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Although the album is divided into eight tracks, there is only subtle audible differences to distinguish them in the listener's ear. Celer often uses track boundaries for purposes other than delineating musical divisions, and the track titles read like one of the poems that have graced other albums or Celer's blog. Track boundaries are an unusual playground for sound artists. The Hafler Trio, in its long search to challenge perception, released CDs where the track layout didn't correspond in the slightest to the sequence of individual pieces. But I don't think this is Celer's motivation, which almost seems more like an acknowledgment of the essential disordered quality of the spiritual and emotional states presented by their music.
Yet despite the seeming placidity of the Dying Star's trajectory, the album's most poignant moment comes at the beginning of the final track. Flickers (Goodnight) is the only track that doesn't begin in silence, but instead is crossfaded directly from its predecessor. Even more significant, its continuing drone is overlaid with the only two even mildly percussive events, aptly characterized by the flickers in the track title, coming at the very beginning of the track and echoed about forty seconds in. These two events, so quiet as to be barely suggested, and appearing only after forty minutes of quiet undulating drones, are Dying Star's hidden treasure. Is it the dying star finally imploding, creating a brief flash all too easily overlooked? Has the listener drifted into an oblivious somnolence and heard it only in his or her dreams? Celer makes a call to the listener's attention and imagination and thereby elevates this release to one of their best.
Dying Star is released on Dragon's Eye and is available in their shop or from various distributors worldwide.
2 comments:
I've been enjoying Dying Star. Nice review.
Just a heads-up.
New aboombong is out: amnemonic.
Available “name your price” at http://aboombong.bandcamp.com/album/amnemonic
Don’t sleep on the bonus track offer…
Spread the word.
Cheers.
It was you who introduced me to Celer; thanks for your review of this release. Also thanks for your thoughts about the 'uses of track boundaries' --- this would make a worthwhile topic for a lengthy essay (alongside the different types of 'fade-outs' and '-ins' in popular and other recorded musics.)
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