Near the Parenthesis returns with "Music for the Forrest Concourse". Tim Arndt's fourth album for n5MD. Perhaps becoming a theme, Arndt again uses the concept of place as the muse for an album. An approach adopted with 2008's "L'Eixample" where Barcelona served as the inspiration. Time, however, is the inspiration for the current release and as a result Music for the Forrest Concourse is more imaginary. Arndt wrote this collection of music 'for dusk, for open air, for sitting down, and for breathing in. It is music for staring upwards and listening attentively or casually.' However you choose to listen Music for the Forrest Concourse will provide many rewards.
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texturaAnyone still unconvinced that electronic music can convey emotion need only listen to Tim Arndt's fourth Near The Parenthesis album for n5MD, Music For The Forest Concourse, to be convinced otherwise. Arndt has an uncanny talent for maximizing the emotional side of his material, with the result serenading tracks brimming with showers of synthetic sparkle and plaintive piano melodies. With its elegant piano playing wrapped in swathes of electronics, the album opener “Good Evening” proves a particularly good exemplar of the style, as does “Inertia (Stay Right Here),” where equally lovely piano playing meanders through a garden of electronic delights. Generally speaking, the hour-long collection is a predictably stirring set from the San Francisco-based producer, who first gained attention with his 2006 release Go Out and See on the Canadian imprint Music Made By People. In Arndt's own words, Music For The Forest Concourse is “for dusk, for open air, for sitting down, and for breathing in. It is music for staring upwards and listening attentively or casually.” Though such a description emphasizes the music's calming dimension, his material can also work up a fair degree of intensity, as tracks such as “Pollarding Trees” and “Diffused” make clear (the latter could even be called shoegaze, if a guitar-less variant of it). In almost every case, Arndt gets the job done in about five minutes' time, so the album moves efficiently from one track to the next. He also brings immense craft to the construction of his multi-layered settings; though each features a wealth of sounds—beats, strings, flickering electronics, an occasional voice recording—, a sense of clarity pervades, in large part due to the central presence of the piano. How fitting it is that the quietly rapturous lullaby with which the album ends, “Good Night,” should be so strongly anchored by the instrument
nowlikephotographsThe use of parenthetical clauses is often reserved for the conveyance of off-handed wisps of information – bits perhaps not absolutely integral to an idea or statement, but rather augmentative or pleasantly illuminative. Musical clauses can be parenthetical as well; textures ebb and flow from the sonic aether of one’s surroundings, as if gradually dusting off a hidden door with their timbre. An evening springtime stroll accompanied by Music for the Forest Concourse, the tertiary release from San Francisco’s Near the Parenthesis, can easily illustrate this concept. Several tracks, including “Good Evening,” “Pollarding Trees,” and “Within an Orbit” all display masterful interweaving of piano lines with warm, marmalade electronics and backgrounds of glazed ambience. “Inertia (Stay Right Here)” is self-explanatory in sound, as the track’s introduction gently persuades the listener to cease all movement, only to create inertia of its own later on. Contributing admirably to the catalog of n5MD Records, Near the Parenthesis has once again crafted an album of delicious and seductively thoughtful electronica (Music for the Forest Concourse)
Paper BlogNear The Parenthesis est le projet d'un californien, Tim Arndt, qui propose via le label de musiques électroniques ambiant n5MD sa quatrième réalisation. A l'écoute des morceaux de Music For The Forest Concourse on semble évoluer dans une forme de post-rock électronique assez attractive. Il est facile de décrocher assez vite sur ce genre de musique qui peuvent rapidement devenir plus assommantes qu'envoûtantes. Tim Arndt parvient par un travail rigoureux d'adjonctions sonores et de samples vocaux discrets à apporter cette petite touche qui fait que l'attention de l'auditeur reste en permanence éveillée. L'album précédent avait pour thématique un lieu : Barcelone . Celui-ci est inspiré par le temps de manière générale : un moment au crépuscule, un temps pris juste pour s'asseoir, un autre pour respirer. L'effet est assez magique : l'écoute de l'album est non seulement apaisante mais nous emmène aussi dans une sorte de dimension temporelle où les choses semblent évoluer de manière tellement plus tranquilles que dans notre quotidien. Agréable et véritablement bienfaisant
de:bugTim Arndt, der Mann hinter diesem schrulligen Projektnamen, hat bei mir im Herzen immer ein Zimmer frei. Dauerreservierung, ohne wenn und aber. Zwei Jahre hat er uns auf sein neues Album warten lassen, eigentlich frech. Und doch: Es sei ihm verziehen. Die neuen Tracks, die immer noch schwerstens Elektronika-verliebt sind, den Zeiten, als diese Art von Sound sehr en vogue war, deutlich in hörbar in Moll nachtrauern, kreisen so kongenial um das Piano als wiederkehrendes Moment, dass einfach alles passt. Minimale Arrangements sind Arndts Sache nicht, immer noch nicht, im Gegenteil. Bis unter die Decke schichtet er Melodie, Geräusch, Schlagwerk und Gefühl. Und dann plustert sich alles auf und sackt erschöpft in sich zusammen. Enorm bunt
Exclaim!Music For The Forest Concourse is a cushy, warm collection of subtly glitchy, expansive ambient. In his fourth release, Near Parenthesis (aka San Francisco, CA-based producer Tim Arndt) plies melodic keys through both calming and stirring atmospherics. The digitally enhanced organic vibes and emotive soundscape, replete with plenty of whirring synth-grain and glitch, envelope haunting piano sonnets as each track swells and crests with an oceanic quality. Reminiscent of label-mates AIM or Loess, Near Parenthesis is less cinematic than the former and less experimental than the later, but can still lay claim to a unique balance of intensity and fragility. Bolder than background music and not entirely beat-less, Music For The Forest Concourse frees the term "gripping ambient" from any oxymoronic notions.
headphone commuteGentle swells of piano, synth pads, and electronic percussion fill my room from the very first track of the latest album of Tim Arnd’s Near The Parenthesis project. On his fourth album for n5MD, titled Music For The Forest Concourse, Arndt explores meditative passages crafted specifically “for dusk, for open air, for sitting down, and for breathing in. It is music for staring upwards and listening attentively or casually”. Falling somewhere between modern classical, emotional electronica, and conscious sky gazing, the music of this San Francisco based producer evokes an up-lifting feeling in each near-five-minute-long track. Perfect for afternoon walks, open window car rides through the country, and for lazy Sunday morning coffee sips. It is especially nice to hear Arndt’s very personal piano work embedded in the background of each track, appropriately ending the album with the lullaby, “Goodnight”. Over the course of an hour in twelve loosely wrapped tracks, like random gifts left on the porch to be discovered by your sleepy neighbors, Near The Parenthesis delivers another collection of soothing glitchy ambient sounds, calming atmospheres and warm sunny rays. Be sure to check out Arndt’s 2008 album, L’Eixample (see Review on Headphone Commute), as well as Of Soft Construction (n5MD, 2007). Recommended if you like his other label-mates, Another Electronic Musician, Arc Lab and SubtractiveLAD.
cyclic defrostWhile San Francisco-based electronic producer Tim Arndt’s preceding 2008 album ‘L’Eixample’ on n5MD saw him taking inspiration from his travels around the Barcelona district of the same name, this latest fourth album ‘Music For The Forest Concourse’ springs from a slightly more imaginary realm, with Arndt instead choosing the broad concept of time itself as his subject. Indeed, Arndt himself describes the twelve tracks here as ‘a collection for dusk, for open air, for sitting down and for breathing in – it is music for staring upwards and listening attentively or casually.” It’s certainly something of an accurate and apt description. As with Arndt’s previous work as Near The Parenthesis, the predominant emphasis here falls upon his lush, melancholic piano arrangements, with the addition of subtle electronics and minimalist glitchy rhythms calling to mind an atmosphere that frequently sits equally between modern classical and ambient.
If opening track ‘Good Evening’ sees proceedings gently unfurling from a wash of ambient electronic textures into elegant piano arrangements coloured with the langorous click and buzz of electronic processing, ‘Lambent Traces Of The Day’ sees more rhythmic ballast entering the mix as clattering, almost post-rock tinged drums lock into place amidst the tumbling keys and gauzy, delayed out melodic electronic tones. There’s also a discernible nod towards Neu!-esque motorik rhythms to be found on ‘Within An Orbit’ as seemingly frictionless, flickering beats glide beneath tinkling keys and the slow, overlapping decay of pitched-down harmonic tones, but these occasional ventures into rhythmic territory aside, for the most part this is an album more geared towards early hours listening, with the aesthetic lean towards more melancholic hues on dreamlike tracks such as ‘Inertia (Stay Right Here)’ and ‘Low Horizon’ coming across as more contemplative than morose.
texturaAnyone still unconvinced that electronic music can convey emotion need only listen to Tim Arndt's fourth Near The Parenthesis album for n5MD, Music For The Forest Concourse, to be convinced otherwise. Arndt has an uncanny talent for maximizing the emotional side of his material, with the result serenading tracks brimming with showers of synthetic sparkle and plaintive piano melodies. With its elegant piano playing wrapped in swathes of electronics, the album opener “Good Evening” proves a particularly good exemplar of the style, as does “Inertia (Stay Right Here),” where equally lovely piano playing meanders through a garden of electronic delights.
Generally speaking, the hour-long collection is a predictably stirring set from the San Francisco-based producer, who first gained attention with his 2006 release Go Out and See on the Canadian imprint Music Made By People. In Arndt's own words, Music For The Forest Concourse is “for dusk, for open air, for sitting down, and for breathing in. It is music for staring upwards and listening attentively or casually.” Though such a description emphasizes the music's calming dimension, his material can also work up a fair degree of intensity, as tracks such as “Pollarding Trees” and “Diffused” make clear (the latter could even be called shoegaze, if a guitar-less variant of it). In almost every case, Arndt gets the job done in about five minutes' time, so the album moves efficiently from one track to the next. He also brings immense craft to the construction of his multi-layered settings; though each features a wealth of sounds—beats, strings, flickering electronics, an occasional voice recording—, a sense of clarity pervades, in large part due to the central presence of the piano. How fitting it is that the quietly rapturous lullaby with which the album ends, “Good Night,” should be so strongly anchored by the instrument.
11 comments so far (post your own)
ed almont posted this comment on Tuesday, 12.22.09 @ 08:18am
looking forward to this!
Dudge posted this comment on Tuesday, 12.22.09 @ 09:44am
I cannot wait. The previews are beautiful. Some stunning melodies.
Juan posted this comment on Saturday, 12.26.09 @ 11:25am
Gracias por la belleza de tu música ....llega en buen momento
unkind posted this comment on Thursday, 01.21.10 @ 07:32am
Guys, please release your work faster. I can't waiting
Gerben posted this comment on Friday, 01.29.10 @ 13:15pm
Wow, I love it already. Can't wait for the release!
Gerben posted this comment on Friday, 01.29.10 @ 13:16pm
Wow, I've only listened the first few tracks and I love it already.
Can't wait for the release!
Alaric posted this comment on Friday, 02.19.10 @ 20:28pm
This is VERY exciting, as Near the Parenthesis is a favorite of mine. So sublime.... For anyone unfamiliar, do check out his previous two recordings!
Alaric posted this comment on Friday, 02.19.10 @ 20:29pm
er... previous THREE recordings! :)
steve posted this comment on Monday, 03.8.10 @ 12:35pm
can`t wait...great music, i buy this release on cd for my cd collection.
greetings from germany
Dudge posted this comment on Friday, 03.19.10 @ 03:31am
Digitally released on my birthday - what a perfect present!
mixx posted this comment on Friday, 06.25.10 @ 11:29am
замечательная музыка, замечательный альбом)))
n5md- мой любимый лейбл)))))))
ed almont posted this comment on Tuesday, 12.22.09 @ 08:18am
looking forward to this!