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FOREST GOSPEL http://forestgospel.blogspot.com/2009/08/slumberwood-yawling-night-songs.html
Slumberwood is an artistic collective from Italy that seems to dabble
in just about every medium, including sound on this, their debut album.
Yawling Night Songs is a dense collection of wild sounds that
have been let loose to navigate a dense night jungle. The first and
second tracks build seamlessly into an increasingly tense aural
freakout with layers of noise being placed atop one another. Towards
the end, female vocals are introduced, babbling incoherently. The
experience is somewhat trying near the end, but just before the floor
falls through, Slumberwood eases into a gorgeous acoustic guitar
passage modified by little bits and pieces of hanging shrapnel that is
kind of reminiscent of some of Scott Tuma’s work. Yawling Night Songs
feels like an exercise in just these types of juxtapositions: the calm
and beautiful posted up next to the manic and frightening. Slumberwood
also seems keen on trying their hand at just about any musical genre
that tickles their fancy, moving from drone, to noise to folk to
blues/bluegrass to post rock. Everything is fair game. However, it is
this openness to morphing that makes Yawling Night Songs
sometimes feel more like a well compiled or interesting mixtape that
the work of one band with a defined aesthetic. But, no matter how
ambitious the band is when attacking each individual muse, they pull it
off pitch perfectly. Each track feels well produced and filled with
lush instrumentation and faded field samples in every nook and cranny. Yawling Night Songs
attacks every version of night available under the black sky and is a
beautiful debut record for a band experimenting to find out exactly
what it would like to be. Slumberwood may not have their identity down
pact yet, but their fragmented debut shows a lot more promise and has
loads more bliss induced musical moments than most bands just getting
their feet wet. Certainly a group to watch out for in the future.
-Thistle
7:52 AM
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