Ståle Storløkken - The Haze of Sleeplessness (2019)

  • 29 Mar, 20:47
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Artist:
Title: The Haze of Sleeplessness
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: Hubro
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 32:11
Total Size: 154 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Prelude to the Haze of Sleeplessness (4:39)
2. Orange Drops (4:32)
3. Reality Box (1:54)
4. Stranded at Red Ice Desert. Remember Your Loved Ones (In Memory of My Dear Mother) (4:04)
5. Turbulence (1:16)
6. Skyrocket Hotel (7:24)
7. Nitro Valley (8:21)

Just as radio drama is said to provide the best pictures, so some music can make for a perfect film soundtrack without the need for a film to exist at all. ’The Haze of Sleeplessness’ is a case in point: as the album starts to play, the listener’s imagination kicks in and does the rest, supplying the necessary plot, character and setting until a full-scale narrative unspools behind one’s eyes.

A suite of seven movements whose common musical material is continuously recycled into new shapes and sounds, while recurring leitmotifs create a connecting thread of continuity, ’The Haze of Sleeplessness’ operates on several levels simultaneously. Most obviously, perhaps, it’s an unapologetic synth-fest; a love poem to old-school electronica and analogue sound whose squelches, bleeps and blurts can’t help but recall the heroic era of Wendy Carlos, Vangelis and Tangerine Dream. It’s also a remarkably original and successful attempt at using by now antique instruments to form a true orchestral palette, building a symphony of sound through combining monophonic sources and their new digital variants into a densely populated audio landscape that is captured with astonishing sonic fidelity. The super-saturated surface of the music fairly crackles with raw electricity, as if the over-amped distortion was about to short-circuit itself, with a wobbly jack plug connection flickering dangerously before finally cutting out. That many of these sounds and their treatment can’t help but suggest the retro-futurist setting of a dystopian sci-fi thriller might make the cinematic analogy inevitable, but it doesn’t lessen the music’s power or cheapen its effect.

‘The Haze of Sleeplessness’ is also a true solo album, as keyboardist/composer Ståle Storløkken (famed for his work with Supersilent and a host of other projects, from Terje Rypdal and Arve Henriksen to Motorpsycho) does everything himself, from writing and playing to recording and mixing. “When I started on this project I wanted to do everything, including the mixing”, Storløkken says. “This was partly because I like it that way and I wanted to get better at it, but also because I think the mixing stage is such an important part of the artistic result when making a record. And on this record the studio and its facilities are so important that they are like another instrument themselves.”

The instruments that Storløkken used for the album, included, he says: “Minimoog, Prophet T8, Prophet VS, Arp Pro Soloist, Oberheim Xpander, as well as some digital/sortware synths. Most of the material is made up of improvised parts that serve as a base on which the arrangement and the final music is built upon, and this basic foundation can be a melody, some chords, a groove or even just a sonic idea. The title, ‘The Haze of Sleeplessness’ reflects in a way the state of insomnia: you are awake, but at the same time, not. This state can be in some ways very creative and imaginative, but also very destructive.”

It’s this sense of a liminal state that’s neither one thing nor the other that ‘The Haze of Sleeplessness’ uses so imaginatively, and perhaps what makes its meaning so difficult to pin down. On one level it’s an intricately conceived electronic journey where the overlaid sounds of several generations’ worth of synthesisers create a malevolent, retro-futurist soundscape complete with clanking industrial noise from what might be ‘Metropolis’-like dark satanic mills, together with a rattling rhythmic pulse that could accompany an action-packed chase sequence. On the other, it’s an abstract tone poem with numerous weird and often startlingly beautiful elements that defies categorisation or any narrative expectations. The truth may lie somewhere in between, but listening in the dark, or with one’s eyes firmly closed, there’s no problem at all.