Florine

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (366 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 6   Total Length: 24:28

eMusic Review

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Jayson Greene

International Editor

04.27.09
An ineffably gorgeous EP reveling in the pure pleasures of the human voice
Label: Florid Recordings / Virtual

Just as you can never dip your foot twice into the same spot in a river, you can never hear a Julianna Barwick composition a second time. The uncannily poised Brooklyn performer builds her reverberant cathedrals of vocal harmony alone, piling her voice slowly and purposefully up in layers, and every time she sits down to record, it is a new experience. From a few wispy strands of melody, she erects massive, dreaming towers of sound; listening to her music is like witnessing an entire city rise from the ground and crumble back into dust. But when Barwick's foot comes up off the looping pedal and the last echo fades into the air, so does the piece you have just heard. You may still be sitting there spellbound, but Barwick has already moved on, to the next improvisation, the next show, the next moment. The methods might be constant, but the song never remains the same.

Which only makes this ineffably gorgeous six-song EP that much more precious. As a document of Barwick's trancelike approach to music-making, it is fascinating, a window into an intensely personal and spontaneous creative process that sometimes resembles a Zen spiritual practice. But taken at face… read more »

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perfect?

dat808

i don't see how this could be any better or more beautiful than it is. soaring, uplifting, and shows you just why it's okay to be alive and human in a messy world. couldn't recommend this more highly.

user avatar

evocative of mystical, invisible places

askheaven.now

i use Julianna's tracks to accompany the more ethereal movements to our dance labs such as the one we like to call "Walking Through Walls". Her expressions assist and accompany us in bringing forward our attention towards inner light-full-ness

user avatar

a few cents worth

laner

considering that equal temperament is many cents out of tune in various directions on every interval of the chromatic scale, I would rather hear someone sing a few cents out and closer to the overtone series than to a piano's rigid spacing. that's one of the beauties of the voice, it can still play in tune music! even if it sounds 'out-of-tune'.

user avatar

Fresh dreampop

franklin.weise

She sounds like an underground Enya for the 21st century. No matter if she's out of tune, as a reviewer noted - that just adds the right amount of weirdness and is part of her unique sound (Sigur Rós + Slowdive + Enya).

user avatar

Music for Purgatory

winkingjesii

it you let go and float along, very ethereal...if you try too hard, straight to hell

user avatar

This chorus don't bore us

coughie

Something different, which is just what I was looking for. 'Anjos' & 'Bode' are the highlights for me. Maybe not suitable for the anally retentive, cynics, or Taylor Swift fans (see 3 below).

user avatar

Intonation?

david.bugher

Anyone else notice that she is out of tune by a few cents on almost every loop? That kind of ruins the experience.

user avatar

this music is decent

ernie-c

the people patting themselves on the back for listening to this is what's annoying.

user avatar

Not for me

TitanII

As for Sunlight, Heaven and Cloudbank... I had a cat that sounded like that once...

user avatar

Cocteau Twins if they left their guitars at home

lmo

I like it, but really don't think it has the atmosphere and depth that makes a Cocteau Twins album so listen-able year after year.

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eMusic Features

Julianna Barwick

By Yancey Strickler

Julianna Barwick understands who she is as both a person and an artist, and she exudes it. A solo artist in every sense, her live performances consist of little more than her singing into a microphone, her voice rendered hollow and enormous by reverb and effects. She sings just one measure at a time, some fragment of a melody like a car radio heard from miles away, and then she builds on it, recording the… more »

They Say All Media Guide

It’s not every day someone comes up with a truly new, undeniably distinctive sound. Certainly not after several decades’ worth of restlessly inventive, electronically aided aural explorers have canvassed seemingly every imaginable sonic and textural frontier in the broadly defined realms of ambient, experimental, and electro-acoustic art music. But that’s exactly what Julianna Barwick has achieved; first with her 2006 album Sanguine, and even more boldly and assuredly on this release, which is billed as an EP even though its predecessor was equally concise. Barwick’s arrival at such a refreshingly original sonic approach is in itself a remarkable feat; that the sound she’s developed also happens to be instantly arresting and utterly beautiful is truly a cause for wonder. The sound in question, essentially the only thing we hear on the whole of Florine (with a few small exceptions), consists of a densely layered array of Barwick’s own vocals — murmuring alto hums; full-throated high-register vocalizing (usually wordless), and an even higher, unearthly siren’s peals — always heavily reverbed, and massaged to erase almost any trace of attack and to produce a long, lingering decay. The effect is a blurry, impossibly ephemeral build-up of sound that, despite its palpably human point of origin, feels neither natural nor artificial, but rather more elusive: supernatural, otherworldly, divine; strange and unfamiliar, and yet comforting and reassuring. Even without the apt, unmistakable imagery conjured by Florine’s song titles — “Sunlight, Heaven,” “Cloudbank,” “The Highest,” “Anjos” (“Angels” in Portuguese) — it would be hard to miss the fundamentally airy, celestial nature of this music, which has the billowing, pillowy softness of a cloud and a haunting, eerie beauty evocative of an angelic choir — keeping in mind that angels are something decidedly other than human. There’s a corresponding (if equally abstracted) spiritual quality to the loop-based, loosely structured compositions themselves: solemn and stately, at least at first, with simple (mantra- or hymn-like, perhaps) elusive melodic fragments repeated cyclically, gradually accreting density and sometimes near-rapturous volume, and then lapsing again into silence. Save for the interlude “Anjos,” which swaps the typical all-but-a cappella model for a prominent instrumental undercarriage of glassine piano rills, these six tracks all take a largely similar form, but they create a considerable range of moods and effects via small variations in texture, harmony, and pacing. Florine may be brief, but it is in no way fragmentary or incomplete: this is a thorough, thoughtful, and mesmerizing fleshing-out of a potent and fascinating musical idea. – K. Ross Hoffman

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