On Matador (no
relation to the label), Arms and Sleepers combine live sounds and samples to
craft lush dreamscapes of Portishead-like eeriness and ambient beauty.Don't listen to this album while
driving at night - you'll likely veer into oncoming traffic.Otherwise, go ahead and let the waves
of trance and transcendence wash over you.
The key to trance has always been the drums.Pianos, synths, and the occasional
melodica provide the melodies on Matador,
but the drums keep the ear invested.Arms and Sleepers has a knack for blending the ‘crunch' of live drums
with the ‘click' of electronic beats.The result is a digital/analog hybrid, especially effective on "Kino"
and "Simone", boasting all the physical warmth of real percussion along with
the precision of coded beats (making a nice ‘cushion' to rest your head on
while samples and synths fly above your dreaming mind).
Collaboration was a significant part of Matador.Notable invites include Philip Caspian of Caspian (QRO interview),
as well as Ben Shepard and Catherine Worsham of Uzi & Ari.The latter pair combine for a vocal
duet on "Architekt" that might be the star of the album.Arms and Sleepers is less about pop
hooks and more about the gradual layering of sonic textures, but you'll be
hard-pressed to forget the simple and seductive piano motif on "Architekt"
anytime soon.
The album ends with "Orly", a quiet minute-long benediction
that moves past you softly, briefly.Like a ship passing in the fog, or like that floating plastic bag from American
Beauty.It's a good metaphor for Matador in general.Arms and Sleepers ask you to stop, slow down, and pay attention to the
moment.The repetition of trance
is designed to hold onto that moment long enough for you to realize you don't
want it to depart.Then it slowly
withdraws, and you are alone.
I hate to break it to you, but you listened to this album backwards. Your final paragraph states that the album ends with Orly, which you relate to the metaphor for the album, is the record's opener. Perhaps if you stopped, slowed down and paid attention to the track listing like Arms and Sleepers supposedly ask you too, you may have realised this.
I know that music reviewing must be a terribly difficult job but I can't say I have much faith in the opinion of a reviewer who can't even get the listening order right.
Anon E. Moss ,
March 08, 2010 @ 16:33
+1
Backwards? Well, I suppose that's a possibility. I simply review the album that the band sends me. Usually they send a file with all the tracks in the correct order, but sometimes I guess there are foul ups.
I can't imagine who would get this jazzed up over what amounted to a pretty damn positive review. We like A&S here and have done a hell of a lot to represent them well recently, an interview, show review, and we're always shouting them out on the twitter.
I hope this is a nutso fan, and not anyone else. Because anyone else besides a nutso fan would be way out of line.