Press Quotes
"an immersive and intense piece of minimalism written for an unorthodox 10-piece ensemble... Lengthy drones merge into each other and morph at a glacial pace, but – like the surface of a Kazimir Malevich painting – what seems clean and rectilinear at first glance is actually filled with fascinating granular detail and jagged edges."
The Guardian
"a 50-minute irradiation of sonic light.... [and] corruscating meditative power."
BBC Radio 3 - New Music Show
"Spooky, slow-moving drone music. It throbs at an almost glacial pace but, when played at volume, fascinating details - fractional dissonances, jagged edges, ever-mutating textures - reveal themselves with every listen. 7/10"
Uncut
"Glotman is a force to be reckoned with… textures blend, mold, and flow, like a hot molten alloy filling into the crevices of your old fractured frame... a powerful and stunningly executed long-form work."
Headphone Commute
"This is not just a drone record…. With an ear turned towards the concept of deep listening, Glotman and Erlandsson turn away from any notion of chilled or new age listening... this album has a cinematic feel with a brooding dark quality about it… The music is forever in a form of movement, twisting and turning, highlighting a sound before weaving away and revealing, but also hiding something… a rich piece of music that deserves to be utilised as a score, such is the impressive nature of the moods contained within."
Drifting, Almost Falling
"Pushes hard for Stars of the Lid sunblissed drone - and succeeds. Essential... It’s f***ing beautiful... a must-have for aficionados of A Winged Victory For the Sullen... It’s amniotic, it’s hypnotic, it’s moving; it leaves me fulfilled yet craving more... as lover of swelling, harmonic drone, it’s quite simply a must-own."
Backseat Mafia
"Pushes neoclassical further in interesting and unique directions… Listen to it as it was originally intended - all in one go. You won’t regret it."
Electronic Sound
"The sonics on Emanate move slowly, and with stealth… The total, majestic, powerful. Its strength, a silent roar – rather than bombast… A body of work that subverts classical music – updates it – by undercutting accepted, traditional “beauty” – melody – with process and production both urban and modern."
Ban Ban Ton Ton
"a rich yet ambiguous work… a nuanced sonic statement against our oversaturated digital age… If you need some out-of-time-and-space experience that would re-calibrate your senses anew, then this beautifully realized, immersive composition is the place for you. ‘Emanate’ may gently hypnotize you."
Salt Peanuts
Discography
Emanate
LP13-40 / 15th May 2020
Tracklist
01
From Light to Refraction
02
Interlude I
03
From Refraction to Procession
04
Interlude II
05
Procession
06
Interlude III
07
From Procession to Refraction
08
Interlude IV
09
From Refraction to Light 

Both prolific composers in their own right working within the field of modern composition/ new electronic music, Berlin-based Yair Elazar Glotman and Stockholm-based Mats Erlandsson have been collaborating since 2015. ‘Negative Chambers’, their first joint album together was released on Miasmah Recordings in 2017, and saw them exploring new approaches to the use of traditional acoustic instruments. Having recently signed to FatCat’s 130701 imprint, and following closely on from Deutsche Gramophon’s release of Jóhann Jóhannsson’s ‘Last and First Men’ project which Yair co-composed, the pair’s sophomore album ‘Emanate’ is a powerful and stunningly executed extended duration work that utilises a fantastic ensemble cast and continues to explore their ideas of a ‘displaced sound’ – combining electronic and acoustic sound sources through both analogue and digital means to create an ambiguous composite work, a music that sounds neither clearly electronic or acoustic, existing instead in some in-between space. 

In our oversaturated digital age where omnipresent media connectivity enables instant gratification and a continuous flood of competing interests, we’re frequently lead to make snap judgements as we multitask through a mass of incoming information – continually scanning and skipping over surfaces. Technological advances were supposed to free up creative thinking, but this flood has instead lead to an erosion of our creativity and attention. In many ways, the idea of a longform music is unsuited to and out of phase with these times. And yet, there is recent evidence of a reaction against this – witness the rise of the practise of mindfulness and the cultural elements of a ‘slow living’ movement; the huge success of Max Richter’s marathon ‘Sleep’ project; and the emergence of an expansive musical niche that draws from drone, electroacoustic and classical traditions and prioritises a more immersive, durational sound worlds – see artists like Kali Malone, Ellen Arkbro, Clarice Jensen, Abul Mogard, William Basinski, Claire M Singer, and labels like Longform Editions and XKatedral. Music here is intended to function not as ambient backdrop to other activities but as a deep listening, intensive immersion.

Aligned with these approaches, as opposed to New Age ambience or the endless soporific, ‘chilled’ music playlists, Glotman & Erlandsson’s work is suffused with a chromatic density and a tendency towards an edgy darkness that puts it closer to Hildur Guðnadóttir’s ‘Chernobyl’ score or Jóhannsson’s ‘The Miner’s Hymns’. It shares that same brassy, bass heavy weight and glowering, simmering sense of tension as well as a similar, sliding feeling of instability – a regular sense that it’s slipping inexorably elsewhere. Its authors cite the influence of  Renaissance vocal polyphony; Giacinto Scelsi’s ‘Pranam II’; György Ligeti’s 1967 piece ‘Lontano’ (heard on the soundtrack to Kubrick’s ‘The Shining’ and Scorcese’s ‘Shutter Island’); as well as American composer Ingram Marshall, and Iceland’s Valgier Sigurdsson. Gorgeously recorded, beautifully focused and measured throughout, ‘Emanate’ is a texturally rich, deep spectrum exploration that flows and unfolds almost seamlessly throughout its fifty-minute span to create an energy field which feels simultaneously static and yet continually shifting.   

Although divided into nine parts, ‘Emanate’ was envisaged and recorded as one long, single composition – an attempt to create an ensemble piece, closer in length and formal approach to classical music compositions than the ever-shorter spans of so much music now tailored for consumption via digital streaming. With time and space allocated for each of the instruments to respond to and expand upon the composition, its extended duration arises from an ongoing exchange between the instrumental ensemble, the electronic elements and the structure of the piece, and invites the listener to follow along an elongated dramatic arch. ‘Emanate’ was written and recorded in a gradual process, structured around the strict formal design of a three-part palindrome, following the pattern A1-B1-C-B2-A2. Each of these 5 parts is bridged by interludes (titled I-IV) which follow their own logic, working with the degradation and variable density of a separate, percussion-based material. Each part on the first side of the palindrome focuses on a specific approach to tonal harmony – chordal or intervallic, contrapuntal/canonic and melodic. As the piece progresses through its second half, these borders become blurred with material and approaches from the different parts bleeding into one another. As a consequence the piece has two parallel formal arches: one linear progression through the whole duration and one mirrored.

Begun as an electronic piece, ‘Emanate’ was composed, performed and recorded from a basic framework of material during a week of intense work at Yair’s Berlin studio, starting out with recordings of zithers and bowed strings processed through extensive electronic treatments – both digital and analogue. The electronic parts were written with a heavy focus on performance – playing parts using manual tools such as reel-to-reel-machines rather than merely working within the confines of the computer. The second part of the process involved transcribing parts of these electronic pieces for a score for a small chamber ensemble consisting of violin, cello, viola da gamba, trombone and double bass. Using this electronic structure to trace out new parts to be played by the ensemble, the score ended up being in time-based notation with all pitches fixed and added another layer of complexity by allowing performers enough freedom to make their own musical decisions when reacting to the electronics and to other players. The resulting instrumental parts weave in and out of the electronics, sometimes blending in with them entirely and sometimes acting individually.

Recording took place at Bonello studios in Berlin on February 2nd 2019, with an ensemble consisting of Hilary Jeffery (trombone), Lucy Railton (cello), Liam Byrne (Viola da gamba) and Simon Goff (violin). Yair played double bass and the piece was performed in its entirety twice, with the second take being selected as best. This swift recording method was only possible due to the exceptionally professional and talented ensemble and the fact that the work had been performed at the CTM festival two days before, providing enough rehearsal time. Additional overdubs were then recorded at Yair’s studio in Berlin and in Stockholm at EMS and the Royal College of Music. On these, Viktor Orri Arnarson played the viola, Sara Fors provided vocals and Maria W Horn added organ.

With individual track titles referring back to the form of the piece, the album’s title is suggestive of the work’s aesthetic resonance. As Mats explains, “it has to do with the textural qualities of the music itself. How it feels or behaves – its inherent seeping or slowly unfolding tendencies, as if it is a gas or liquid emanating from somewhere. It also relates to the transfer of ideas and intentions happening through the making and publishing of a musical work, where the album acts as a sort of container.”  

Stunningly conceived and realised, ‘Emanate’ is a bold and gorgeously rich work that dilates time and exists in a blurred interzone between emotional states; between classical, and experimental electronic music music worlds.  Step back a moment from the modern media coalface, allow yourself the time and space to be immersed in its currents and depths and ‘Emanate’ will amply reward your attention. 

 

COVID 19 UPDATE

Due to the Coronavirus outbreak, the vinyl release will be delayed until current distribution / retail issues have been resolved. We will still be taking preorders for the vinyl and everyone who preorders it will receive a full album download upon release date.

Both prolific composers in their own right working within the field of modern composition/ new electronic music, Berlin-based Yair Elazar Glotman and Stockholm-based Mats Erlandsson have been collaborating since 2015. ‘Negative Chambers’, their first joint album together was released on Miasmah Recordings in 2017, and saw them exploring new approaches to the use of traditional acoustic instruments. Having recently signed to FatCat’s 130701 imprint, and following closely on from Deutsche Gramophon’s release of Jóhann Jóhannsson’s ‘Last and First Men’ project which Yair co-composed, the pair’s sophomore album ‘Emanate’ is a powerful and stunningly executed extended duration work that utilises a fantastic ensemble cast and continues to explore their ideas of a ‘displaced sound’ – combining electronic and acoustic sound sources through both analogue and digital means to create an ambiguous composite work, a music that sounds neither clearly electronic or acoustic, existing instead in some in-between space. 

In our oversaturated digital age where omnipresent media connectivity enables instant gratification and a continuous flood of competing interests, we’re frequently lead to make snap judgements as we multitask through a mass of incoming information – continually scanning and skipping over surfaces. Technological advances were supposed to free up creative thinking, but this flood has instead lead to an erosion of our creativity and attention. In many ways, the idea of a longform music is unsuited to and out of phase with these times. And yet, there is recent evidence of a reaction against this – witness the rise of the practise of mindfulness and the cultural elements of a ‘slow living’ movement; the huge success of Max Richter’s marathon ‘Sleep’ project; and the emergence of an expansive musical niche that draws from drone, electroacoustic and classical traditions and prioritises a more immersive, durational sound worlds – see artists like Kali Malone, Ellen Arkbro, Clarice Jensen, Abul Mogard, William Basinski, Claire M Singer, and labels like Longform Editions and XKatedral. Music here is intended to function not as ambient backdrop to other activities but as a deep listening, intensive immersion.

Aligned with these approaches, as opposed to New Age ambience or the endless soporific, ‘chilled’ music playlists, Glotman & Erlandsson’s work is suffused with a chromatic density and a tendency towards an edgy darkness that puts it closer to Hildur Guðnadóttir’s ‘Chernobyl’ score or Jóhannsson’s ‘The Miner’s Hymns’. It shares that same brassy, bass heavy weight and glowering, simmering sense of tension as well as a similar, sliding feeling of instability – a regular sense that it’s slipping inexorably elsewhere. Its authors cite the influence of  Renaissance vocal polyphony; Giacinto Scelsi’s ‘Pranam II’; György Ligeti’s 1967 piece ‘Lontano’ (heard on the soundtrack to Kubrick’s ‘The Shining’ and Scorcese’s ‘Shutter Island’); as well as American composer Ingram Marshall, and Iceland’s Valgier Sigurdsson. Gorgeously recorded, beautifully focused and measured throughout, ‘Emanate’ is a texturally rich, deep spectrum exploration that flows and unfolds almost seamlessly throughout its fifty-minute span to create an energy field which feels simultaneously static and yet continually shifting.   

Although divided into nine parts, ‘Emanate’ was envisaged and recorded as one long, single composition – an attempt to create an ensemble piece, closer in length and formal approach to classical music compositions than the ever-shorter spans of so much music now tailored for consumption via digital streaming. With time and space allocated for each of the instruments to respond to and expand upon the composition, its extended duration arises from an ongoing exchange between the instrumental ensemble, the electronic elements and the structure of the piece, and invites the listener to follow along an elongated dramatic arch. ‘Emanate’ was written and recorded in a gradual process, structured around the strict formal design of a three-part palindrome, following the pattern A1-B1-C-B2-A2. Each of these 5 parts is bridged by interludes (titled I-IV) which follow their own logic, working with the degradation and variable density of a separate, percussion-based material. Each part on the first side of the palindrome focuses on a specific approach to tonal harmony – chordal or intervallic, contrapuntal/canonic and melodic. As the piece progresses through its second half, these borders become blurred with material and approaches from the different parts bleeding into one another. As a consequence the piece has two parallel formal arches: one linear progression through the whole duration and one mirrored.

Begun as an electronic piece, ‘Emanate’ was composed, performed and recorded from a basic framework of material during a week of intense work at Yair’s Berlin studio, starting out with recordings of zithers and bowed strings processed through extensive electronic treatments – both digital and analogue. The electronic parts were written with a heavy focus on performance – playing parts using manual tools such as reel-to-reel-machines rather than merely working within the confines of the computer. The second part of the process involved transcribing parts of these electronic pieces for a score for a small chamber ensemble consisting of violin, cello, viola da gamba, trombone and double bass. Using this electronic structure to trace out new parts to be played by the ensemble, the score ended up being in time-based notation with all pitches fixed and added another layer of complexity by allowing performers enough freedom to make their own musical decisions when reacting to the electronics and to other players. The resulting instrumental parts weave in and out of the electronics, sometimes blending in with them entirely and sometimes acting individually.

Recording took place at Bonello studios in Berlin on February 2nd 2019, with an ensemble consisting of Hilary Jeffery (trombone), Lucy Railton (cello), Liam Byrne (Viola da gamba) and Simon Goff (violin). Yair played double bass and the piece was performed in its entirety twice, with the second take being selected as best. This swift recording method was only possible due to the exceptionally professional and talented ensemble and the fact that the work had been performed at the CTM festival two days before, providing enough rehearsal time. Additional overdubs were then recorded at Yair’s studio in Berlin and in Stockholm at EMS and the Royal College of Music. On these, Viktor Orri Arnarson played the viola, Sara Fors provided vocals and Maria W Horn added organ.

With individual track titles referring back to the form of the piece, the album’s title is suggestive of the work’s aesthetic resonance. As Mats explains, “it has to do with the textural qualities of the music itself. How it feels or behaves – its inherent seeping or slowly unfolding tendencies, as if it is a gas or liquid emanating from somewhere. It also relates to the transfer of ideas and intentions happening through the making and publishing of a musical work, where the album acts as a sort of container.”  

Stunningly conceived and realised, ‘Emanate’ is a bold and gorgeously rich work that dilates time and exists in a blurred interzone between emotional states; between classical, and experimental electronic music music worlds.  Step back a moment from the modern media coalface, allow yourself the time and space to be immersed in its currents and depths and ‘Emanate’ will amply reward your attention. 

 

COVID 19 UPDATE

Due to the Coronavirus outbreak, the vinyl release will be delayed until current distribution / retail issues have been resolved. We will still be taking preorders for the vinyl and everyone who preorders it will receive a full album download upon release date.

Listen
Press Quotes
"an immersive and intense piece of minimalism written for an unorthodox 10-piece ensemble... Lengthy drones merge into each other and morph at a glacial pace, but – like the surface of a Kazimir Malevich painting – what seems clean and rectilinear at first glance is actually filled with fascinating granular detail and jagged edges."
The Guardian
"a 50-minute irradiation of sonic light.... [and] corruscating meditative power."
BBC Radio 3 - New Music Show
"Spooky, slow-moving drone music. It throbs at an almost glacial pace but, when played at volume, fascinating details - fractional dissonances, jagged edges, ever-mutating textures - reveal themselves with every listen. 7/10"
Uncut
"Glotman is a force to be reckoned with… textures blend, mold, and flow, like a hot molten alloy filling into the crevices of your old fractured frame... a powerful and stunningly executed long-form work."
Headphone Commute
"This is not just a drone record…. With an ear turned towards the concept of deep listening, Glotman and Erlandsson turn away from any notion of chilled or new age listening... this album has a cinematic feel with a brooding dark quality about it… The music is forever in a form of movement, twisting and turning, highlighting a sound before weaving away and revealing, but also hiding something… a rich piece of music that deserves to be utilised as a score, such is the impressive nature of the moods contained within."
Drifting, Almost Falling
"Pushes hard for Stars of the Lid sunblissed drone - and succeeds. Essential... It’s f***ing beautiful... a must-have for aficionados of A Winged Victory For the Sullen... It’s amniotic, it’s hypnotic, it’s moving; it leaves me fulfilled yet craving more... as lover of swelling, harmonic drone, it’s quite simply a must-own."
Backseat Mafia
"Pushes neoclassical further in interesting and unique directions… Listen to it as it was originally intended - all in one go. You won’t regret it."
Electronic Sound
"The sonics on Emanate move slowly, and with stealth… The total, majestic, powerful. Its strength, a silent roar – rather than bombast… A body of work that subverts classical music – updates it – by undercutting accepted, traditional “beauty” – melody – with process and production both urban and modern."
Ban Ban Ton Ton
"a rich yet ambiguous work… a nuanced sonic statement against our oversaturated digital age… If you need some out-of-time-and-space experience that would re-calibrate your senses anew, then this beautifully realized, immersive composition is the place for you. ‘Emanate’ may gently hypnotize you."
Salt Peanuts
Discography