Artist: The Kilimanjaro Darkjazz Ensemble
Title Of Album: From the Stairway
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Denovali Records
Genre: Electronic / Future Jazz / Abstract / Nu jazz / Ambient
Format: Mp3
Quality: 320 kbps
Total Time: 1:02:43
Total Size: 170 mb
The
Kilimanajro Darkjazz Ensemble are a project which has always been tied
to films. Films are luxurious because they dispose of all these boring,
unimportant, and trivial parts of our lives. This allows them to fully
control our sensations, to put us in a very specific mood. Joy and
sadness are occasionally OK, endless joy or endless sadness are
clinical. But there is one sensation which can be persistent and
unconditionally bearable at the same time. In the absence of a better
alternative, let's call it "the mood". The mood is what TKDE are aiming
at. The mood.
The mood is infinite and illimitable, but not
uniform and unique. On "From The Stairwell", TKDE deliver eight new
incarnations of the mood. Stairwells have always been intriguing. They
appear to unavoidably lead you to your destination, but they only
disclose the path bit by bit. What lies far ahead of you and far beyond
you is hidden in the shadows. The stairwell could just as well be
infinite. You climb up this murky stairwell, passing by many doors.
Every door contains a variation of the mood, a short film, a song. You
open the first one, "All Is One". The evaporating mist discloses a
large and empty room with a barstool in the middle. On the barstool, a
chanteuse from the roaring twenties. Her voice starts to trigger
vibrations of the ground, the walls start spiralling around her, but
she remains untouched in the eye of the storm. Second room, "Giallo".
Sly guy, telling smile, nice suit. Walking down the streets in the
dusk. The ambience starts to get out of phase, the guy stumbles in
horror while blending with the surrounding to a brown soup. Fourth
room. "Cocaine". Naked people with pig heads crawl on the floor, on the
walls, on the ceiling. They try to hopelessly suck up the white dust
which covers every single piece of this room and is constantly spit out
by tubes coming out of the walls. Dissonant sounds accompany the work
of this desperate hive. As the people manage to counteract the tubes,
fragile melodies start to overpower the dissonances. Sixth room,
"Cotard Delusion". Baby morphing into a black fluid morphing into an
old man which turns his eyes inwards and finds his inside to be
completely empty. The journey up the stairwell, down the stairwell,
continues. The pictures fill your head and make you forget where you
wanted to go in the first place.
"From The Stairwell" is a
surprise and a logical step at the same time. It is a surprise because
the songs are far less beat-driven in comparison to TKDE's earlier
works, and even contain a few hopeful tints here and there. It is a
logical step because in the end each song turns to have a very diverse
dramaturgic flow. This could raise the conjecture that TKDE, initially
started out to make music for existing and non-existing films, wanted
to incorporate the audiovisual impression completely into songs, making
the films superfluous. At times, "From The Stairwell" makes you think
of 60's soundtracks, but the organic feeling of those is always
interwoven with mechanical elements. Altogether, every single of the
numerous details present in TKDE's new songs feels to be at the right
place and you can either just dive into the mood or pick one of the
many aspects and enjoy it on its own - be it Gideon Kiers' beats &
fx, Jason Köhnen's bass & piano, Hilary Jeffery's trombone,
Charlotte Cegarra's voice & piano, Eelco Bosman's guitar, Nina
Hitz' cello, Sarah Anderson's violin, or - appearing as guest musicians
- Eiríkur Óli Ólafsson's trumpet and Coen Kaldeway's saxophone &
bass clarinet.
Tracklist:
1. All is One [5:22]
2. Giallo [6:02]
3. White Eyes [8:28]
4. Cocaine [11:28]
5. Celladoor [7:17]
6. Cotard Delusion [5:46]
7. Les Etoiles Mutantes [6:17]
8. Past Midnight [12:03]