Reviews Search

The World on Higher Downs, "Land Patterns"

"Krautrock" would be the most appropriate description for the sound TWoHD make, though their Germanic descent is unlikely, and Wisconsin is pretty far from Europe.  But they do take the approach that Can did with regards to recording to the next logical step.  Instead of just taking sessions of improvisation and melding them into "tracks," they composed the album in different locations, and then pieced it together into coherent works.  The result is very different experience than these ears are used to 

 

Plop

The entire disc is covered in a haze of reverb that gives the vibe of '90s shoegaze bands, but maybe not so much in content as atmosphere.  The four members of TWoHD play a variety of instruments throughout, creating tracks that differ greatly from one another, but with a similar feel throughout.  Strings and lush synths are prominent on songs like "Ascension And" and "A Muted Street Song," but the latter is augmented with live drums and heavily processed percussion as well.  Even with the vast instrumentation, a song like "Waterpath St." drifts in an ambient space of bass drone with metallic scrapes.

Unconventional instrumentation plays a role throughout as well, such as the human snapping/slapping percussion in "Two Aged Windows," and the molten cassette tape hiss of "Her Static Will."  The album ends on an odd note with the slow, simplistic percussion of "Sun Court" mixed with orchestra hits and crashes, not unlike a lo-fi symphony.  There is a very calm, relaxed feeling throughout the entire album, though some elements of darkness creep in, like the subtle synth dread in "Her Static Will" and the bleakness of "Waterpath St."

The most difficult aspect of this album is just how dense it is.  The massive amounts of multitracking and instrumentation make it difficult to discern exactly what is going on at times.  It is never overly muddled or muddy, but my tastes are for more sparseness.  The density does, however, contribute to a very prominent atmosphere throughout

Land Patterns is not a work that can be easily described at all using any genre definitions or terms.  There are elements of jazz, electronic, alternative rock, and classical here for sure.  In that regard, it is not unlike an even more unconventional Fridge with an even greater amount of instrumentation mixed in.  As a debut, it is extremely strong and diverse and hopefully marks the beginning of a long career.

samples: