The long opening track "Heleneleh" is intentionally simple droning electronic hum, pitched near the 60hz hum of a guitar amplifier to resemble one sitting far off in another room. The rise in pitch approximately three minutes in is a drastic one, given how intentionally static the track is. The tones eventually join each other in harmony before being met with a third, almost ringing bell type tone. Towards the end a resonant, almost orchestral texture arrives, the various pitches existing together and generating independent harmonics, all with the familiar warmth of an analog synthesizer.
The short "Linear to Circular/Vertical Axis" is a veritable beehive of activity after the frozen layers of the previous track, consisting of reversed surges of tone with significant underlying variation. There is a crunchy lo-fi digital rust to the sound that makes it stand out compared to the purity of the other longer pieces. "Circle One: Summer Transcience" takes a much different approach, beginning immediately with a high frequency tinnitus ring that stays present for the entire duration, but is presented at a restrained volume that keeps it from becoming too disturbing or irritating. An ultra low frequency sub-bass enters, eventually oscillating rapidly. It’s an intentional study in extreme sound variation, the high frequency is psychologically effective, the low end is far more physical.
"Observation Wheel" meshes almost bird-like chirps and swelling low frequency drone with rhythmic stabs of white noise. There is a subtle variation throughout, but it has a warm ambient quality, with the slowly undulating low end sound slowly pulsating like a boat in the ocean. The closing "Rotational Change for Windmill" keeps a chirping electronic tone through the first half that is repetitive enough to encroach on annoying, but never crosses the threshold. Even at low volume, a combination of ultra and sub-sonic tones and abrasive tones can be heard, almost like an old Whitehouse album being played from a few doors down.
When I say enhanced and hindered by being on CD, I think the format does wonders for the purity of sound: Eleh is known for low volume pure tones that are presented here with pristine clarity. However, the digital purity doesn’t give the disc an overly clinical or sterile sound at all, there is still the analog warmth of the source material that shines through. On vinyl though, the interaction between the imperfections of the medium and the Spartan tones would give a unique listening experience each time. So it is neither a plus nor a minus fully, it is simply a difference.
Eleh’s first foray into the digital realm is one that doesn’t hinder the warm analog glow of the sound in the slightest, and allows instead a full pure transmission of their simple, yet inviting electronic drone. Minimalist in the classic sense of the world, it is the kind of album that demands full attention, played in a setting without any distraction or intrusion. Under those conditions, it is a perfectly engrossing hour of beauty.
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