
Zaumne - Parfum
Properly stunning fever-dreamweaving on this new one from sferic, the label behind modern ambient classics by Space Afrika, Perila and Jake Muir, featuring a typically scene-stealing appearance by YL Hooi and occupying an elevated space at the intersection of flickering dub-pop and ASMR soundscaping. If youâre into anything from HTRK to Malibu, FĂ©licia Atkinson to Voice Actor, consider it a major life enhancement. Zaumne is the alias of Mateusz Olszewski, whose last album could be found on the excellent Mondoj label, home to Antonina Nowacka, Piotr Kurek, Claire Rousay, More Eaze and other likeminded lowercase producers. For his Sferic debut, Zaumne enlists YL Hooi - a constant source of inspiration for many of us here, as well as Metoronori and the muted sax of Patrick Shiroishi. Loosely inspired by Baudelaireâs âFlowers of Evilâ (soft spoken extracts of which appear throughout), the album is a sort of exercise in escapism and sensual wandering. Throughout âParfumâ, faded pop is fleshed out with surreal elegance: all flickering neon and half-heard whispers suggestive of blurred late night fantasies; liminal, abstract, and highly evocative. Sounds hang in the air like incense, caressing the senses with an intentionality that's missing from so much landfill ambient. On opening track 'Voyageurâ he sets the scene with pastoral field recordings, dragging a pitched voice and elongated pads through a rhythmic throb that reduces dub techno to a faint knock. There are echoes of music from the fringes of the afterhours club scene too: Andrew Pekler's obscure imaginary landscapes, Jake Muir's druggy bathhouse vapours, DJ Lostboiâs balmy introspection. But despite a shared blearyâeyed aesthetic, Zaumneâs sound is more explicit and well defined, and with it brings a more acute emotional pull. When YL Hooi appears on 'SorciĂšres', her voice; drenched in reverb but absolutely crystalline, takes proceedings to a whole other level, reminding us of Natalie Beridzeâs perennially overlooked âThe Wrestlerâ from her 2003 album for Thomas Brinkmannâs Max Ernst label; a sort of echo chamber dub perfectly re-imagined as dreampop. A whispered French vocal introduces us to 'Ăther', a smoked cloud of looping synths and twinkling bells, and on 'Nymphesâ a wash of pads, wind chimes and waves lapping at the shore somehow manages to swerve all the associated schmaltz youâd imagine and instead gives us the same tingling sensation we had when we first heard Art of Noiseâs âIn Visible Silenceâ at dusk, on a beach in the south of France, what seems like forever ago. There's a ritualistic quality to Zaumneâs music too, as if he's burning rare gums and mosses over smoldering coals in a remote Carpathian clearing. Hikari Okuyama, aka Metoronori, brings her pointed surrealism to 'Ombres', adding a softly spoken wonder to Olszewski's chimes, while Los Angeles-based multi-instrumentalist and composer Patrick Shiroishi contributes horn curliques to 'Prairie', ushering us towards the same sonic space inhabited by Bohren und der Club of Gore and Julee Cruise. Perfect late night music.
Zaumne - Parfum
Properly stunning fever-dreamweaving on this new one from sferic, the label behind modern ambient classics by Space Afrika, Perila and Jake Muir, featuring a typically scene-stealing appearance by YL Hooi and occupying an elevated space at the intersection of flickering dub-pop and ASMR soundscaping. If youâre into anything from HTRK to Malibu, FĂ©licia Atkinson to Voice Actor, consider it a major life enhancement. Zaumne is the alias of Mateusz Olszewski, whose last album could be found on the excellent Mondoj label, home to Antonina Nowacka, Piotr Kurek, Claire Rousay, More Eaze and other likeminded lowercase producers. For his Sferic debut, Zaumne enlists YL Hooi - a constant source of inspiration for many of us here, as well as Metoronori and the muted sax of Patrick Shiroishi. Loosely inspired by Baudelaireâs âFlowers of Evilâ (soft spoken extracts of which appear throughout), the album is a sort of exercise in escapism and sensual wandering. Throughout âParfumâ, faded pop is fleshed out with surreal elegance: all flickering neon and half-heard whispers suggestive of blurred late night fantasies; liminal, abstract, and highly evocative. Sounds hang in the air like incense, caressing the senses with an intentionality that's missing from so much landfill ambient. On opening track 'Voyageurâ he sets the scene with pastoral field recordings, dragging a pitched voice and elongated pads through a rhythmic throb that reduces dub techno to a faint knock. There are echoes of music from the fringes of the afterhours club scene too: Andrew Pekler's obscure imaginary landscapes, Jake Muir's druggy bathhouse vapours, DJ Lostboiâs balmy introspection. But despite a shared blearyâeyed aesthetic, Zaumneâs sound is more explicit and well defined, and with it brings a more acute emotional pull. When YL Hooi appears on 'SorciĂšres', her voice; drenched in reverb but absolutely crystalline, takes proceedings to a whole other level, reminding us of Natalie Beridzeâs perennially overlooked âThe Wrestlerâ from her 2003 album for Thomas Brinkmannâs Max Ernst label; a sort of echo chamber dub perfectly re-imagined as dreampop. A whispered French vocal introduces us to 'Ăther', a smoked cloud of looping synths and twinkling bells, and on 'Nymphesâ a wash of pads, wind chimes and waves lapping at the shore somehow manages to swerve all the associated schmaltz youâd imagine and instead gives us the same tingling sensation we had when we first heard Art of Noiseâs âIn Visible Silenceâ at dusk, on a beach in the south of France, what seems like forever ago. There's a ritualistic quality to Zaumneâs music too, as if he's burning rare gums and mosses over smoldering coals in a remote Carpathian clearing. Hikari Okuyama, aka Metoronori, brings her pointed surrealism to 'Ombres', adding a softly spoken wonder to Olszewski's chimes, while Los Angeles-based multi-instrumentalist and composer Patrick Shiroishi contributes horn curliques to 'Prairie', ushering us towards the same sonic space inhabited by Bohren und der Club of Gore and Julee Cruise. Perfect late night music.
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Properly stunning fever-dreamweaving on this new one from sferic, the label behind modern ambient classics by Space Afrika, Perila and Jake Muir, featuring a typically scene-stealing appearance by YL Hooi and occupying an elevated space at the intersection of flickering dub-pop and ASMR soundscaping. If youâre into anything from HTRK to Malibu, FĂ©licia Atkinson to Voice Actor, consider it a major life enhancement. Zaumne is the alias of Mateusz Olszewski, whose last album could be found on the excellent Mondoj label, home to Antonina Nowacka, Piotr Kurek, Claire Rousay, More Eaze and other likeminded lowercase producers. For his Sferic debut, Zaumne enlists YL Hooi - a constant source of inspiration for many of us here, as well as Metoronori and the muted sax of Patrick Shiroishi. Loosely inspired by Baudelaireâs âFlowers of Evilâ (soft spoken extracts of which appear throughout), the album is a sort of exercise in escapism and sensual wandering. Throughout âParfumâ, faded pop is fleshed out with surreal elegance: all flickering neon and half-heard whispers suggestive of blurred late night fantasies; liminal, abstract, and highly evocative. Sounds hang in the air like incense, caressing the senses with an intentionality that's missing from so much landfill ambient. On opening track 'Voyageurâ he sets the scene with pastoral field recordings, dragging a pitched voice and elongated pads through a rhythmic throb that reduces dub techno to a faint knock. There are echoes of music from the fringes of the afterhours club scene too: Andrew Pekler's obscure imaginary landscapes, Jake Muir's druggy bathhouse vapours, DJ Lostboiâs balmy introspection. But despite a shared blearyâeyed aesthetic, Zaumneâs sound is more explicit and well defined, and with it brings a more acute emotional pull. When YL Hooi appears on 'SorciĂšres', her voice; drenched in reverb but absolutely crystalline, takes proceedings to a whole other level, reminding us of Natalie Beridzeâs perennially overlooked âThe Wrestlerâ from her 2003 album for Thomas Brinkmannâs Max Ernst label; a sort of echo chamber dub perfectly re-imagined as dreampop. A whispered French vocal introduces us to 'Ăther', a smoked cloud of looping synths and twinkling bells, and on 'Nymphesâ a wash of pads, wind chimes and waves lapping at the shore somehow manages to swerve all the associated schmaltz youâd imagine and instead gives us the same tingling sensation we had when we first heard Art of Noiseâs âIn Visible Silenceâ at dusk, on a beach in the south of France, what seems like forever ago. There's a ritualistic quality to Zaumneâs music too, as if he's burning rare gums and mosses over smoldering coals in a remote Carpathian clearing. Hikari Okuyama, aka Metoronori, brings her pointed surrealism to 'Ombres', adding a softly spoken wonder to Olszewski's chimes, while Los Angeles-based multi-instrumentalist and composer Patrick Shiroishi contributes horn curliques to 'Prairie', ushering us towards the same sonic space inhabited by Bohren und der Club of Gore and Julee Cruise. Perfect late night music.









