Gareth Hardwick-Aversions
There was a good bit of hype around this record when it came out due to it being less of a Hardwick record and more of a reimagining of Hardwick pieces by some serious heavy hitters (Library Tapes, Machinefabriek, Steinbruchel, to name a few). There are a few new Hardwick pieces in here to be fair and they are plenty good. What is most impressive about this record though is how many people contributed remixes, yet the record sounds like a complete thought. It doesn't come across as individual thoughts, differing points of view, it's all so damn cohesive that it's borderline remarkable.
I can't say that this is drone in a pure form at all, but it certainly owes greatly to it. There is a lot of really expansive tones that control the album. They are met with a few piano chords, some string touches, but overall the tones just loom, kind of hover and wash out for a second, then quickly reemerge. The are two remarkable tracks on here. The first is Steinbruchel's remix of "Carnations" which sends at least 7 different tones all at once, each one panning from one side of the phones to the other, all in different sequences, and octaves, yet there is no dissonance, it's complete harmony, almost trance inducing from what is a half step or half second away from spinning into total chaos in lesser hands.
The second is the Apalusa remix of "David". Built around a low end drone that sweeps a full cycle every 8 seconds or so, Apalusa introduces some nice string sequences that float in and out every 10 seconds (about) but are offset from the initial drone so the entry is a bit different for each of the first 10+ cycles. Following the strings is nice wooden percussion and then muted bass drum that sounds like it is about a mile off. The whole thing is just completely enveloping powerful stuff. Around the 7 minute mark he introduces a subtle synth(?) line in a different scale to the whole mix and just sets the whole next few minutes in motion before the 8:45 (ish) mark when the synth build comes in, the drone is turned up, sounds are bouncing off each other, the point where one tone begins and another ends are just unimportant, and everything is transported somewhere else. This track, to me at least, embodies everything that is so right with drone based music. All that it can make you feel, the state of mind that you can be transported to, just like that Sudafed guy in the old commercials, remember him? With the medicine head, where his head would get all big and float off like a balloon, yeah, that's how that track makes me feel, and I approve.
Obviously there are some superb moments on here, but the Xela remix of "High Tension" is a seriously low point, also Hardwick's "Interlude" seems a bit out of place (in spite of being a really pretty piano piece). Would still very much recommend this as an entry point for drone based music as there is enough melody throughout that I think it can be enjoyed by a lot of different people, and recommend those into the less electronic/more organic drone at least give it a listen. 8.75/10