Sunday, August 31, 2014

Little Limbs "Young Vessels EP" review


Jimi Hendrix oftentimes referred to music as a pallet of colors, something that conjures images and shades in the mind. This is something that I've experienced. Black Metal conjures greys. Noise conjures static and disassociating pictures. Folk is deep brown and denim and dust. Ambient never changes. Ambient is always white.

At least, almost always. With Young Vessels, their debut EP, Little Limbs have brought some color to the usual IDM/Ambient proceedings.

Clocking in at three tracks, the album is short but makes up for its brevity with its fullness. It's dynamic, with thick, bassy beats and soft, silky drones, sprinkled with some well placed and suitably atmospheric samples of animals, fire, and speech.

"Everything at Once" is a soulful blast of ambient electronica, perfect for being for being in a club alone.

"Canadian Wilderness" is the highlight of the album for me, a joyful and dangerous romp through indie pop-electronica. It manages to feel wild, a feat in a genre as thought out and pre-planned as electronic music.

This album is many colors, royal blue, green, orange, and magenta, but it's also many images. The forest at daybreak, pale skin, a city made by sega where everything is pink, a boy with deer antlers, an open flame in a spaceship, a polaroid of something sad.This album is  many things but it is never white.

Stream it here

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