ElectroWorld

SaturmZlide - BeVor, Album [16/04/12]

« Older   Newer »
  Share  
Luca EW
view post Posted on 27/3/2012, 16:53 by: Luca EW     +1   +1   -1
Avatar

Senior Member

Group:
Administrator
Posts:
22,315
Reputation:
0
Location:
Novara / Milano

Status:


SaturmZlide - BeVor
(Hands Productions)



Tracklist
01. Rainlands
02. El Door Rado RMX
03. Powerplant
04. Bionic Ocean I (Blue Engines)
05. Interceptor
06. Girl Under Glas
07. World Time Crash
08. Half of the Planet (Spiritual Mix)
09. The Sky

Release Date
16th April 2012



Press Release
“BeVor” is German for “before” - but just what does that mean in respect to this album? In some ways, this CD is rather an “after” - Hamburg’s Alexander Marco finally releases a full SaturmZlide album, after nearly two decades of musical activities in various bands, genres and styles, and after a well-received CD-R on Fich-Art in 2009.
Anyways, Alex is an atypical musician, following a late vocation to the call of Industrial and Rhythm’n’Noise, who brings along the experience of his past musical endeavours - and lets them shine through in his compositions.
“Bevor” is a somewhat enigmatic crossbreed of musical currents that make for a strong blend. The overall essence is the rhythm, no doubt about that, punchy and groove-infected, making this album a tight-knit unit despite the many different ideas which have been put into practice.
So, let’s roll with it: “Rainlands” is a moody intro with tribal downbeats and a steady build-up. Then starts the Rhythm Noise section of the album with the club recommendation “El Door Rado Rmx” – a relentless noise groove and a commanding vocal sample do the job proper! “Power Plant” and “Interceptor” combine distorted rhythms with strong atmospheric breaks, while inbetween those “Bionic Ocean I” surprises with it’s beatless, experimental atmosphere.
“Girl Under Glas” then adopts a different line: Hard beats with a broken edge and full-on modern electronica sounds, an update of the style you shouldn’t call IDM. “World Time Crash” and “Half Of the Planet” appear in similar shape with the beats more on the straight side though.
The album then closes with a magnum opus, a nearly 25 minute suite in seven movements entitled “The Sky” that revisits all the styles and elements from the album and melts them with new ideas even more out of bounds, with a psychedelic atmosphere being the foundation stone upon which this monumental composition is erected. It starts with a straight rhythm track, plunges into atmospheric sounds; and then come in some guests: The 3rd part (“Drifting”) features the guitar playing of some Andreas Hellriegel, giving it a prog rock flavour, while the 4th part (“Timerider”) is a bouncing rhythm track, featuring Industrial veteran Philipp Münch. The following parts slow down considerably, preparing the listener to bid farewell to this musical trip.
So, “BeVor”, before what? You get the strong impression, and you may well hope, this “before” is the first step before a lot more to come – quality always comes out on top, and this debut (if you may call it that) is surely a top pick!

Links
Artist: Facebook
Label: Website | Facebook

Edited by Luca EW - 2/6/2014, 19:44
 
Web  Top
0 replies since 27/3/2012, 16:53   74 views
  Share