Torrent details for "[ambient, electronic] (2021) Rival Consoles - Overflow [FLAC] [DarkAngie]"    Log in to bookmark

wide
Torrent details
Cover
Download
Torrent rating (0 rated)
Controls:
Category:
Language:
English English
Total Size:
335.41 MB
Info Hash:
7733878a6389533e06a5c875d5fec9130a00d617
Added By:
Added:  
12-12-2021 01:57
Views:
642
Health:
Seeds:
6
Leechers:
0
Completed:
179
wide



Similar torrents

Name 
DL
Uploader
Size 
S/L 
Added
-
323.32 MB
577
[4/0]
15/11/21 18:30
Uploaded by DarkAngie:_moderator: Size 323.32 MBHealth [4/0]Added 15/11/21 18:30
-
205.35 MB
549
[4/0]
31/03/21 20:04
Uploaded by DarkAngie:_moderator: Size 205.35 MBHealth [4/0]Added 31/03/21 20:04
-
454.66 MB
494
[3/0]
27/06/21 20:27
Uploaded by DarkAngie:_moderator: Size 454.66 MBHealth [3/0]Added 27/06/21 20:27
-
224.78 MB
388
[3/0]
15/12/21 23:44
Uploaded by DarkAngie:_moderator: Size 224.78 MBHealth [3/0]Added 15/12/21 23:44
-
311.35 MB
398
[1/0]
10/06/21 12:14
Uploaded by DarkAngie:_moderator: Size 311.35 MBHealth [1/0]Added 10/06/21 12:14
-
164.07 MB
364
[1/0]
06/12/21 01:55
Uploaded by DarkAngie:_moderator: Size 164.07 MBHealth [1/0]Added 06/12/21 01:55

Description
wide
(2021) Rival Consoles - Overflow  



Review:
Ryan Lee West has called his music “inward-looking” and said he likes to find “something about the self within music”. That was especially true of his landmark 2018 album, Persona, a dreamy, minimal, shoegaze-tinged LP that felt handmade for late-night introspection. On his newest album under the Rival Consoles moniker, Overflow, West’s music sounds decidedly outward-looking. It is louder, more expansive, and more concerned with societal themes than personal ones. The album was composed for a dance production of the same name created by choreographer Alexander Whitley. Which isn’t hard to see — Overflow is more theatrical than anything West has made. The LP opens with one of the longest and most ambitious tracks in the Rival Consoles’ discography, the fittingly-titled 10-minute “Monster”. West gets into drone territory here, hitting us with sharp, stentorian snare drums and an ominous one-note bassline. The percussion is sparse but fierce, making everything sound expansive and spaced-apart like it’s being made in a cathedral. Organ pipes enter at around the eight-minute mark, adding a hellish, medieval flair to an otherwise modern track. Everything about this song is huge and abrasive. The rest of the album follows in a similarly expansive vein, with tracks like “Hands” and “Tension in the Cloud” delving further into drone territory. “Noise Call and Response” is slow and heavy, led by a groove that sounds submerged in molasses, like a slice of warehouse techno played at the slowest possible BPM. “Noise Call and Response II” is much faster. The whole track crescendos into a rush of kick drums and washy keyboards before taking a turn for the ambient, leaving us bathed in an ocean of modulated violins. But Overflow isn’t just outward-looking in its music; it’s also outward-looking in its themes. If albums like Persona and Articulation explored the self, Overflow seems to explore the dehumanization and breakdown of the self. Take “I Like”, where a voice repeatedly stutters “I like”, “it’s like”, and “they will like” throughout the entire song. The vocal sample is chopped up so that it stutters over itself and echoes in a million different directions at once. In the social-media age, where everyone is obsessed with likes, likes, and more likes, the song is a fitting metaphor for our life and times. It feels distracted and fragmented, just like us. Sometimes, however, the album’s technological themes feel a little cliched or overdone. “The Cloud Oracle” is three-and-a-half minutes of vocal clips from Google leaders, networking gurus, and other digital entrepreneurs. West has always had a knack for communicating themes in his music implicitly, but here, he seems to tell rather than show. The “Cloud Oracle” is unusually heavy-handed for a Rival Consoles’ song. It goes on too long and overexplains the themes that are already self-evident in the music. The album is a bit front-loaded, too, as the back-half lacks the explosiveness of the first. The 12-minute “Flow State” feels somewhat directionless compared to the LP’s other behemoth, “Monster”. “Touches Everything” seems to end prematurely, the skittering drums and whirring synths dying down just as the whole song seems like it’s about to climax. All in all, it’s fair to say that Overflow is Rival Consoles’ most ambitious album, even if it isn’t the most consistent. It aims huge and comes up huge on occasion. Even if the result is a mixed bag, it’s rewarding to hear West expand his range and infuse his unique brand of techno with more droning and expansive qualities.


Image error



Track Listing:
1.Monster 10:10
2.I Like 02:08
3.Hands 05:18
4.Pulses of Information 04:06
5.Noise Call and Response I 04:20
6.Overflow 05:36
7.The Cloud Oracle 03:28
8.Tension in the Cloud 03:36
9.Noise Call and Response II 08:37
10.Scanning 04:27
11.Flow State 11:53
12.Touches Everything 05:04
13.Making Sense of It All 03:08


Media Report:
Genre: ambient, electronic
Country: UK
Format: FLAC
Format/Info: Free Lossless Audio Codec, 16-bit PCM
Bit rate mode: Variable
Channel(s): 2 channels
Sampling rate: 44.1 KHz
Bit depth: 16 bits

  User comments    Sort newest first

No comments have been posted yet.



Post anonymous comment
  • Comments need intelligible text (not only emojis or meaningless drivel).
  • No upload requests, visit the forum or message the uploader for this.
  • Use common sense and try to stay on topic.

  • :) :( :D :P :-) B) 8o :? 8) ;) :-* :-( :| O:-D Party Pirates Yuk Facepalm :-@ :o) Pacman Shit Alien eyes Ass Warn Help Bad Love Joystick Boom Eggplant Floppy TV Ghost Note Msg


    CAPTCHA Image 

    Anonymous comments have a moderation delay and show up after 15 minutes