Hands In The Dark
Razen - Blue Rot LP
Regular price
€19.99
Razen are back with a second album on Hands In The Dark, follow up to last year's release Robot Brujo.
On Blue Rot, the band introduces a softer palette and a new quartet, as the core duo of multi-instrumentalists Brecht Ameel and Kim Delcour is augmented with new band member Berlinde Deman on Serpent and guest Thomas Bloch on Glassharmonica and crystal Baschet.
Drawing inspiration from late 19th-Century Symbolist art, 'Blue Rot' summons heartbreak and the perils of isolation in languid, hypnotic modes, laying bare the beauty of stillness, the solitary gaze at drifting clouds.
Notwithstanding its hushed and melancholy tone colours, the album provides the listener with the customary disorientation, instrument clashes and tension between stasis and slow-moving development so firmly entrenched in the sound world of Razen.
These five improvised pieces offer another testimony to the uniqueness of this outfit, their esoteric ancient-modern approach and to their dedication to explore new ground on each release while managing to sound only like themselves.
Notes
Brecht Ameel - prepared harmonium and monochord
Kim Delcour - recorders and reeds
Berlinde Deman - serpent
Thomas Bloch - glassharmonica and cristal Baschet
Mastering by Stephan Mathieu
Cutting by Andreas [Lupo] Lubich
Artwork ("Mollis, Poppy, Lily”) by Oona Libens
Design by Floriane Miny
On Blue Rot, the band introduces a softer palette and a new quartet, as the core duo of multi-instrumentalists Brecht Ameel and Kim Delcour is augmented with new band member Berlinde Deman on Serpent and guest Thomas Bloch on Glassharmonica and crystal Baschet.
Drawing inspiration from late 19th-Century Symbolist art, 'Blue Rot' summons heartbreak and the perils of isolation in languid, hypnotic modes, laying bare the beauty of stillness, the solitary gaze at drifting clouds.
Notwithstanding its hushed and melancholy tone colours, the album provides the listener with the customary disorientation, instrument clashes and tension between stasis and slow-moving development so firmly entrenched in the sound world of Razen.
These five improvised pieces offer another testimony to the uniqueness of this outfit, their esoteric ancient-modern approach and to their dedication to explore new ground on each release while managing to sound only like themselves.
Notes
Brecht Ameel - prepared harmonium and monochord
Kim Delcour - recorders and reeds
Berlinde Deman - serpent
Thomas Bloch - glassharmonica and cristal Baschet
Mastering by Stephan Mathieu
Cutting by Andreas [Lupo] Lubich
Artwork ("Mollis, Poppy, Lily”) by Oona Libens
Design by Floriane Miny