Zero One Seven
London, UK-based, the term cinematic gets tossed around a great deal in the music reviewing business, especially when it comes to those genres and styles of an electronic inclination. For the most part anything appearing particularly dark, atmospheric and epic seems to get pasted with this descriptor, and much of that undeservedly so. Perhaps the right adjective at the time, in comparison to Blackfilm's self-titled debut album, most other so-called cinematic peers fall short. This stuff simply defines cinematic. Its orchestral nuances and muffled piano (Interference), spectral voices and effective interlude transitions (Eastern and Untitled), among other elements, serve to elucidate this formative strategy. As the second release for young label Spectraliquid (based in Athens, Greece), Blackfilm reflects a promising musical direction and, more significantly, astute artist selectivity. The disc invites its listener in with Come & See, an introduction to both the sound textures and strong thematic aspects that intertwine its ten compositions. Blackfilm brings a post-structuralist film noir quality to the forefront of pieces characterized as sweeping, ghostly, orchestral, downtempo and, of course, epic. Brilliant Stalingrad figures prominently in this idea; its ten-minute duration encompasses abandoned Cold War ambience and ominous post-urban illbient alike. In shorter tracks, other strengths come to prominence. The gently pushing bass tones in Five Years are masterful, while the insatiable trip hop groove of Sonar burns well into the night. The sensual Indian singing wafting through Mahabharata arouses fantastic visions of that poem's grandeur and ancient metaphysics. The spacey tenor, echoing voices and maudlin strings of Midnight to 4 A.M. conceives a vast and unquenchable insignificance in the face of a universe beyond human comprehension. Blackfilm is gritty music for an eyes-closed headspace, at once harrowing and enlightening. Blackfilm seems to have sampled or used a live drum kit for virtually all its snare and cymbal needs, and this anchor to realistic desires creates a specific tension strung through its otherwise calm, yet alienating, mood. Soothing and atmospheric as it is, this music blurs the uncomfortable boundary between fleeting emotion and the gnawing abyss. It succeeds in its sublimity. The closing, brooding Atlantikend sends the listener's consciousness off on a trajectory pointed deep into the blackness between the stars, or perhaps deeper into the fabric of space and time itself, to a place so unknowable as to rewrite actuality. Soaked in the history of our world, Blackfilm grasps for its tenuous future. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
London, UK-based, the term cinematic gets tossed around a great deal in the music reviewing business, especially when it comes to those genres and styles of an electronic inclination. For the most part anything appearing particularly dark, atmospheric and epic seems to get pasted with this descriptor, and much of that undeservedly so. Perhaps the right adjective at the time, in comparison to Blackfilm's self-titled debut album, most other so-called cinematic peers fall short. This stuff simply defines cinematic. Its orchestral nuances and muffled piano (Interference), spectral voices and effective interlude transitions (Eastern and Untitled), among other elements, serve to elucidate this formative strategy. As the second release for young label Spectraliquid (based in Athens, Greece), Blackfilm reflects a promising musical direction and, more significantly, astute artist selectivity. The disc invites its listener in with Come & See, an introduction to both the sound textures and strong thematic aspects that intertwine its ten compositions. Blackfilm brings a post-structuralist film noir quality to the forefront of pieces characterized as sweeping, ghostly, orchestral, downtempo and, of course, epic. Brilliant Stalingrad figures prominently in this idea; its ten-minute duration encompasses abandoned Cold War ambience and ominous post-urban illbient alike. In shorter tracks, other strengths come to prominence. The gently pushing bass tones in Five Years are masterful, while the insatiable trip hop groove of Sonar burns well into the night. The sensual Indian singing wafting through Mahabharata arouses fantastic visions of that poem's grandeur and ancient metaphysics. The spacey tenor, echoing voices and maudlin strings of Midnight to 4 A.M. conceives a vast and unquenchable insignificance in the face of a universe beyond human comprehension. Blackfilm is gritty music for an eyes-closed headspace, at once harrowing and enlightening. Blackfilm seems to have sampled or used a live drum kit for virtually all its snare and cymbal needs, and this anchor to realistic desires creates a specific tension strung through its otherwise calm, yet alienating, mood. Soothing and atmospheric as it is, this music blurs the uncomfortable boundary between fleeting emotion and the gnawing abyss. It succeeds in its sublimity. The closing, brooding Atlantikend sends the listener's consciousness off on a trajectory pointed deep into the blackness between the stars, or perhaps deeper into the fabric of space and time itself, to a place so unknowable as to rewrite actuality. Soaked in the history of our world, Blackfilm grasps for its tenuous future. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Midnight to 4 AM
Stalingrad
Sonar
Come & See
Interference
Mahabharata
Untitled
Five Years
Eastern
Atlantikend
Walk With Me
Inter ference
SE5
Five Years (Original)
Where We Stand
Broken Optimism
Version
8632
Vegas
Five years (Sines remix)
Blade City 2094
Lost
Five Years (Ekaros remix)
Dark Area Of The Night Sky
Traitors
Mistakes
Fateless
Deep Roots
Roadblocker Dub
Invisible Corridor
Bethnal Green
Song Without Words
1996 Chronicles
Gone
Blackmark
01 Come & See
03 Untitled
02 Interference
04 Stalingrad
05 Sonar
06 Five Years
08 Midnight To 4 AM
Five Years - Original
07 Eastern
09 Mahabharata
Mistakes Pt. 2
10 Atlantikend
Five Years (Ekaros remix) - "Remix"
Five Years (Sines Remix) - "Remix"
Where We Stand (Aql Mix) [Bernocchi, Blackfilm] - Aql Mix
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