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Matmos is a very successful duo among their own records as an artist An Opportunity to Cut is an Opportunity to Heal and making a history of Bjork as Evening. But Drew Daniel, one half of Matmos, is very rich. When he is not actually dreaming pa new insects musical genresshe is also writing under the banner of The Soft Pink Truth.
Where Matmos usually focuses on musical experiments – using medical samples or building materials from PVC tubing – Soft Pink Truth goes wherever Daniel takes him. It could be the history of the house. It can be a group of black metal covers. Or, in the case of Should We Continue to Sin That Grace May Increase?it can be a stunningly beautiful and hopeful meditation on global growth.
Let’s continue and secret writings than what Daniel did by himself. It trades the swings and house strikes of previous items with something that lowers and heals. Although there are many field recordings and samples, like you’ll find on Matmos’s record, they stray towards a more natural and ambient look than Daniel’s other projects.
The first song, “Shall,” opens the stage with steady drones, pulsating sounds, and a song that sings ominously on the edge of a magical valley. It’s a preview of what we’re leaving behind as the album hits with the new-age change of “We.” A muted floor-to-floor kick plays in the background, the sweep of the wind, the rush of a female voice, and a piano playing peekaboo. The song gradually gathers strength, while the arrangements become more busy and reach the clouds.
“Go” follows “We”‘s dance journey with a call to prayer, before leading into the oceanic groove of “On,” with its soaring chorus, shimmering piano, and soaring vocals.
All of this is tied, however, to what is undoubtedly the album’s highlight, “Sin.” Saxophone blasts dance with bells and vibraphones while some simple floor thrusts infuse the jam with an irresistible groove.
I chose the word “jam,” on purpose, too. Where the classic Soft Pink Truth and most of the Matmos series are made primarily from samples, Let’s continue… they lean heavily on instruments and the musicians jump around in real time. That Do You Party? He listens carefully; Let’s continue… he feels suddenly. It is influenced by his celebration of human creativity and the power of the healing arts.
“So” is a drop after the fun celebration of “Sin,” with saxophones serving as the gateway to the back of the album, which, like the rest, is a mixed bag. Their simple two-note drone is a constant that other instruments build on top of, from the piano pedal that sets up the frenzy of “It,” to the jazzy explosion of “Grace,” which emanates from what sounds suspiciously like a nervous system car alarm.
“May Increase” spends its four-minute extra time including everything that “It” did. All the chaos, all the noise, until it finally ends with a deep release.
The Soft Pink Truth Will Do We Still Sin That Grace May Abound? available at Bandcamp and the largest advertising platforms, including YouTube Music, Apple Music, Spotifyand Deezer.