Jump to content
IGNORED

Proem - Enough Conflict

Rate this topic


Recommended Posts

1279294875_enough-conflict.jpg


1. Deep Sleeping Birds
2. Back To Fail
3. Guns.Knives.Lemons
4. jiittirrrrriii
5. She Never Cries
6. Fall Forward
7. Sudden Sharp Turns
8. Kalimba Jam
9. Enough Confict
10. Seafaring Velvet Waltz
11. Skulls
12. @ The Firey Abyss
13. A Short Bit Before You Go
14. Untitled



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SMA7yTj3XL4&feature=related

  Quote

In the ten years or so since he first appeared on the music scene, Proem’s Richard Bailey has contributed releases to quite a few labels,
from Hydrant and Monotonik to En:peg Digital and Nonresponse, but he has always returned to California-based n5MD, publishing four albums
through them, one of which still only available as a MiniDisc, harking back to the original nature of the label.

One of the main qualities of Bailey’s work is the way he maintains a fine balance between melody and abstraction, yet, his last album,
Till There’s No Breath, released last year on Nonresponse, investigated much dark terrains than usual. With its slow-moving pieces,
dense soundscapes and vast reverbs, the album wouldn’t have sounded too out of place on Miasmah. With Enough Conflict, Bailey
returns to more familiar grounds, weaving varied and contrasted soundscapes into sumptuous melodies to create a soundtrack
which ranges from moody glitch-ridden electronica (Deep Sleeping Birds, Jiittirrrriii, Sudden Sharp Turns) and intricate constructions
(Guns.Knives.Lemons, She Never Cries, Enough Conflict) to sumptuous atmospheric pieces (Kalimba Jam, @ The Firey Abyss, A Short Bit Before You Go).

While technology is undoubtedly at the core of his work, Bailey tempers that with occasional stabs at the piano, especially on the cinematic Fall Forward,
on which he combines acoustic and electronic sounds into a very effective emotionally-charged piece. The piano surfaces elsewhere in the album, but it
is very much Bailey’s rather exquisite sound design and strong vision of sound placement that dominate here. This is felt throughout, but it appears most
significantly on tracks such as album opener Deep Sleeping Birds, She Never Cries, Sudden Sharp Turns or the title track for instance, which see the man
juggling extremely delicate textures, often placed as part of the backdrop, yet still very much part of the fabric of these pieces, and more prominent
sound forms, resulting in very coherent compositions.

There is no clear progression or narrative through the record, although the tone changes toward the end from complex electronic structures to much more
ethereal and ambient forms, hinting at the sombre overtones of Bailey’s previous album. Instead, the mood changes continuously as Bailey alternates
between moody compositions, cinematic pieces and atmospheric tracks. While this occasionally interferes with any natural flow, it surprises the listener
by going against expectations and actually contributes to the album feeling fresh and vibrant.



proem
n5md Edited by Redruth
Link to comment
https://forum.watmm.com/topic/59588-proem-enough-conflict/
Share on other sites

  • 2 years later...
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×