The Avener - The Wanderings Of The Avener (2015)

  • 15 Nov, 17:04
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: The Wanderings Of The Avener 2CD
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: Capitol Music
Genre: Electronic, Deep House, Downtempo, House, Folk, Blues
Quality: FLAC 16/44100
Total Time: 01:13:26
Total Size: 543 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:
01-01 The Avener - Panama [4:35]
01-02 The Avener - Fade Out Lines (The Avener Rework) [4:35]
01-03 Andy Bey - Celestial Blues (The Avener Rework) [3:34]
01-04 The Avener - Castle In The Snow [3:32]
01-05 The Avener - To Let Myself Go [4:13]
01-06 The Avener - Lonely Boy [4:03]
01-07 John Lee Hooker - It Serve You Right To Suffer (The Avener Rework) [3:25]
01-08 The Avener - Hate Street Dialogue [4:18]
01-09 The Avener - Your Love Rocks [4:08]
01-10 The Avener - Waitin' Round To Die [4:17]
01-11 The Avener - We Go Home [3:13]
01-12 The Avener - La Tourre [3:51]
01-13 The Avener - Waiting Here [4:04]
01-14 Mazzy Star - Fade Into You (The Avener Rework) [4:10]
02-01 The Avener - You're My Window To The Sky [3:22]
02-02 The Avener - Glory Box [4:19]
02-03 The Avener - Castle In The Snow (Epic Empire Remix) [3:45]
02-04 The Avener - Fade Out Lines (Radio Edit) [3:05]
02-05 The Avener - We Go Home (EDX's Paris At Night Remix) [3:05]

The debut album by the French DJ and producer Tristan Casara, known as The Avener, is a stylish and nonchalant fusion of acoustic music and Deep House. The artist seeks to explore the boundaries between genres, uniting elements of blues, jazz, folk, soul, and funk with a contemporary electronic soundscape. Titled The Wanderings of The Avener, the record combines Casara’s original compositions with masterful reworks of tracks by artists such as Phoebe Killdeer, John Lee Hooker, Mazzy Star, Andy Bey, and Rodriguez. The album showcases a perfect balance between lyrical songwriting (including the singles "To Let Myself Go" featuring Ane Brun and "We Go Home" featuring Adam Cohen) and the dance floor intuition of a specialist DJ. It serves as a musical ode to the last 50 years of music history, reinterpreted within a current context.