Soshi Takeda - Same Place, Another Time
Same Place, Another Time
Soshi Takeda
January 20, 2022
January 20, 2022
January 25, 2022
January 10, 2022
December 23, 2021
December 16, 2021
December 6, 2021
December 1, 2021
November 11, 2021
November 2, 2021
October 26, 2021
October 20, 2021
September 13, 2021
August 1, 2021
July 10, 2021
June 30, 2021
March 25, 2019
March 25, 2019
May 9, 2019
May 10, 2019
May 13, 2019
May 28, 2019
May 29, 2019
June 11, 2019
June 24, 2019
June 25, 2019
June 27, 2019
July 2, 2019
July 2, 2019
July 12, 2019
July 30, 2019
August 8, 2019
August 23, 2019
August 29, 2019
September 5, 2019
September 10, 2019
September 20, 2019
September 24, 2019
September 30, 2019
October 4, 2019
October 9, 2019
October 10, 2019
October 12, 2019
October 14, 2019
October 14, 2019
October 26, 2019
October 30, 2019
November 4, 2019
November 5, 2019
November 6, 2019
November 11, 2019
November 20, 2019
November 25, 2019
November 27, 2019
December 2, 2019
December 5, 2019
December 20, 2019
December 21, 2019
December 24, 2019
January 7, 2020
January 10, 2020
January 17, 2020
January 19, 2020
January 22, 2020
January 23, 2020
January 31, 2020
February 4, 2020
February 7, 2020
February 17, 2020
February 19, 2020
February 20, 2020
February 29, 2020
March 7, 2020
March 12, 2020
March 13, 2020
March 15, 2020
March 20, 2020
March 20, 2020
March 20, 2020
March 24, 2020
March 27, 2020
March 29, 2020
March 31, 2020
April 6, 2020
April 13, 2020
April 13, 2020
April 18, 2020
April 23, 2020
April 24, 2020
May 1, 2020
May 1, 2020
May 1, 2020
Liam Murphy
July 21, 2022
Tracks in this feature
Tracks in this release
Vaporwave has become a genre made up of many different sounds. Based more on aesthetic than any sonic characteristic, texture and tone can vary wildly. Collections of artists happily delve into deep, rewarding subgenres, and many a legendary album is created. However, those alchemists with the ability to meld sounds and styles together are few and far between. This spectacle of coalescence is very much the strongest aspect of MUSEミューズ.
The opener Une moderne Olympia whirs into life with warm synth akin to artists like S U R F I N G or 18 Carat Affair. The chords and samples judder and veer off course at points, diving through filters and suffering from that characteristic defunct sound of eccojams or signalwave. And glistening over the top of the murky sound is pristine percussion, reminiscent of the glossiest of vaportrap. When cross-referencing genres like signalwave and vaportrap, a glaring contrast can be heard.
VANITAS命死 happily brings these sounds and more into a fun and vibrant embrace.
There are tracks reminiscent of the more ambient side of vaporwave. Haystack at Giverny has that familiar gossamer aura. A spiral of bell sounds reaching up high into a purple skyline, before the track slams back down with crisp percussion and moody jazz melodies. the joy of painting S31 e13, Wilderness Day has a feeling of dizzying repose as well. Romantic keys waver through aqueous filters, as a saxophone with all the taut jazziness of Kenny G and all the emotion of Acker Bilk reverberates unpredictably around the cascading soundscape.
The melodic instrumentation is so pure throughout the whole of the album, at points it feels like it wants to shrivel up. Tracks like La Grenouillère seem to want to disregard restrictive quantisation and curl up in a warm ball of jazzy licks and cool chords. VANITAS命死 strides through MUSEミューズ indebted to the clean sound provided by electronic percussion, but not without utilising it to add an unforgettable dynamic between beat and melody. Sometimes the percussion will carry on with an unfaltering trajectory as the melody fails and falls out of beat, leaning into that flawed sound of eccojams. But in other moments the drumbeat will join with the nosediving sounds, with each part snagging and stuttering out of time. These moments stand out due to the artist’s otherwise pristine beat sequencing, and gift the album a truly unique spark.
The concept of vaporwave is still alive, with new artists pushing boundaries that were set out at the movement’s birth. MUSEミューズ harbours that revolutionary energy. Making use of inventive sampling and arrangement, yet still brimming with melodic brilliance, the album is a delight to experience.