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Loscil - Endless Falls FLAC album

Tracklist Hide Credits

1 Endless Falls
Violin – Kim Koch, Robert Sparks
7:55
2 Estuarine
Piano – Jason Zumpano
8:20
3 Shallow Water Blackout 7:07
4 Dub For Cascadia 6:06
5 Fern And Robin
Recorder [Bass] – Robert Sparks
7:11
6 Lake Orchard
Steel Guitar [Lap] – Scott Morgan
7:40
7 Showers Of Ink 8:43
8 The Making Of Grief Point
Piano – Jason ZumpanoVocals, Words By – Daniel Bejar
8:54

Companies, etc.

  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – Kranky
  • Copyright (c) – Kranky

Credits

  • Photography By [Cover] – Sadie Fern Morgan Marshall
  • Written-By, Producer – Scott Morgan

Notes

Comes in gatefold sleeve.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 7 96441 81412 1
  • Mastering SID Code: IFPI L489
  • Mould SID Code: IFPI 8142
  • Matrix / Runout: 09AC7<7105>KRANK141 DADR
  • Rights Society: SOCAN

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
KRANK 141 Loscil Endless Falls ‎(2xLP, Album) Kranky KRANK 141 US 2010
krank141 Loscil Endless Falls ‎(8xFile, FLAC, Album) Kranky krank141 Europe 2010

Tracklist

Endless Falls 7:55
Estuarine 8:20
Shallow Water Blackout 7:07
Dub For Cascadia 6:06
Fern And Robin 7:11
Lake Orchard 7:40
Showers Of Ink 8:43
The Making Of Grief Point 8:54

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
krank 141 Loscil Endless Falls ‎(CD, Album) Kranky krank 141 US 2010
KRANK 141 Loscil Endless Falls ‎(2xLP, Album) Kranky KRANK 141 US 2010
krank141 Loscil Endless Falls ‎(8xFile, FLAC, Album) Kranky krank141 Europe 2010


Loscil - Endless Falls FLAC album

Musician performer: Loscil

Title: Endless Falls

Country: US

Date of release: 2010

Style: Experimental, Ambient

Genre: Electronic

Size FLAC: 1759 mb

Rating: 4.5 / 5

Votes: 609

Other Formats: AU VOC MP3 MP1 ADX MOD MP4

Related to Loscil - Endless Falls FLAC Albums

Whatever
It begins and ends with rain. But when the waterfalls subside, a picturesque landscape reveals itself through haze and fog. Vast fields of textural sound unfold beneath the soaring heights, with a slight pulse of bass vibrations, originating from the unexplored depths, and an echoing muffled synth line, dying in the cavernous emptiness of this landscape. With a microscopic nod to dub, Loscil weaves sonic parachutes that lift up beyond the clouds and slowly coast down to earth, only to have it curve beneath them, in an endless fall. Endless Falls is Scott Morgan's fifth full length album on Chicago's Kranky, not counting the digital freebie, Stases, released out by a net-label, One. Endless Falls also comes on the heels of Strathcona Variations digital EP, released by Ghostly International in October 2009. I was sure that the follow-up full length was going to be put out by Ghostly as well. But, alas, Morgan returns to Kranky, which has been the home for his last four albums, Triple Point (2001), Submers (2002), First Narrows (2004) and Plume (2006). Since Plume, Morgan has been busy developing his ambient soundscapes, complimenting looped drones with subliminal melodies and modulated bass. The intricately designed dense textures wrap one's unoccupied consciousness in melancholy, sadness and reflection. The mood fluctuates the listener from wakefulness to hypnotic dream states, crackling and clicking with stripped down rhythms and wet minor pads. On the last nine minute piece, "The Making Of Grief Point", Morgan features a long spoken word piece by Daniel Bejar (member of indie band, Destroyer, for which Morgan plays the drums and saxophone), delivered softly and deliberately, over a pulsing tone and walking synth notes through an unresolved chord. This is the first time Loscil brings vocals of any kind into his work. About this choice, Scott Morgan states: "The collaboration with Dan made us both incredibly nervous. Dan felt out of his element doing 'spoken word' but rose to the challenge. I felt self-conscious about changing the listening perspective from abstract, ambient music into foreground, conscious listening. The first time I heard Dan's voice recording I was terrified and was tempted to call the whole thing off. I listened to it a few more times and it completely grew on me. Now I can't imagine that piece without his performance. I love Dan's use of words, his vocal rhythms and the intimate intensity of his voice." Additional collaborators on the album include the return of Jason Zumpano on piano, Kim Koch on strings and Robert Sparks on bass recorder. Scott's four year old daughter, Sadie, is responsible for providing the cover art for the album, taken from the backseat of the family car. Check out an interview with the photographer on Loscil's Blog. Endless Falls is incredibly gorgeous, sublime and subtle yet precise. Recommended for fans of Pole and Gas, as well as Stars of the Lid, Christopher Bissonnette and Tim Hecker. "The answer to the making of grief point is picnic baskets filled with blood."
Whatever
It begins and ends with rain. But when the waterfalls subside, a picturesque landscape reveals itself through haze and fog. Vast fields of textural sound unfold beneath the soaring heights, with a slight pulse of bass vibrations, originating from the unexplored depths, and an echoing muffled synth line, dying in the cavernous emptiness of this landscape. With a microscopic nod to dub, Loscil weaves sonic parachutes that lift up beyond the clouds and slowly coast down to earth, only to have it curve beneath them, in an endless fall. Endless Falls is Scott Morgan's fifth full length album on Chicago's Kranky, not counting the digital freebie, Stases, released out by a net-label, One. Endless Falls also comes on the heels of Strathcona Variations digital EP, released by Ghostly International in October 2009. I was sure that the follow-up full length was going to be put out by Ghostly as well. But, alas, Morgan returns to Kranky, which has been the home for his last four albums, Triple Point (2001), Submers (2002), First Narrows (2004) and Plume (2006). Since Plume, Morgan has been busy developing his ambient soundscapes, complimenting looped drones with subliminal melodies and modulated bass. The intricately designed dense textures wrap one's unoccupied consciousness in melancholy, sadness and reflection. The mood fluctuates the listener from wakefulness to hypnotic dream states, crackling and clicking with stripped down rhythms and wet minor pads. On the last nine minute piece, "The Making Of Grief Point", Morgan features a long spoken word piece by Daniel Bejar (member of indie band, Destroyer, for which Morgan plays the drums and saxophone), delivered softly and deliberately, over a pulsing tone and walking synth notes through an unresolved chord. This is the first time Loscil brings vocals of any kind into his work. About this choice, Scott Morgan states: "The collaboration with Dan made us both incredibly nervous. Dan felt out of his element doing 'spoken word' but rose to the challenge. I felt self-conscious about changing the listening perspective from abstract, ambient music into foreground, conscious listening. The first time I heard Dan's voice recording I was terrified and was tempted to call the whole thing off. I listened to it a few more times and it completely grew on me. Now I can't imagine that piece without his performance. I love Dan's use of words, his vocal rhythms and the intimate intensity of his voice." Additional collaborators on the album include the return of Jason Zumpano on piano, Kim Koch on strings and Robert Sparks on bass recorder. Scott's four year old daughter, Sadie, is responsible for providing the cover art for the album, taken from the backseat of the family car. Check out an interview with the photographer on Loscil's Blog. Endless Falls is incredibly gorgeous, sublime and subtle yet precise. Recommended for fans of Pole and Gas, as well as Stars of the Lid, Christopher Bissonnette and Tim Hecker. "The answer to the making of grief point is picnic baskets filled with blood."
Hanad
Subtle and powerful, persistent with being imposing Loscil's "Endless Falls" is another beautifully crafted sonic experience. Waves of soft sounds come and go, while subtle details create a sense of rythm and texture. My highlights are "Lake Orchard", a kind of slow motion trance, and the deeply emotional "The Making of Grief Point". Stylistically speaking this album resembles previous Loscil works, but at the same time it is a new and unique experience which I highly recommend. 5/5
Hanad
Subtle and powerful, persistent with being imposing Loscil's "Endless Falls" is another beautifully crafted sonic experience. Waves of soft sounds come and go, while subtle details create a sense of rythm and texture. My highlights are "Lake Orchard", a kind of slow motion trance, and the deeply emotional "The Making of Grief Point". Stylistically speaking this album resembles previous Loscil works, but at the same time it is a new and unique experience which I highly recommend. 5/5
Umge
Dramatic and persistent. Loscil's newest oeuvre is transcendental; a measured, sobering mantra music whose gentle and unrelenting percussive resonances permeate the psyche.There is a tenacity in these sounds; the clammy, near-dissonant textures reverberate in a stifled, uneasy permanence. The music manages to exist between static and dynamic states—comfortably motionless but threatening to unmerge and dissipate. The vibrations are entropic.
Umge
Dramatic and persistent. Loscil's newest oeuvre is transcendental; a measured, sobering mantra music whose gentle and unrelenting percussive resonances permeate the psyche.There is a tenacity in these sounds; the clammy, near-dissonant textures reverberate in a stifled, uneasy permanence. The music manages to exist between static and dynamic states—comfortably motionless but threatening to unmerge and dissipate. The vibrations are entropic.