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Clorinde – The Gardens Of Bomarzo

CS2171518-02A-BIG

Label: Etruscan
Catalog#: ETR 004
Release date: 14-04-2013
Source: 2xCD, Album
Format: MP3
Quality: 320 kbps
Size: 216 mb
Genre: Electronic, Rock
Style: Modern Classical / Post-rock / Folktronica / Cinematic Experimental

Tracklist:
Disc 1
01 Jupiter Ammon
02 Pegasus
03 Proserpina
04 Neptune
05 Hannibal’s Elephant
06 The Dragon
07 Nymphaeum
08 Venus
09 Ceres
10 Hercules and Cacus
11 The Mouth of Hell
12 The Theatre

Disc 2
01 Left Sphinx
02 Glaucus
03 Cerberus
04 Echidna and Harpy
05 Kantharos
06 The Nymph
07 The Tortoise and the Whale
08 Etruscan Bench
09 The Temple
10 Right Sphinx

Imagine an orchestral and oriental Efterklang reworking “Selected Ambient Works” by Aphex Twin – you now have the framework to disseminate “The Gardens Of Bomarzo” by Clorinde. The concept is not a beardy one: statues from the Italian Renaissance garden, various gods and goddess creatures from early mankind become inspiration in a double CD release where “permissible atrophy” – my term for criticism being ideologically permeable of the past – take heed of instrumental manipulations of the present.

The first point to mark any “permissible atrophy” – where sound ingrains itself as useless – from me is the production quality. Seriously, when has music sounded so well rounded, warm and clean? This bodes well for the interpretation of structures that exchange their turf in regards to the instruments used to work on the record. “The Nymph” halfway in to disc II resonates as a sustained exploring of both what has sustenance and what has dissonance with fusion. While “Pegasus”, tune two on disc I, is rollickingly austere, a rousing dragon’s bellow of a bassline with smart apertures in the drums.

“The Tortoise And The Whale” on disc two invites the saxophone and violin to commingle a to-do list, nailed to wall pressure affair in respects of mood and confluence. The effects on “permissible atrophy” turn the listener’s perceptions reverse-ways – to immense appreciation rather than pernickety over-analysis of the weird. All instruments: organ, guitar, saxophone, violin, drums, kalimba, clarinet, glockenspiel, mandolin, accordion, mbira, harmonium, bowed zither, banjo, ukelele – the list is endless – renders the compositions sharply poignant, and all instead of being an extraneous mess. This only adds to the commendability of Clorinde.

Clorinde is the brother duo of Andreas and Simone Salvatici, multi-instrumentalists who are said to “do an extensive use of acoustic instruments taken from Western and non-Western Folk traditions, extrapolated from their original conventional tunings and use and electrified with transducer contact microphones so that they can be processed into electronic devices and amplification”. Importantly with “The Gardens Of Bomarzo”, they have won me over to explore their previous various tunings – both environmental and tonal – and essentially put, “The Gardens Of” is a landmark release in terms of conceptual deification of a place that turns into something sonically extraordinary.

– Mick Buckingham for Fluid Radio

320 kbps
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26.04.2013 Album Electro Electronic Rock ,

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