|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Sval

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (26 ratings)
Sval album cover
01
Valldal
7:34 $0.99
02
Sus
6:35 $0.99
03
Juv
1:12 $0.99
04
Byge
1:18 $0.99
05
Demring
3:35 $0.99
06
Skygge
5:23 $0.99
07
Dis
8:36 $0.99
08
Skumring
6:34 $0.99
09
Glimt
7:06 $0.99
10
Vidde
8:00 $0.99
11
Skodde
5:55 $0.99
12
Dunkel
2:51 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 64:39

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

Write a Review 2 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Hooked

Pieter

Wasn't in the mood for more "soundscapes" but this is to good to miss.

user avatar

quite amazing

christopher.barraza

Sval is remarkable. Electronic and organic at once, it thrums with cold synthetic samplings, but still hints at nature. The album is a seamless whole; the tracks morph from one to the next without the listener even noticing. Highly recommended.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Following up on the debut album Sart (2007, also released by 12k), Sval is a gorgeous, entrancing work of ambient electronica. In the course of 12 tracks that (mostly) segue and (all) flow as a continuous piece, Sval takes us through a lot of pastures and styles, while retaining a commanding level of cohesion and consistence, thanks to a sound palette that never leaves the blue spectrum. Feelings of winter, wind, wide spaces, and cold prevail — like watching light play off snow-covered landscapes. The album starts in a vintage German electronic music style, but moves occasionally toward more beat-driven chill-out ambient electronica here, experimental ambient and dub there, and Icelandic territory on one particular track (“Dis,” with its guest vocalist Elisabeth Lahr, strongly evokes the soundworld of Jóhann Jóhannsson). Rune Sagevik and Jostein Dahl Gjelsvik manage to blend the listener-friendly straightforwardness of ambient electronica with the genre-pushing edginess of a more experimental artistic approach. Parts of Sval may sound a little “easy” for a release on 12k, but behind the occasional beat or melody lies rich experimental drone textures. In fact, the album could be described as a cross between Klaus Schulze and Lawrence English (especially his For Varying Degrees of Winter). It’s a perfect piece of work, the kind that can become a gate to welcome new listeners into the field of experimental ambient music. – François Couture

more »