|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Review

0

The Field, Cupid’s Head

  • 2013
  • Label: Kompakt

House music for the ears, not the body

Now on his fourth album, Sweden’s Axel Willner, aka The Field, occupies a unique niche in electronic music. He’s signed to techno label Kompakt, but his sound is informed as much by rock — the ear-bending, sensual feedback of My Bloody Valentine and the Jesus and Mary Chain, for instance — as electronic music; the only thing missing are lyrics, though his songs are full of carefully textured vocal samples.

Cupid’s Head continues Willner’s exploration of the fertile common ground between shoegaze and the wide-open spaces of Manuel Göttsching, or the post-acid house Wild Pitch mixes from Chicago’s DJ Pierre. Pierre, in a way, provides Willner’s template, with his layers of subtle keyboard sounds, treated vocals and percussion, the overall effect being an ever-ascending aural illusion of spiralling sounds. Willner’s samples, however, are microcosmic, sometimes less than a bar in length, and they stack up to provoke a sense of dizzying abandon and release.

On “Black Sea,” Willner creates an unrelenting pulse out of a wheezing latticework keyboards, glued together by kick drum and a jagged bassline. The harshly-affected female vocal sounds simultaneously angelic, triumphant and pleading on “No. No…,” with the visceral church organ — hellish rather than heavenly — adding to the assembly-line percussion to create music that is truly unsettling.

While remaining anchored to the traditional house tropes — kick-drum, hi-hats, snare drum, bass — Willner has built a baroque, 21st-century aesthetic. This is house music, alright, but for the ears, not the body.

Genres: Electronic   Tags: The Field

Comments 0 Comments

eMusic Radio

6

Kicking at the Boundaries of Metal

By Jon Wiederhorn, eMusic Contributor

As they age, extreme metal merchants often inject various non-metallic styles into their songs in order to hasten their musical growth. Sometimes, as with Alcest and Jesu, they develop to the point where their original… more »

View All

eMusic Activity

  • 10.05.13 Like those electro remixes of Edwin Sharpe, Ra Ra Riot, Temper Trap and others? Meet the culprits, Little Daylight: http://t.co/X0Zc3IQHqQ
  • 10.05.13 To wrap up his takeover duties, Moby asked us to interview @TheFlamingLips' Wayne Coyne. We talked about The Terror: http://t.co/lMYx0Yh52l
  • 10.04.13 She's out of jail and already back to making music - Lauryn Hill released a new single this morning: http://t.co/1Nnqkja7K0
  • 10.04.13 We talk with takeover editor Moby about finding inspiration in Marianne Faithfull, living in LA, and not touring. http://t.co/Ii2LC02JDG
  • 10.04.13 Since going solo, @MissFrankieRose keeps taking risks with her lush indie pop. Download "Sorrow" FREE today: http://t.co/6NJmwQPZRH