Slow & Steady // Music of the Week / WS 17-May-21
This week’s playlist has served as a soundtrack to my efforts to count my blessings, name them one by one, and stay the course, to just keep going: be it with Stranger Fiction, with work, or with life. It starts with the nightchill downtempo of A Forest Mighty Black’s Duo Trippin’ and ends with Kendrick Lamar telling you 'we’re going to be all right.'
Jon Hopkins — Immunity
Usually when you can't finish an album it's indicative of its failings. But in rare cases, it's indicative of a greatness that compels you to behave like some sort of character from a movie: hold your head in your hands, sink to your knees, stare at the sky, shake your head in disbelief, whisper wow through teary eyes. That's what happens with Immunity.
Ichiko Aoba — "gift" at Sogetsu Hall (Live)
This is an enchantingly beautiful acoustic folk performance by the Japanese artist, recorded live in a concert hall in Tokyo. What’s remarkable is its simplicity: one woman playing an acoustic guitar and singing.
Nicolas Jaar — Cenizas
Since his previous album Sirens, Nicolas Jaar has been particularly concerned with how electronic music can reflect his anxieties about the geopolitical future of the world. Cenizas appears to very much be a continuation of that exploration. It isn't bleak, but it is certainly concerned.
The Soft Pink Truth — Shall We Go On Sinning So That Grace May Increase
Great ambient albums don’t sit in the background, but are instead unforgettable. Be it Music For Airports, or Disintegration Loops, or The Tired Sounds of Stars of the Lid, they’re all hugely memorable. The same is true for Shall We Go On Sinning So That Grace May Increase, by The Soft Pink Truth, the pseudonym of Drew Daniel, one half of Matmos.
The Orb — Adventures Beyond The Underworld
The Orb's Adventures Beyond The Ultraworld is a classic of ambient house and electronica, it feels like floating through space with headphones on — tuned to the frequency of some alien radio station playing music from their home planet that mimics music inspired by human electronic music.