Reykjavík Grapevine - 31.07.2015, Side 33

Reykjavík Grapevine - 31.07.2015, Side 33
33The Reykjavík GrapevineIssue 11 — 2015 MUSIC The opening track “Like A Bird” is well-named because it really does resemble the output of Mr. Oizo of Flat Beat fame. The blobby beats and tinkly top-end of “Throw It Away,” married to an insistent beat and strange squeezebox-esque sound, are a typically playful trick of Signout, aka Bjar- nar Jónsson. Meanwhile, “Hear My Sweet Orange” seems like it’s going to explode into The Prodigy’s “Charly” before swerv- ing into more ambient territory—the little trickster. A particular highlight is the more soni- cally experimental “Get Me Back,” a poly- rhythmic, angular exploration of move- ment and dynamics. If C3PO got pilled up, this is what he’d listen to, and break out some badass body popping. There’s oc- casionally a hint of menace, too: the pad sweeps and lonely bells of “Bad Girl” swell and eddy in and out of the speakers with those unsettling brass-glass overtones firmly in play. It’s not quite Enigma, but it’s a buzzing, bizarre cousin to those electric monks. In general, this is a collection of tracks that take full advantage of sonic and ste- reo spaces, providing rhythms and fre- quencies designed to flutter the heart, tickle the brain and get the feet itching. - JOE SHOOMAN A collaboration between Frosti Jónsson and Japa- nese ambient drone artist Nobuto Suda, this four- and-a-half track suite falls deeply into the territory of epictronica. It all begins with the water-trickling, expanding pad sounds of “Flumine,” the music yawning awake as a brand new day dawns with a swelling deli- cacy and heartbeat. “Blue Sky So Beautiful” follows, with its saw-tooth distortions, Ultravox-y rhythms and beckoning sub-bass; the sound of 4am in the chillout tent. “River Never Ends” melds some half-heard vocal samples with ethereal vox, tinkling chimes and half-arpeggios, drawing the listener deep inside the speakers as melodies and layers play around and about the stereo field and the song again rises in crescendo before a diminuendo toward a snow-tread ending. “Poems In The Sand” is as beauti- ful as the title; the gorgeousness is in the transience, a slow-building piece of music that has a hint of the 1980s about it. The experience comes to a much more ambient end with the ambitious “Glacier,” which draws on the elements that pre- ceded it to create a soundscape rich with the smooth surfaces of drawn- out, undulating chords and strewn with jagged-edged darting rhythms. Some records are like short story collections, with tracks linked by vir- tue only of a common author or style. This record is like a novel, which is not complete til the last page of the last song, the last fade of the dying chords a full stop that leaves a si- lence of absence, having wiped the world away. - JOE SHOOMAN Album Reviews Mr. Signout ‘I Got A Feeling’ facebook.com/Mr-Signout Tune in, turn up, sign out Bistro Boy & Nobuto Suda 'Rivers & Poems' www.bistroboy.net Supine sonics and sublime splashes

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