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First Narrows

Loscil

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Album Review

Scott Morgan's — aka Loscil — third full-length is titled for the first gap in the entrance to the Burrard Inlet spanned by the Lion's Gate Bridge into Vancouver, his hometown, from the Pacific Ocean. The title is not an accident, as the notions of gap, time span, and movement in Morgan's new pieces offer a nocturnal view of the transition of fluid inner space. First Narrows also marks a first for Morgan: this is his first collaborative recording with live instruments. Morgan's generated sounds, from varied sources both organic and electronic, both musical and found atmospheres, were custom programmed and processed with the notion of time displacement built in — the programs were designed as "flawed" so that no two performances of his sonic patches would ever be the same. Morgan then asked Jason Zumpano (Rhodes), Nyla Raney (cello), and Tim Loewen (guitar) to improvise over his aural constructions, and then edited and mixed the constructed electronic sounds with the live ones. The end result feels unlike anything he's ever done before, but retains his trademark moodiness — in spades. Pulses and sequences flit by through the middle of washes of white noise and played sound, phrases become long passages and then disappear as gradually as they appeared, channels blend, drop out and shift, giving a form to the formless and then dissembling it into the ether. Over five tracks, this heartbeat ambience and alien soundscape architecture layer, dissemble, stretch, float, commingle, and undulate through the ears of the listener who is, in turn, taken out of her or his own time-space continuum. Spooky, lush, warm, watery, and even moving, First Narrows is a glorious experiment in aural atmospherics.

Customer Reviews

the farthest radio waves

Loscil towers the sky and takes us with him. First Narrows is an entrance to these far reaches of the firmanent, the farthest corners of the universe. The opening track, Sickbay, is a space shuttle pulling away from orbit. The rest of the journey is a sountrack of celestially organic blips and beeps bouncing in zero gravity. Highlights include Brittle, an elegantly complex track with angelic nicks and rhythms. Loscil ends with Cloister, the sounds of the seraphim singing at the farthest edge of the universe.

Superb

One of the most uplifting albums I have heard in a long time. Outstanding in the realm of ambient records and, I am inclined to believe, Loscil's best work to date (including his latest LP, Plume). Both genial and resonant, First Narrows has a life that one would not expect to find in an arrangement of ambient electronic music - due mainly to the incorporation of musicians playing live on each track. Comparative to its surrounding works, this record is particularly moving because it is sparsely melancholic. With the exception of Lucy Dub, which separates the suspiciously similar - yet incessantly pleasing - Sickbay and First Narrows, these songs emanate a warmth in their major harmonic content that feel like an auditory velvet robe which you would rather not take off.

Elegant, serene, awake

Very hard to avoid describing this album as "perfect" and stopping there. Electronic, but that doesn't matter. The sounds are organic too. Quiet, but more like quiet watchfulness than like passive dozing. Ambient, but full of rhythm. Passes like a cloud, but it's carefully controlled and beautifully made. I give up. Buy now.

Biography

Formed: Canada

Genre: Electronic

Years Active: '00s, '10s

Scott Morgan apparently appropriated his Loscil alter ego from the operation code within the sound synthesis system Csound. Although he admitted he rarely used Csound to create his compelling minimalist recordings, he asserted that looping and oscillating were the basics of his music-making process. Drawing stated influence from contemporary post-techno musicians such as Oval and Wolfgang Voigt’s Gas, as well as early electronic music pioneers such as Brian Eno and Raymond Scott, he...
Full Bio

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