| Genre | Unknown |
|---|---|
| Date (CEST) | 2014-06-05 21:53:07 |
| Group | NJS |
| Size | 83 MB |
| Files | 1 |
| M3U / SFV / NFO | |
Nicholas_Szczepanik-Please_Stop_Loving_Me-2011-NJS
Infos
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Tracklist (M3U)
| # | Filename | Artist | Songname | Bitrate | BPM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 01-nicholas_szczepanik-please_stop_loving_me.mp3 | Nicholas Szczepanik | Please Stop Loving Me | Unknown | Unknown |
NFO
Artist : Nicholas Szczepanik
Album : Please Stop Loving Me
Year : 2011
Genre : Ambient
Quality : 244kbps / 44.1KHz / Joint Stereo
Source : CD
Playtime : 0h 47m
Size : 87.06mb
Label : Steamline
Catalognr : STEAMLINE 1031
Tracklist:
01. Please Stop Loving Me 47:33
Releasenotes:
No tracklist, only 1 track.
Enjoy!
Some releases overwhelm you with background detail; others offer next to
nothing. Szczepanik's Please Stop Loving Me is clearly amongst the latter. In
this case that makes some kind of perfect sense, however, as the album
materialùa single-track, forty-eight-minute ambient-drone compositionùis about
as purified as could be imagined. Working with a severely reduced palette,
Szczepanik, a Maryland native and now Chicago resident, builds slowing shifting
layers of sunblinded symphonic tones into a powerful long-form statement of
emotional and majestic sweep. As his hymnal material strains upwards in repeated
gestures of supplication, Please Stop Loving Me naturally calls to mind Stars of
the Lid's recordings, even if Szczepanik's recording pushes Stars of the Lid's
devotional sound to its seemingly asymptotic limit. Needless to say, there are
no beats or formal rhythms present, just vaporous tonal masses that suggest some
electronically sculpted conflation of synthetic strings and organ. The music
maintains tension by constantly flirting with resolution but then, just as it
appears about to do so, moving away from it via the intervention of another
tonal shift; as a result, the listener is held in thrall despite the piece's
extended length. That effect is pushed to an even further extreme during the
recording's closing section when Szczepanik reduces the material to a single,
wavering chord that hovers in place for minutes on end, building tension to an
almost unbearable degree as it does so, before slowly fading away into
nothingness. Calling Please Stop Loving Me immersive verges on ridiculous
understatement, so dense and enveloping are its arcing masses of sound, and the
uncommonly beautiful and haunting piece captured on this recording impresses as
a further refinement of the work Szczepanik has issued to date, including 2009's
The Chiasmus, and the 2010 follow-up, Dear Dad.
Textura
http://www.textura.org/reviews/szczepanik_pleasestoplovingme.htm
http://nszcz.bandcamp.com/