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Details / Tracklist: |
1.1 In the Morning1.2 Sweet Subtropics1.3 Wild Fennel1.4 The Girl with the Freckles That Sounded Like Two Bells1.5 I Dream the Dusty Road Over There1.6 Adam, Eve and the Jellyfish1.7 Affirmation1.8 Reggae Days1.9 El Tablado1.10 Sweet Nothing1.11 Jose1.12 In the Evening |
 | Number of discs: |
1 |
 | Extra-Infos: |
.. Nothing/ 180gr./ Michael Luechner On A 180-degree Turn |
 | Description: | The sound and arrangement of the pieces are close to the ideas and techniques of Debussy and Ravel. Soprano vocals by Stina K. are provided on several tracks. The entire album was created over a span of five years (2005-2010), and was designed to be evocative of relaxing in, and traveling to, places in Europe, Japan and North-America. Places like the Canary Islands, Okinawa or Catalina Island. And it could only be done with classical music instrumentation - more specifically, with chamber music arrangements. Upon initial listen, the album may seem far removed from Guitar's earlier work with symphonic walls of guitars, but ultimately the arrangements are similar - minus the distortion this time."Dolce farniente" - that?s what they say in Italy. It means "It's sweet to do nothing."
Over the last decade, Guitar?s Michael Lueckner has crafted six albums released on labels such as Morr Music and Onitor (Germany), Third-Ear and & Records (Japan), and Clairecords (USA). Each album brought a unique twist to his marriage of electronics and more traditional instrumentation, and most with a certain refreshing twist on shoegazing. However, on It?s Sweet to Do Nothing, his seventh full-length, Michael purposefully takes a 180-degree turn by blending classical string arrangements (harp, piano, violin, contrabass, etc.) with drum programming and samples. He returns to his roots here, as his first love of music, his most collected and most listened-to music is modern classic chamber music.
It?s Sweet To Do Nothing is intentionally impressionistic - the listener is requested (and inspired) to think about Monet, Sisley, Degas, Pisarro - landscapes, lakes, people in motion. The album?s impressionistic cover art was commissioned from artist Jonathan Armstrong, who was sent an early release of the album to absorb before painting the piece.
The sound and arrangement of the pieces are close to the ideas and techniques of Debussy and Ravel. Soprano vocals by Stina K. are provided on several tracks. The entire album was created over 5 years (2005-2010), and was designed to be evocative of relaxing in, and traveling to, ?dolce farniente? places in Europe, Japan and North-America. Places like the Canary Islands, Okinawa or Catalina Island. And it could only be done with classical music instrumentation -- more specifically, with chamber music arrangements.
Upon initial listen, the album may seem far removed from Michael?s earlier work with symphonic walls of guitars, but ultimately the arrangements are similar -- minus the distortion this time.
|  | No. of tracks: |
12 |
 | Manufacturer No.: |
CLIR81.2 |
 | Product Safety
Responsible Person for the EU:
Ten Dance Media GmbH Boxhagener Str. 106, 10245 Berlin, DE gpsr@tendance.de |  |
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