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Black Devil

Disco Club

Black Devil - Disco Club | Alter K (AK61) - main
Black Devil - Disco Club | Alter K (AK61) - 1Black Devil - Disco Club | Alter K (AK61) - 2Black Devil - Disco Club | Alter K (AK61) - 3Black Devil - Disco Club | Alter K (AK61) - 4Black Devil - Disco Club | Alter K (AK61) - 5Black Devil - Disco Club | Alter K (AK61) - 6

A1

"H" Friend

5:43

A2

Timing, Forget The Timing

4:34

A3

One To Choose

4:57

B1

We Never Fly Away Again

4:53

B2

Follow Me (Instrumental)

5:15

B3

No Regrets

5:00

26.9€
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Alter K (AK61)
Lo Recordings (none)

1x Vinyl LP Album Reissue Remastered

Release date: May 11, 2015, France

Ware began as an experimental electronic duo back in the 1980s, when you had to know what you were doing. Comprising Sacha Galvagna, who went on to play with acts as diverse as Rosa Mota, Horsepower, Charles Atlas, Crown Estate, The Last King of England and Carta, and Andrew Wilson a producers’ producer, noise machine maker and DJ, who found underground acclaim for his Crossed Wires output, the band reconnected earlier this decade when they found themselves with some unexpected time on their hands. From across continents the pair took advantage of 21st century technology to resurrect a sketchpad of aural experimentation that would become the foundation of Star Catalogue, Ware’s long overdue long player set for release through Absent Music.

Setting out with the spectral cha-cha of title track Star Catalogue, Ware chart their passage through diaphanous arrangements that veer off mid-song into unexpected new spaces, melting into liminal vibrations that render large parts of the album as continuous pieces inherently connected by overtones and sentiment. Threading its gossamer sounds into a surprisingly unyielding whole, the album takes in the phantasmal glam of Nerve Agency, Sable Bay’s prismatic ache, the infinitesimal disquiet of Eigen State, and the nylon strung desire of New Model. As the pair impart the unhurried entreaties of The Splintered Woods, which gives way to the cabin fever of My Life as a Ghost and its switch up into ebullient arousal, the unexpected focus-pull of Frame, the shadowy elegy of Nepenthe, and the apparitional house of The Apprentice Pillar, Ware artfully draw the listener into a heady intimacy that is a striking contrast to the cookie cutter soul-bearing histrionics of modern pop music.

In an era in which the thrill of anticipation has been extinguished by the attention-free instant gratification of streaming’s ‘what you want when you want it’ model, Ware have delivered a piece of work that is greater than the sum of its exemplary parts. Painted in exquisitely fragile figures that lead inexorably onward through its 11 tracks, Star Catalogue won’t be so vulgar as to demand your attention, but it unquestionably deserves it.