Sin Fang - Sad Party - Music CD

Sin Fang - Sad Party - Music CD

$22.78
Sale price  $22.78 Regular price 
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Sin Fang - Sad Party - Music CD

Sin Fang - Sad Party - Music CD

$22.78
Sale price  $22.78 Regular price 

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After his collaboration with Sley and mm's rvar Smrason for the 2018 album Team Dreams (MORR 150CD/LP), Sad Party sees Sindri Sigfsson take things into his own hands again. As a result of frantic and mostly improvised jam sessions, the nine pop songs are as bittersweet as the title suggests, meandering between Sin Fang's trademark knack for catchy melodies, rich sonic textures, and advanced musical experimentalism. Psychedelic and melancholic at once, it brings Sigfsson's many different musical facets into a consistent and irresistible flow. Sad Party was recorded by Sigfsson alone over the course of three weeks in an old wooden studio in downtown Reykjavk before it was, like so many Icelandic venues in recent times, closed for good thanks to rising rents. "It had a wonderful view, something most music studios do not have," says Sigfsson of the place, where he had spent so much time recording, drinking, and playing table tennis in the past years. Now he locked himself in for three weeks to throw a very last Sad Party. Aiming for the music to be "not too fast and not too slow, not too loud and not too quiet", the songwriter followed a radical stream of consciousness approach for the lyrics. Starting with lush and warm drones, the opener "Planet Arfth" sets the mood for Sin Fang's fifth solo record just perfectly. This is goodbye, the wordless vocals in the background seem to say - but we're going to make the best of it, counters the slow hip-hop groove that takes center stage midway through the track. Soon giving way for slow and funky dream pop sounds ("Hollow"), Sad Party slowly picks up speed with intricately built rhythms ("No Summer"), piano-driven power pop ("Smother") and even IDM-influenced electronica ("Goldenboy Is Sleeping"), before the second half makes the melancholy that comes with a farewell audible. The bitter follows the sweet. After a wonderfully psychedelic gem ("Happiness"), a hazy mid-tempo rock ballad ("Never Who I Wanna Be") and a shimmering downbeat piece that highlights Sigfsson's abilities as a producer of experimental electronic music ("Cloudjuice"), "Constellation" serves as the perfect coda to the album. With it's underwater lo-fi aesthetics and it's psychoactive qualities, it ends the album with just the right amount of anthemic ambiguity. Here's to old places, new beginnings and, most of all, Sin Fang!

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