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    Tashi Wada - What Is Not Strange? (2024) [Official Digital Download 24/48]

    Posted By: delpotro
    Tashi Wada - What Is Not Strange? (2024) [Official Digital Download 24/48]

    Tashi Wada - What Is Not Strange? (2024)
    FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/48 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 51:55 minutes | 571 MB
    Experimental Electronic, Ambient | Label: RVNG Intl., Official Digital Download

    Tashi Wada's first new album in over five years is also his most surprising, comprising a set of elevated, poetic songs that draw from psych-rock, new age and ambient, leaving the tonally rich, avant-minimal drone he's most widely associated with to simmer in the background. It's gorgeous, subtly extravagant "Dream Music" - one for fans of Julia Holter (who appears here on vocal duties), Jim O'Rourke, Rafael Toral, Joanna Brouk, Terry Riley.

    The son of legendary Fluxus minimalist Yoshi Wada, Tashi Wada has thus far largely followed in his father's footsteps, composing vibratory oddities on 2014's cello-fwd 'Duets' and collaborating with his dad on 2018's wormhole-piercing wonder 'Nue'. 'What Is Not Strange?' flips the script, written over a period when Wada both endured the death of his father and welcomed the birth of his daughter. Considering his conflicting emotions, Wada began to move away from minimalism and towards a form of ecstatic maximalism. He immersed himself in the poetry of surrealist Philip Lamantia - who inspired the album's title - and began to see the album as "dream music", a way of harmonising with Lamantia's view that the secrets of the world are contained within all of us.

    The title track opens with a cautious ensemble of blurry, pitch-bent synths and wordless, weightless vocals, but when the album hits 'Grand Trine', Wada's intentions are made clear. Psych-y harpsichord twangs and ethereal flute transport us back to the Laurel Canyon era as a voice is reduced to breathy echo, and the bolshy drums become a faint sweep. These carefully-engineered builds and drops feed into the theme - the music appears to assemble and disassemble itself like a dream landscape, tripping between memory and illusion.

    The process is most distinct on 'Flame of Perfect Form', an energetic avant-rock stomper that's been tweezed to perfection. Drums are identifiable and sturdy, but still manage to wash like waves around the hypnotic, droning vocal part; Wada turns his knotted electric guitar riffs into dense, frayed patterns that intertwine with distorted cello squeals. There aren't discernible verses or choruses, but it still feels like a song, its tempo monitored by heartbeats and intuition, its structure informed by exposed emotions. We can make out a legible blueprint of classic American music, but Wada blurs the edges into incomprehensible shapes, Lamantia's peyote-fueled stanzas guiding his hand.

    The spectre of Minimalism manifests itself too - particularly on tracks like the serene 'Revealed Night' and 'Asleep to the World' - but even these moments are spiked with disquiet. The former almost drowns its scrapes and oscillations under smoggy cityscape recordings, and the latter cuts into silence with percussive punctuations, curving mumbled words into negative space and organ flurries into dreamy serenity. On 'Time of Birds', the tonal experiments that rooted 'Duets' is repurposed, underpinning a balmy vocal drone, and organ work that sounds as if it's swaying between Wendy Carlos and Alice Coltrane, both triumphant and discreetly mystical.

    'What Is Not Strange?' seems exceptionally well timed, landing in an era when minimalism is abundant but incongruous. By fracturing musical history using dream logic and beat era surrealism, Wada gestures towards a dazzlingly interlaced future that's dense, unpredictable and entirely human. If you've been enjoying Rafael Toral's similarly mind-expanding 'Spectral Evolution', this one's defo for you.

    Ezra Buchla – viola, electric viola
    Corey Fogel – drums, percussion
    Devin Hoff – double bass
    Julia Holter – vocals, additional keyboard
    Tashi Wada – keyboards, sirens

    Tracklist:
    01 - What Is Not Strange?
    02 - Grand Trine
    03 - Revealed Night
    04 - Asleep to the World
    05 - Flame of Perfect Form
    06 - Under the Earth
    07 - Subaru
    08 - Time of Birds
    09 - Calling
    10 - Plume
    11 - This World's Beauty

    foobar2000 1.4.1 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
    log date: 2024-06-12 17:16:01

    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
    Analyzed: Tashi Wada / What Is Not Strange?
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

    DR Peak RMS Duration Track
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
    DR9 -2.06 dB -13.89 dB 2:05 01-What Is Not Strange?
    DR7 -0.19 dB -10.72 dB 6:10 02-Grand Trine
    DR11 -3.22 dB -17.70 dB 3:16 03-Revealed Night
    DR7 -0.20 dB -12.22 dB 5:28 04-Asleep to the World
    DR7 -0.18 dB -8.27 dB 6:30 05-Flame of Perfect Form
    DR8 -1.87 dB -12.34 dB 4:30 06-Under the Earth
    DR9 -2.58 dB -14.05 dB 2:46 07-Subaru
    DR7 -0.20 dB -9.87 dB 7:52 08-Time of Birds
    DR11 -3.37 dB -17.14 dB 5:16 09-Calling
    DR9 -0.20 dB -12.11 dB 6:22 10-Plume
    DR9 -0.20 dB -11.96 dB 1:40 11-This World's Beauty
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

    Number of tracks: 11
    Official DR value: DR8

    Samplerate: 48000 Hz
    Channels: 2
    Bits per sample: 24
    Bitrate: 1591 kbps
    Codec: FLAC
    ================================================================================


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