THE USE OF ASHES – white nights: glowing lights

(CD/LP, tonefloat)

Strange designs of popmusic have become inflationary in the wake of the Animal Collective’s first two albums. So much that they have spawned a whole new label of a subgenre ranging from Devendra Banhart to the Akorn Family and from Comets Of Fire to Six Organs of Admittance (to name some of the better ones). A lot of those use their strange noodlings and mixing escapades as an excuse for lack of vision, lack of structure and lack of technical ability. The more awesome it is if amidst the sea of mediocre and unlistenable hippie shit there comes up a real diamond of impromptu songsmith handicraft. One that flows like water and shines like the sun reflecting on the sea, radiating ease and wisdom.

The trio Use of Ashes on the one hand peruses a lot of uncommon instruments like sitar, tabla and even a bouzouki. On the other one third of the band is only responsible for what they call “sound and spheres”. An introspective reader might already guess where “white nights glowing lights” is headed: a mix of folklore world music with trance aspects. Somewhere between psychedlic drones and luminous melodies. And there is also a certain kind of shamanic atmosphere coming from some of the more looped instrumental parts, whereas in other places vintage analogue synthesizers add colours.

The vocal melodies and also some of the lyrics very interestingly remind me of the late work of David Gilmour. For instance the song “Dark white planet” that starts with the words “you and me waiting / on this dark white planet / we stayed awake too long / me and you / on this white dark planet”. The first part of that song seems to me like a psylocibine gobbling band of heathens from beyond the mountains forming a Pink Floyd Revival band after a night of trips. And therefore Use of Ashes never use volume or loudness as a means of aesthetics in their songs; their songs would probably work without amplification as well. Quite contrarily, what fascinated me during the first few listens was the intrinsic interplay between these old string instruments and a drumkit that seems to consist mostly of big toms and the way the form a song so gently but with persistence.

Definitely, this album breathes a lof of nostalgia for (imagined) old times, centuries ago, when living was more simple. “it’s a crystal ride / picking daisies / on a lazy daisy day” (lazy daisy day) At times fantasy garnishments enter this realm, like a prince with golden hair, a dragon ro silent mountain. As it turns out: “white nights: glowing lights” is part of an album cycle that begann with “White nights: the hand of tzafkiel”. Well, if you follow these songs over the course of some albums then a mighty story line will evolve. But with only this one to get into it is like opening “Lord of the Rings” arbitrarily at some page and then reading 120 pages and then closing the book again and calling that a story. It won’t work.

So I’ll suffice it to judge these eighteen tracks – some short instrumentals, some melodic songs, some atmospheric epics – on what  they are on this album alone. And they are one third warm sunshine, one third mindtripping and one third hands down to earth. The promise of another chapter of “white nights” is at hand, and I for one am excited to hear how this is going to go on.

www.tonefloat.com

11/2009