Choir of Young Believers - GRASQUE (2016)

  • 23 Nov, 17:06
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Artist:
Title: GRASQUE
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: Ghostly International
Genre: Indie & Alternative
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 58:41
Total Size: 384 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Olimpiyskiy (1:38)
2. Serious Lover (5:25)
3. Vaserne (1:55)
4. Face Melting (7:05)
5. Græske (8:16)
6. Jeg Ser Dig (6:09)
7. Cloud Nine (5:33)
8. The Whirlpool Enigma (1:20)
9. Perfect Estocada (5:36)
10. Salvatore (0:52)
11. Gamma Moth (5:58)
12. Does It Look as If I Care (8:54)

The record pulls in a host of unlikely influences: smoky jazz on the noirish “The Whirlpool Enigma” twinkling pop on “Gamma Moth” and sun-bathed soul on “Cloud Nine.” It’s not so much a reinvention as a redirection, maintaining all of the group’s essential elements but setting them within a new context. Much of that is because, when Makrigiannis started the project, it wasn’t meant to be a new COYB record. Having been inspired by everything from experimental electronic music to Danish ‘80s and ‘90s pop, to modern hip-hop and R&B to techno and westcoast slow jams, he’d made a new, imaginary band in his head called Grasque to reflect those influences. He quickly recorded both “Græske” and “Face Melting” with Aske Zidore, who had also produced Rhine Gold, and when Choir of Young Believers reconvened to tour with Depeche Mode, he wrote a few guitar-based songs to play live. Gradually, he realized all of his new ideas and music could melt together with Choir of Young Believers. A couple of months later, he and Aske went to a small Swedish farm for a week and came back with more than 10 hours of new music. The result is an album that is confident and expansive, incorporating an encyclopedia of styles while still maintaining the essential elements of Choir of Young Believers’ DNA. It’s pop music, put through a kaleidoscopic filter. “I must admit, one of the things I worried about was ‘What will people think?’” Makrigiannis says. “With almost all ofthese songs, I had been in doubt. Some, I felt, were too poppy, others too experimental some didn’t even feel like songs, but more like trips, or feelings. Some even had Danish and Greek lyrics. But now, it’s all Choir of Young Believers to me, and it feels great to have pushed the walls around the band, giving it a bit more space.