FIBLA
lent CD/LP,
spa.RK
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| Almost Buddhist in effect,
Fibla’s new album spreads sunshine, warmth and grace via gentle and
subtle beats awashed with beautiful and spacious synthie-sounds. The album
builds up to a rhythmic highpoint in its middle and then slowly degrades
again into the Azorean ocean of ease and sounds it started off from.
“lent” is proof that it is possible to but emotion and heart into
electronic music. This record shimmers, shines and soothes. |
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It is hard to make out differences nowadays. At times I think there are
new labels and records popping up everywhere, who are mainly interested in
producing interesting logos and writing their names in various forms of
interpunctuation and small and big letters. (Maybe I should try crack.ED or
something? Nah…) Especially in relation to electronic music, there might
be just as much labels and artists as there are people actually listening to
all the music being released. Well, this could be a good sign as well, the
listener emancipating himself into being an artist, the production-tools in
the hands of the consumers, no more difference between consumers and
producers, and here we are again, where we started off: it is hard to make a
difference nowadays. Who does what and why? For some years the techno-scene
was proud that the producers lived in absolute anonymity, but nowadays the
star-system has full reach in each and every aspect of this genre as well.
The revolution devours its children, just like history has taught us it
will. Which records are of importance and why? I will give you the same
answer, I have always to this question: Whatever music strikes your heart
and / or mind makes a difference. During times as complex and difficult as
ours the only way to keep a clear head and to not lose orientation is to
rely completely on your personal experience and network. And if you can’t
trust the, who can you trust? “an incredible shared moment” is not only what makes some music so
special to the listener at certain times in very individual circumstances,
it is also the title of the last track on the second album by Fibla (not
counting the collaboration with video artist Carles Congo) and his first on
his very own record label. And “an incredible shared moment” is what you
will get from the warmest, friendliest, most heart-reaching electronic album
I have heard in the last months. Fibla still uses subtle electronic beats,
close to actual clicks’n’cuts but not quite, that build up into complex
patterns that produce various straight rhythms at once. Did anyone say Autechre
on tranquillisers? Well, that is not all there is. Because these fundaments
are awashed with warm, liquid atmospheres and synthie-sounds that flow like
dolphins in video games. Maybe it is just a culturally learned trigger to
associate these sounds with absolute freedom, elegance and beauty but there
we go, if it spells grace then it most assuredly is graceful. And it is,
right down to the distorted vocalised keyboards and undercurrent
noise-patterns. |
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09/2003