Lau Nau - 5 x 4 (2023)
Artist: Lau Nau
Title: 5 x 4
Year Of Release: 2023
Label: Fonal Records – FR-119LP
Genre: Ambient, Experimental
Quality: 16bit-44,1kHz FLAC / 24bit-44.1kHz FLAC
Total Time: 41:54
Total Size: 170 mb / 382 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: 5 x 4
Year Of Release: 2023
Label: Fonal Records – FR-119LP
Genre: Ambient, Experimental
Quality: 16bit-44,1kHz FLAC / 24bit-44.1kHz FLAC
Total Time: 41:54
Total Size: 170 mb / 382 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
A1 – Lightiella
A2 – Amphipoda II
A3 – Pleomothra
A4 – Isopoda
B5 – Ostracoda
B6 – Sessilia
B7 – Hyperiidea
B8 – Calanticomorpha
5 x 4 is a new solo collection from award-winning Finnish composer, producer, and musician Laura Naukkarinen, recorded at Elektronmusikstudion EMS in Stockholm using the historic Buchla 200 modular synthesizer, an AKG BX20 spring reverb, and, on two songs, her voice. The album shows yet another side of her singular musical universe, by turns aquatic and meditative, always pulsing with energy.
Lau Nau's ninth solo album, 5 x 4 is being released by her longtime co-conspirators Fonal (Finland) and Beacon Sound (US). Composed and recorded at EMS over a period of five years, the title is a reference to the Buchla's sequencer, which has five steps and four tracks, thus creating the characteristic five-beat tempo behind the compositions. The eight tracks that comprise 5 x 4 fluctuate between different moods: the contemplative hum of Isopoda; the coral-like tones and lush vocal melodies of lead single Sessilia; and the carbonated radiance of Hyperiidea and Amphipoda.
Boomkat review: "Highly recommended... The album coaxes us in with a pair of delicate instrumentals before Laura allows her vocals to complete the picture. We're reminded of Caterina Barbieri's 'Ecstatic Computation' on 'Pleomothra', as a lilting 5/4 saw wave prangs with wordless vocals that glide across delicate electronics like hot oil on ice. On some level it still sounds like folk music, inseparably connected to Northern European sacred sounds and early music played on the kantele, the justly tuned Finnish five-string zither that Naukkarinen used on her earliest material. None of these references are completely upfront, but listen to the wistful 'Ostracoda' and you'll hear echoes of a distant past in its mossy melodies and rickety plucks.
When Florian Fricke attempted to reconcile folk and electronic music on the first Popol Vuh recordings, he zeroed in on traditional music's intangible mysteriousness - the kind of intrigue that comes from centuries of oral tradition. In contrast, Naukkarinen picks out its warmth and playfulness, inflecting familiar bleeps with the meter of a fairytale. 'Sessilia' begins with blunted organ drones, but as soon as Naukkarinen's vocals materialise we're whisked away into the deep forest, across bubbling streams and frozen lakes. It's deeply visual music, so evocative you can almost touch the bark and fur, and while Enya's an overused musical reference right now, it's hard not to draw parallels between Naukkarinen's oblique revivalism and the Celtic legend's new age treatments in the 80s."