apestaartje

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mountains : sewn

mountains : sewn - cover imageApestaartje co-founders Brendon Anderegg and Koen Holtkamp follow up their critically acclaimed self titled debut as 'Mountains' with this second offering of slowly evolving sound. Recorded over several lengthy excursions outside the confines of the city in upstate New York and Connecticut, 'Sewn' invokes a sense of ease and delicate precision. A beautiful combination of clean crisp texture and warm pulsating harmony that shows a group developing and expanding their sound with an extreme attention to detail that reflects new layers in each melody and texture. Eight tracks that combine acoustic instrumentation (guitar, piano, accordion, harmonica etc..), binaural field recordings and resonant electronic processing to create a wide range of electro-acoustic experience. From the folkish acoustic guitar of 'sewn two' and 'bay' to the densely layered organic din of 'hundred acre' and the psychedelic minimalism of 'sheets', 'Sewn' shows a group as equally invested in melody as it is in experimentation.

Other Music :
After successful national and international tours, and an acclaimed album under their belts, the two-man project Mountains (separately known as Anderegg and Aero) have released their anticipated second release, entitled Sewn. The wondrous weaving of acoustic, electronic/melodic and textural elements are what Mountains is all about. And although there are plenty of pastoral electronic artists out there these days, not many can capture the atmosphere and power of nature the way that this duo manages to.

I've often described Mountains to newcomers simply as "Fennesz with song-structure, with equal texture and a focus on beauty." Equal parts Mego and Fahey. Sewn, like their previous self-titled album, is full of slowly building and shifting organic layers of textural sound made up of rich field recordings, acoustic instrumentation and electronics. With this album, there is both a sharper focus and an even more gradual, natural ease to the pace. Track markers only serve to divide up the listening experience since each section leads naturally into the next. Finger-picked guitar of noticeable power and melodic complexity take turns under the spotlight with seemingly more subtle layers of electronics and natural sounds that move with quiet intent. These sounds grow imperceptibly to the point of swallowing the space previously occupied by the more recognizable instruments--a dew-covered hill slowly overtaken by early morning fog and the rising sun comes to mind. The "new age" element is still there too but Mountains has a way of demonstrating nature rather than just illustrating it. It's the real deal here, folks. They're feeling it and so will you. by: Scott Mou

Stylus Magazine :
Last year, under the guise of Mountains, Brendon Anderegg and Koen Holtkamp crafted last year’s most gorgeous—and, to these ears, best—record. It’s not that beauty is obligatory for a great album, but this New York-based duo struck a sound that was too exhilarating to ignore. Simultaneously tuneful, experimental, and entirely natural, Mountains return with an enriched palette and a heightened sense of songwriting in the form of Sewn.

Mountains’ sophomore album arrives less than a year after their self-titled debut, yet the growth displayed on Sewn is commendable. The duo have challenged their own formula of layered soundscapes and extended structures with twice as many tracks and a run-time that is twelve minutes shorter. Concentrating on more song-based compositions, Sewn contains tracks that are often only three or four minutes long, allowing short glimpses of their grandiose vision.

Mountains gather many sounds—the familiar (acoustic guitars), the foreign (swells of digitally processed sound), and the natural (field recordings)—while successfully weaving each into their gorgeous sonic web. But despite the divergent sounds that wander through the album, Sewn is remarkably cohesive. Credit this to the consistently tender approach to instrumentation and the dew-coated atmospherics they elicit from them or the fact that Mountains act more like listeners than musicians: their patience and serenity outstrips many of their experimental cohorts. It’s as if they’re capturing the sounds from the ether and that Sewn simply exists—exquisitely and inimitably—and was never quite written or recorded.

Mountains’ adept sense of pacing and stark attention to detail attests to this fact; each of the album’s eight songs unfold as if they were blossoming into a living, breathing entity. Each technique and style that arises on Sewn seems to exemplify this fact. Reoccurring throughout the album, “Sewn Two” first introduces the warm, unadorned fingerpicked guitar playing which is gently accompanied by organic drones and processed acoustic instruments. “Sewn Two” closes before the three minute mark, yet Mountains still occasionally make a foray into extended song structures—most notably on the dense and sprawling “Hundred Acre.” That track slowly amasses itself into a tidal wave of sound with a rich composite of textural drone, wind and rain recordings, and digital blemishes at its core. It is Sewn’s boldest moment, evoking pure, intimate emotion that lands somewhere between nostalgia and contentedness. by: Ryan Potts