Review: Originally released on Mikhaylo Vityk's own imprint Leleka in 2014 on physical, "A Voyage to Arcturus" is now for the first time available digitally via Apollo Records. Ukranian house mystic Mikhaylo Vityk offers here a suitably epic Vakula LP, A Voyage To Arcturus, trabelling between ambient, dub, tropical jazz and more. Those with a more considered grasp of literary matters will no doubt recognise that Vityk has taken titular inspiration from A Voyage To Arcturus, the 1920 novel penned by Scottish writer David Lindsay with each of the sixteen tracks also named after chapters from the book too. By his own admission, this is more of an imaginary soundtrack than outright album, and as a result there is little here one could call deep house. Spending some time with it does however confirm what a singular talent the Ukrainian is!
Review: Matthew Adams' Sieren project delivers a full length studio album to Apollo following a string of EPs between 2016-18. It follows the Transients Of Light album Christian Loffler's Ki Records released some four years ago which expands on his bittersweet, emotive, and atmospheric production style; adding yet more nuance to his inner city UK approach to club music, abstract rhythms, epic sub bass and uplifting melodies of trance and ambient synth. Find ghetto tech tempos, techno drums and haunted wasteland atmospheres in "Night Bus" alongside the dubby, broken beat heaviness of numbers like "Oblivious". Beatless and melodic fields of bliss shine through in "Pacific High" softened by the cushions of white noise and crackle, sometimes punctuated by vanguard drum patterns as heard in the title track "Timelapse". Expect a roller coaster of synth dips and ascending synths next to pools of dubby drums and new school instrumental hip hop.
Review: Chamber music composer turned electronic music producer Paul Frick has been rather quiet of late, with his last solo release of note coming way back in 2011 via Kalk Pets. Happily, this belated return to action - a fine full-length excursion on R&S's downtempo offshoot Apollo - is one of his strongest releases to date. It's largely humid and tropical in tone, with the producer fusing field recordings of nature and manipulated tropical drums with all manner of lilting, ear-pleasing musical touches. It's rather hard to pigeonhole, all told, but there's little to fault. The producer's ability to balance feverish soundscapes and blissful home listening fare with more floor-friendly compositions is arguably the album's defining feature, with his knack of crafting entertaining and melodious experimental music coming a close second.
We use cookies to personalise content and ads, to provide social media features and to analyse our traffic. We also share information about your use of our site with our social media, advertising and analytics partners who may combine it with other information that you've provided to them or that they've collected from your use of their services.