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Lie In Light

by

Cloudland Canyon

 
Lie In Light
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Avg: 3.5 (28 ratings)

Ladies and Gentlemen, we are floating in space.

  • We Say...

    If the nod-and-wink title "Krautwerk" wasn't a big enough clue, the album opener's deployment of shortwave radio frequencies and bands of ever-present, fluctuating drones should leave no doubts surrounding Cloudland Canyon's methodology. By the time the squiggles of jam-session guitar and hypnotic bass cut in, the aural senses are being thoroughly bombarded — and that's before the Teutonic chanting strikes up.

    Collaborative duo Simon Wojan and Kip Uhlhorn have absorbed and re-shaped their '70s influences to create a set of dreamy, undulating soundscapes. It's tempting to dip straight into a collection of oceanic imagery or intergalactic metaphors to describe their approach, and indeed there are moments where otherworldly overtones are impossible to ignore. The use of theremin throughout "White Woman" provides a typically sci-fi vibe, as do the rotating electronics on the amusingly named "Scheisse, Schatzi, Auf Wiedersehen!," which are akin to an investigative flyby from a squadron of flying saucers. Yet it's the skillful manipulation of distinctly earthen feedback — particularly on title track "Lie in Light" — which truly engages mind and body, providing beauty through chaos in a fashion reminiscent of zero-tempo shoegazers.

    Elsewhere, the repeated appearance of transmission-style loops feel symbolic of exploratory communications being emitted into the atmosphere. This affords the engrossing layers of instrumentation a crucial sense of expansion, where otherwise they may have become stifling. As the churning groove of "Mothlight Part 1" closes with the intonation that "sometimes it's hard to come home again," it seems clear that Cloudland Canyon's trip is not one of self-absorption, but of continual travel and distance; through the vast, open plains of low-pitched static and far beyond.

  • They Say...

    Going through Cloudland Canyon's first three releases -- the full-length Requiems der Nature 2002-2004, the EP Silver Tongued Sisyphus, and the single, half-hour "single" Exterminating Angel -- it's easy to see the development from their early electronic, near ambient works that rely on Moebius and Rodelius to the more psychedelic displays of Neu! and Guru Guru with their own brand of near-silly pop woven into the fabric. Two years later we come to Lie in Light, a seven-cut full-length on Kranky that tosses this all into the cauldron and more, much more, for a frothy yet meandering brew of retro-psych rock sounds plus Motorik and kosmiche from the German scene of the '70s. Look no further than "Krautwerk," the album's opening track. A drone set up by a church organ, synth, and God knows what else commences the cut, then gives way a minute later to an early Kraftwerk-ian groove with Michael Rother and Neu! on the rhythms and Can's sense of guitar freak drama. While there are some drum fills, Cloudland Canyon's Kip Uhlhorn and Simon Wojan add layers of bass, screaming fuzzed guitar, chanted vocals, harmonium, fuzzed over pulsing basslines, sine wave generators, and Kelly Uhlhorn adding her voice to the mix as another droning presence with her repeated recitation of "Lie in Light..." as cheesy synths on stun soar above the mix, swooping in and out as some vocal screams à la Mani Neumeier burst in about halfway through, screaming something indecipherable. Sure, you've heard it all before, but it works beautifully; in fact, one wishes the track would simply never exhaust itself. It's easy to get lost there in that bath of sound. "White Woman" begins with a majestic synth drone met by guitars and other instrument sounds and feedback (controlled to the nth degree) participate in setting the scene for a modal chant of words so dumb they'll make you laugh. (Don't listen to them if you want to like the cut.) The music is deeply reminiscent of Planet Gong calling down the playful cosmic gods in one of their extended interludes. Speaking of Gong, Steve Hillage's albums Rainbow Dome Musick and Green were obvious references here, but more for the warm, bubbling synthesizer sounds in "Heme." The seamless construction of the album is beautiful, where one track simply bleeds into another and the dream goes on. That said, it's also the problem. All of this adaptation and fiddling with textures while slipping the imitation of one long-gone legend's music into another one's without an individual sense of identity can be a little too much. Sure, lots of acts do this, but they leave some kind of trademark or stamp on the method to their madness. Cloudland Canyon leaves none. It may indeed be their M.O. but there is little to distinguish this record from its more legendary predecessors except as imitation and assimilation to the point of spacy blur and white out. Lie in Light is a decent listen, at times even an excellent one, but it's utterly temporal: there isn't anything here to stand out in one's memory when it's over.

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