Please Sign in to see price
Cat-No:fur102
Release-Date:08.07.2016
Genre:Techno
Configuration:Vinyl Album Excl
Barcode:4260038311189
in stock
Last in:08.07.2016
+ Show full info- Close
in stock
Last in:08.07.2016
Cat-No:fur102
Release-Date:08.07.2016
Genre:Techno
Configuration:Vinyl Album Excl
Barcode:4260038311189
1
Mogador - 1
2
Mogador - 2
Deluxe LP w 180g, Reverse Board Sleeve, MP3 Download

- Celer co-founder with Danielle Baquet-Long
- Artwork by Nao Watahiki

Tracklist LP:
A I (18:28)
B. II (16:55)
Short info:
Some records just barely nudge your consciousness, but they do so in such an intriguing manner that their tentativeness and ephemerality lure you in deeper than you expect. Such is the case with Overflow Pool by Mogador, a new project by Will Long. This prolific producer—who is best known for his profoundly meditative ambient music under the name Celer—favors the longform, beatless approach to composition, as he lets his rigorously honed tones unspool with a gentle insistence. Overflow Pool consists of three lengthy pieces full of lingering, aqueous chords that are spaced out by suspenseful lacunae. Each piece revolves around episodes of briskly struck piano chord clusters that are left to decay to near silence, for maximal contemplativeness. These are followed by a lowerkeyed retort, as if to ground the listener and to keep her from getting overly optimistic from the preceding burst of Harold Buddonuppers tones. Similarities to Brian Eno's Thursday Afternoon are also evident, as Mogador methodically doles out morsels of oceanic calm geared to align your chakras like some 21stcentury
Stephen Halpern LP. It sounds ideal for flotation tanks, deeptissue massages, and general relaxation.

Long observes that Mogador differs from his Celer output “because it's completely unprocessed. This is a pure room recording with no extra effects; only piano and reeltoreel
delay.” The Yokohama, Japanbased musician says that his primary aim with Overflow Pool “was to make something that doesn't happen all the time—it's so sparse, that it blends into the room. It happens so seldom that it's easy to forget about. You just catch it here and there. That's the feeling I wanted.” It's a feeling that's all too rare in modern music—peacefulness without sentimentality.











More