Fire-Toolz – Rainbow Bridge
Rainbow Bridge
Fire-Toolz
May 11, 2020
May 11, 2020
May 13, 2020
May 15, 2020
May 15, 2020
May 28, 2020
June 5, 2020
June 5, 2020
June 5, 2020
June 10, 2020
June 16, 2020
June 17, 2020
June 19, 2020
June 23, 2020
June 26, 2020
June 27, 2020
July 1, 2020
July 14, 2020
July 17, 2020
July 18, 2020
July 20, 2020
July 21, 2020
July 23, 2020
July 24, 2020
July 30, 2020
July 30, 2020
July 31, 2020
August 2, 2020
August 5, 2020
August 7, 2020
August 11, 2020
August 14, 2020
August 18, 2020
August 19, 2020
August 21, 2020
August 24, 2020
August 25, 2020
August 29, 2020
September 5, 2020
September 5, 2020
September 9, 2020
September 11, 2020
September 14, 2020
September 15, 2020
September 17, 2020
September 21, 2020
September 27, 2020
September 28, 2020
October 13, 2020
October 16, 2020
October 21, 2020
October 29, 2020
October 31, 2020
November 1, 2020
November 5, 2020
November 10, 2020
November 12, 2020
November 23, 2020
November 26, 2020
November 29, 2020
December 4, 2020
December 10, 2020
December 12, 2020
December 15, 2020
December 22, 2020
December 27, 2020
December 30, 2020
December 31, 2020
January 7, 2021
January 9, 2021
January 17, 2021
January 24, 2021
January 31, 2021
February 1, 2021
February 7, 2021
February 18, 2021
February 24, 2021
March 4, 2021
March 11, 2021
March 31, 2021
April 16, 2021
April 20, 2021
May 4, 2021
Louis Pelingen
December 17, 2023
Tracks in this feature
Tracks in this release
Brain fog is a common occurrence for many, especially as one gets older. A feeling that often follows a moment in which you have processed a complex or large amount of information. You don’t feel like thinking about anything, you check out. It’s a numbing condition. A condition where you just want to lay down for a moment in a temporary state of stillness and not think.
The 2 track EP from Mom and Dad’s Computer processes this concept, a brief haze running under 10 minutes that encapsulates what it feels like to be in that foggy mind stasis. There is a considered method on the melodies of these tracks, with fluidity in transitions to keep the compositions gently passing to and fro in your head. The textures are cloudy enough to let the listener stay afloat, but there are aspects that are distinct, causing the listener to question whether they act as a suppressor or an inducer of that feeling of fogginess.
Consider the first track, 脳. Through the glossy synth pads and shuffling beat, they harmonise together to create the feeling of brain fog, wrapping around you like a cocoon. The guitar guides us gently as it passes through like a moth searching for a light source. Is it a red herring as the lilting chords submerge you deeper into the fog? Or is it a call for help, reaching its hand towards you so you can finally break free from the fog?
This happens once again on the second track, 霧. The source of that feeling of brain fog does not just come from the beat or synths, but rather from the interplay between the horns and the keys, constantly lulling you to that stasis. Yet, pay attention to the bass line underneath. It only peeks to play its full form once everything dulls down around the 2-minute mark and the ending, but it’s there throughout the piece. Does the subtle rumble of that instrument enhance the calming tone of the track, keeping you settled in the foggy soundscape? Or is it a galvanising tone, clambering for your attention amid the soothing bliss?
A dullness litters the mind when one experiences brain fog. But, the meditative feel of the two tracks can act as either a trick or a balm to one’s addled mind. Mom And Dad’s Computer pulls forth lilting and readable melodic throughlines that push through that fog with sullen instrumental tones and steady pacing.