Systems/Layers

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (122 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 19   Total Length: 62:13

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Complex, transcendent

timothy.d.hill

I have to admit to bias here - I'm a huge Rachel's fan. But this is head and shoulders above even their best work: more complex than most of their earlier music, it also stays with you longer. One of the few albums I'm pretty sure I'm still going to be listening to 10, 20, and 30 years from now.

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Haunting...

jisherw

Such a great album. I really like almost all of the songs but my two favorites are "Water from the same source" and "Esperanza" they are both so captivating!

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Tracks truncated

Objectman

This album has split, truncated tracks, so unless you want the lot - forget it. I downloaded tk3 which abruptly cut off at end. Deeply saddened by such obvious micro payment scraping.

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Un-f***-ing believable

senatorbobdole

This is the record i always thought Rachel's could make. It's so fantastic, start to finish, and each track leads into the next track perfectly. It's this great mix of low-fi/indie, classical, and ambient/field recordings. I never tire of hearing this cd, and actually think they could never really top it. Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful.

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Beautiful

sevenbaby87

The title says it all. Wonderful album. I love the work of Rachel's.

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amazingly rich

Graham-Roc

This is, without question, the best album that Rachel's has put out to date. The songs on this album are rich, brooding, and incredibly structured / coherent. It is best to listen to Systems/Layers (at least, at first) as a single composition. The more-dissonant tracks, while somewhat difficult, are part of the whole. Please, do not cherry-pick tracks from this album. You will find a few songs that you appreciate more than others, but the process of discovery is incredibly important here. This album will encourage you to suffer a bit as you learn what you enjoy, and without this (minimal) pain and frustration, it's hard to appreciate how good this album is. Don't listen casually at first. Study this music, and soon you will begin to understand it and reap great rewards.

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Great music

eieio

There is something about this disc that is very creative and fresh. Parts of it reminds me of the Bill Nelson (of BeBop Deluxe) .

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hooray

tania

I can't much describe Rachel's music, but it's awesome. this album is fairly eclectic. Some tracks will remind you of pieces from their earlier records, while others branch in entirely new and unexpected directions. This is a great leap from Selenography, I think. Check it out!

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They Say All Media Guide

The experimental avant-pop trio Rachel’s fifth release is a collaborative dance/theater piece with the New York ensemble Siti Company. The predominantly instrumental Systems/Layers follows eight characters through one day of their lives in the city, relying on urban field recordings and the distinctive subway chamber music of the group to tell these stories. The melancholy strings and plaintive piano on the beautiful “Water From the Same Source” weep with a reverence for their subject that permeates the record as a whole. These mini-films feel like rainy mornings, and the listener can almost smell the diner coffee while hurrying through pockets of cigarette smoke and bakery truck exhaust. The quietly frantic “Arterial” descends into a swirl of spoken billboard ads before replacing its frenzied piano with cellos on the taut “even/odd.” Carousels and ice cream trucks provide the backdrop for curbside greetings, and buzzing electrical poles warm pigeons outside the day shelter as the band nears the end of the workday. Imaginary credits roll as the solo piano album closer “NY Snow Globe” gently unlocks the front door of your apartment, leaving a trail of footprints that beg to be retraced. Like David Byrne’s underrated orchestral epic The Forest or Philip Glass’ Koyaanisqatsi, Systems/Layers is cerebral and human, transporting you without insulting your intelligence. – James Christopher Monger

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