Geso / God Is A Glitch
  • HOME
  • ALL WORK
  • BIO / CONTACT
  • AV FEED
Geso / God Is A Glitch
Geso / God Is A Glitch
  • HOME
  • ALL WORK
  • BIO / CONTACT
  • AV FEED
BACK TO BLOG

Colin Stetson

2 May, 2017
-
Music
I guess sharing and commenting on the new album from Colin Stetson is a must, at least from a personal point of view, as I have been following his career for already some years and somehow I have to thank him and his music for opening my mind to other genres and specially other instruments. I can’t say enough how impressive an emotional his music can be, the same goes for his live performance. I see him as rare and unique flower in between jazz, modern classic and experimental music fields. I guess that getting more personal what I enjoy from his music is that dark and distorted version of beauty, if I could describe with visual or narrative words “post-apocalyptic” comes to my mind… But don’t be afraid under those harsh layers there is melody, there is feelings, melancholy, love, passion, creation.

If by any chance you are discovering right here, right now his music, I can’t recommend enough that you pay a listen to his previous works, specially New History Warfare Vol.1, 2 and 3, but also his collaboration with Sarah Neufeld. And if you have the possibility to see him live, please do!! You won’t regret it.

“All This I Do For Glory” is a reasoning and exploration of the machinations of ambition and legacy, an examination of the concepts of afterlife, and the first half of a doomed love story in the model of the greek tragedies. As a narrative, it exists temporally somewhere between 2015’s “Never were the way she was” (with Sarah Neufeld) and the first volume of the NHW Trilogy.

With this, his first solo outing since 2013’s “To See More Light”, Colin Stetson ventures into territory both familiar and strange. Here still, is the dogmatically stripped down approach to performance and capture (all songs recorded live with no overdubs or loops) but there is an immediacy to the album that belies a more invasive and thorough miking of the various instruments being utilized and a seeming influence drawn from the early nineties electronica of artists like Aphex Twin and Autechre, evident in the more pointed role played by the instruments’ many percussive elements.

There are ancestries, motivic and timbral, woven through these six songs that plainly anchor them within the shared universe of his Trilogy, though the overall experience is one of extreme intimacy, the sounds and imagery more tangible and immersive than previous offerings. The brief and brutal “In the clinches” recalls (or presages) echoes of songs like “Judges”, though now feeling like one has fallen down the bell of Colin Stetson’s ancient bass saxophone itself. “Spindrift”, crystalline and serene, calls to mind the ambient works of Aphex Twin, while “Between Water and Wind” with it’s “Immigrant Song” swagger, relentlessly carves it’s way into the bedrock here, paving the way with an increasing focus on the minute and the minimal, with a deepened sense of patience shared by most of the album’s six tracks.

Engineered and mixed by Colin Stetson himself, this album represents a decidedly independent approach across the entire creative process and finds him at the top of his game, both as a composer and instrumentalist as well as a producer.

Tags
circular breathing
Colin Stetson
experimental
inspiration
inspirational music
jazz
meditative music
music
post-jazz
saxophone
spiritual
Email
← PREVIOUS POST
Justin Walter
NEXT POST →
Terminal Dream

Related News

Other posts that you should not miss.
Metabolic Rift Atonal

Atonal’s Metabolic Rift – closure trip review

3 November, 2021
-
Music, Opinion
It’s been a while… for many things. No concerts, no festivals, limited social life, etc, etc. you know what I’m talking about. Every unusual situation brings with it…
Read More →
14 MIN READ
Geso's Top 10 Music 2019

2019: Top 10 | the music that inspired my year

16 December, 2019
-
Music
Before I start with my personal Top 10 albums of this year, I must say two obvious things: 1st. I regret having this blog nearly abandoned, specially missed…
Read More →
15 MIN READ
Berlin Atonal Festival 2018

Atonal 2018 trip review [part 2]

12 September, 2018
-
Music, Opinion, Visual Review
We are in the equator of Berlin Atonal 2018, facing the program for Day III. Something you learn in life is that after a big wave there is…
Read More →
21 MIN READ
Colin Stetson – All This I Do For Glory | godisaglitch.com