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David Sylvian - Manafon |
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Review
DAVID SYLVIAN is a man apart. In his thirty-year career that spans the New Romantic movement, ambient works, progressive rock, and mature and esoteric pop, Sylvian has tested popular styles and bent them to his own vision. But the 00s have seen a more extreme side of his work. While 2003's "Blemish" startled long-time fans with its emotional rigour, Sylvian has taken the next step with "Manafon" (his first solo album in 6 years) – a work of nuance and stern musicality, that is also intriguing, suspenseful, and horribly beautiful.
On "Manafon", Sylvian pursues "a completely modern kind of chamber music. Intimate, dynamic, emotive, democratic, economical." In sessions in London, Vienna, and Tokyo, Sylvian assembled the world's leading improvisers and innovators, artists who explore free improvisation, space-specific performance, and live electronics. From Evan Parker and Keith Rowe, to Fennesz and members of Polwechsel, to Sachiko M and Otomo Yoshihide, the musicians provide both a backdrop and a counterweight to his own vocal performances – which, minus one instrumental, are nakedly the center of each piece.
Sylvian's voice has never been so dominant or so striking, and his resonant tenor and deliberate vibrato captivate the listener from the start of "Small Metal Gods". "It's like a one-man monologue in which every change of light and backdrop is crucial to the carrying of the central performance. It's an ensemble work even though there is a central performance."
Intuition drew Sylvian to these pieces and these players, and the surprises they bring: a cello visiting like a warm hand on a forehead, the unpredictable use of unadulterated sine waves, the brassy path of Evan Parker's soprano sax solo. "Manafon" has a forbidding core, but aesthetically, each piece is an engrossing discovery. Presented as ever in a beautiful digipak featuring exquisite artwork from Ruud Van Empel and designed by Chris Bigg.
Format
CD Digipak
Tracklisting
01. Small Metal Gods (click to listen)
02. The Rabbit Skinner (click to listen)
03. Random Acts of Senseless Violence (click to listen)
04. The Greatest Living Englishman (click to listen)
05. 125 Spheres (click to listen)
06. Snow White in Appalachia (click to listen)
07. Emily Dickinson (click to listen)
08. The Department Of Dead Letters (click to listen)
09. Manafon (click to listen)
Record Label
Samadhi Sound
Release date
14th Sep 2009
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