下载 [ambient, art pop, classical, jazz, prog-rock] (2021) Charlotte Greve, Wood River, Cantus Domus – Sediments We Move [FLAC] [DarkAngie] torrent - GloDLS
登录
用户名:
密码:
记住我:
[注册]
[恢复帐户]
Friends
Hack Storm
Friendly Site

FTU Apps
Friendly site

Get Into Way
Friendly site

KaranPC
Friendly site

OneHack
Friendly site

IGGGames
Friendly site

洪流细节 "[ambient, art pop, classical, jazz, prog-rock] (2021) Charlotte Greve, Wood River, Ca..."

[ambient, art pop, classical, jazz, prog-rock] (2021) Charlotte Greve, Wood River, Ca...

To download this torrent, you need a BitTorrent client: Vuze or BTGuard
下载这洪流
Download using Magnet Link

健康:
种子: 31
懒鬼: 4
已完成: 683 
上次检查: 06-01-2022 19:20:10

上传者的声誉点 : 8167





Write a Review for the Uploader:   10   Say Thanks with one good review:
Share on Facebook
Details
name:[ambient, art pop, classical, jazz, prog-rock] (2021) Charlotte Greve, Wood River, Ca...
说明:
(2021) Charlotte Greve, Wood River, Cantus Domus – Sediments We Move  



Review:
Before composing the seven-part suite Sediments We Move, Charlotte Greve mapped it out. The German-born, Brooklyn-based composer, singer, and saxophonist scribbled and sketched shapes, schematics, and musical charts. She plotted the album song-by-song, listing out each track’s core instruments, audible accents, and “tempo/vibe.” In her stack of notes and doodles, Greve pursued a philosophy of sediment, attempting to translate its various physical states into musical composition. Recorded with Greve’s band Wood River and the Berlin choir Cantus Domus, Sediments We Move carries an air of obsession, every measure committed to the theme. By definition, sediment is matter transported by wind or water and deposited back to earth. Over time, it may accumulate on the ocean floor, or consolidate into microscopic tiers of rock. Greve is intrigued by these phases, as well as the incremental change between them. She conveys the transformation with fluctuating tempos and a blend of genres. A stirring composite of choral hymns, progressive rock, and free jazz, Sediments We Move is rich in detail but never overwrought. Instead, it presents a fluid cycle of matter as sound: building, dissipating, and crystalizing once again. Greve was driven by the reality that any object is a collection of particles, capable of gathering and dispersing. She considered the construct of family: how it is a whole, but also made up of interconnected yet individual members. In conversations with her grandmother, she noted the intergenerational similarities between relatives. Greve eventually enlisted her older brother, Julius Greve, to pen lyrics for Sediments We Move, maintaining the theme of family in a literal sense. The knowledge of this process makes the songs more tactile. You can imagine their construction—experience the layers as they accumulate, like the sediments that inspired Greve. Her interpretation of the sedimentary process is formal; though many of the instrumental parts are structurally simple, they layer to form grand obelisks of sound. Remarkably, the album credits list only five types of instruments: saxophone, synthesizer, guitar, bass, and drums. Greve’s lithe voice and alto often curve along the surface, but Cantus Domus’ massive, spectral melodies provide the most drama. The choir constantly changes shape: On “Part IV,” their vowels are elongated and their frictionless harmonies glide through the atmosphere. Greve’s saxophone ripples in the foreground, anchoring their voices to terra firma. On “Part V,” the choir fractures into dizzying, staccato measures, their incessant “la la las” buzzing like hornets. Neither state is permanent; what once was rock will again become silt. Sediments We Move is more interested in transition than discrete forms. “Think of layers as always present but not always visible in their entirety,” Greve wrote on one page of her notebook. At times, the album’s faint layers are masked by heartier sounds: jagged guitar, pummeling drums, synthesizer sheen. But occasionally, Greve peels back these elements to reveal underlying activity. Toward the end of “Part III,” the choir and rhythm section become sluggish and eventually cut out altogether. What’s left is a nest of whispers, rustling like restless insects. Have they been there all along, hissing obscure messages? The words are only intelligible with the aid of a lyric sheet: “Molten crust, inner core, a salted rain drop.” The consonants stack up, light and crisp. Even Greve’s leanest passages contain strata to sift through. The album completes its own cycle: The first and final parts are carried by the divine melodies of Cantus Domus. In “Part I,” the sopranos sing: “The sediment forms, no matter what, what matters….” (The repetition of the word “matter” feels like an inside joke.) At the end of “Part VI,” male vocalists join in a velvety lower register: “As sediments, we move,” they repeat. It’s as if the same particles have drifted down the album and, in this low, tranquil place, come momentarily to rest.





Track Listing:
1.Part 1 08:18
2.Part 2 05:57
3.Part 3 07:37
4.Interlude 06:12
5.Part 4 08:31
6.Part 5 07:06
7.Part 6 08:48


Media Report:
Genre: ambient, art pop, classical, jazz, prog-rock
Country: USA
Format: FLAC
Format/Info: Free Lossless Audio Codec, 16-bit PCM
Bit rate mode: Variable
Channel(s): 2 channels
Sampling rate: 44.1 KHz
Bit depth: 16 bits
YouTube 视频:
类别:FLAC
语言:Aucune/N/D
总大小:324.13 MB
哈希信息:4C76B4DA78AE79441849880D721756D8E67E9C5E
增加:DarkAngie VIPMusic Lover
加入的日期:2022-01-04 00:47:35
洪流地位:Torrent Verified


评级:Not Yet Rated (Log in to rate it)


Tracker:
udp://bt1.archive.org:6969/announce

这个洪流也有备份的纤夫
URL播种机懒鬼已完成
udp://bt1.archive.org:6969/announce000
udp://inferno.demonoid.is:3391/announce000
udp://movies.zsw.ca:6969/announce81181
http://tracker.files.fm:6969/announce61174
udp://tracker.opentrackr.org:1337/announce172328


文件列表: 





Comments
无可奉告,仍将过帐