VIDEOSPHERE (LP + DOWNLOAD)

(LP)
LP + DOWNLOAD. the London-based artist Lake Turner (aka Andrew Halford), swoons into focus with ÊThe SunbirdË, a teasing drift of lilting, ambient tones, riding out a submerged piston-pulse rhythm
Genre Electronic & Dance
FormatVINYL
Cat. noKOM424
Label KOMPAKT
Artist LAKE TURNER
Release Date23/10/2020
CarrierLP
Barcode4250101418730
Barcode: 4250101418730 1. The Sunbird by Lake Turner 02:49 2. No Way Back Forever by Lake Turner 04:19 3. Outland by Lake Turner 03:33 4. Honeycomb by Lake Turner 06:11 5. Videosphere by Lake Turner 03:24 6. Matthias by Lake Turner 05:25 7. Hunter™s Ballad by Lake Turner 04:38 8. Love 95 by Lake Turner 04:06 Videosphere, the debut album by Kompakt™s latest signing, the London-based artist Lake Turner (aka Andrew Halford), swoons into focus with šThe Sunbird›, a teasing drift of lilting, ambient tones, riding out a submerged piston-pulse rhythm. Across its brief 109 seconds, it manages to traverse evocative terrain  something mythopoetic, something both humble and grandiose, a glimpse of the other behind the sky™s curtain. šI wanted to conjure up something resembling an ancient ceremony or death procession,› Turner nods. šLike a hymn to the surroundings of a faraway hill.› It™s both sky-bound and earthen, a ritual incantation to call in the music of the spheres. Turner was introduced to the Kompakt family by his sometime collaborator Yannis Philippakis of Foals. He™d previously made music in post-punk and indie groups Great Eskimo Hoax and Trophy Wife, but Videosphere is the first time he™s fully articulated his own vision of electronic music, aside from one limited lathe-cut 12›, 2018™s Prime Mover EP, on Algebra. The lush ambient-disco-techno dreams of Videosphere were constructed and completed in his London studio and at his parents™ arable and sheep farm in Worcestershire, which might help explain the hazy, unhurried pastoralism of the album. šThere was a slight bittersweetness in finishing the record (in Worcestershire) as my parents were in the middle of selling my childhood home,› he sighs, before quipping, šon the plus, I ended up shearing a lot of sheep over the summer.› A student of archaeology and ancient history, Turner is no doubt carefully attuned to the twisting cogs of history and memory, and it™s no surprise that Videosphere has a nostalgic, melancholic cast; much of its beauty rests in the way it tugs, gently, at the heart strings  see the tear-stained cheeks of the lush, dappled šHoneycomb›, or the sweetly sad electro-roundelay of šNo Way Back Forever.› It™s not all drift-dream hypnosis, though  Videosphere is very much grounded in the now. ššNo Way Back Forever› is a nod to the linear nature of time,› Turner explains by way of example, šand the tipping point of the world climate crisis that scientists have now declared.› Jayne Powell™s vocals are sent spinning through the song, wound like candyfloss; she takes centre stage on the techno hymnal title track, too. Throughout, there™s a sense of forward movement, despite the life stasis we find ourselves collectively bound by in mid-2020; there™s also a yearning for the communal, for community, that™s captured in the album title, a nod to an object Turner encountered at London™s Geoffrey Museum, ša television set in the shape of a spaceman™s helmet from the 1970s.› šThe vision I loosely had was to make an electronic record that had a communal warmth and almost ceremonial or ritual feel. I wanted to examine the relationship of our archaic minds in the trappings of the modern world,› Turner concludes. šWhat the Videosphere also symbolizes for me is the oneness of humanity and community, prevailing.›