By Dan RaperThis album is available at the moment for free on the group’s website, and you’d be missing out if you didn’t take the time to grab it while it’s up there. This NYC-via-Oslo improvisational jazz duo has taken on board all sorts of influences in the past – from free jazz to classical to IDM electronica. So – a modern group. But the songs don’t sound tossed-off or improvisational in any way. Instead, there’s a strong sense of pop driving the rhythms and major tonalities that drift through the album. A Dream I Used to Remember is in this way even more accessible than their 2007 album Commuter Anthems, which occasionally veered towards atonality or electronica. Here, the atmosphere is completely organic, and rather resembles Grizzly Bear much of the time (that’s a great thing). Listen especially for “Canada”, a gorgeous, rattling accumulation of what might have been incidentally-discovered sound; or “Windswept”, more complex and more compelling, drawing out a looped syncopation into Western-inspired chug. Like Battles somehow blissed-out and sedated, Opsvik & Jennings start from a single rhythm and end up with an instrumental album of exquisite pop deconstruction.
15 June 2009Opsvik and Jennings - “A Dream I Used to Remember” Related Articles
Opsvik & Jennings: Commuter AnthemsBy Dan Raper03.Jul.07 This modest, instrumental album melds a plethora of influences into a complex web of experimental pop |
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Comments
Wonderful album. I dont really like jazz, but this music is perfect.
Comment by roma from russia — June 17, 2009 @ 5:24 am