Showing posts with label Miwon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Miwon. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Miwon (SCQ's Year-End Questionnaire Part III)


One of my very favourite electronica artists, Miwon (aka Hendrik Kroz) released A To B in the late stages of 2008. The record would’ve no doubt landed among my year-end lists had I found it sooner, but enough about that (the whole sad story is in the review). A To B remains a breathtaking addition to SCQ’s 2009 listening and, here, Miwon provides a breakdown of his most noteworthy selections. (Photo By Sibylle Fendt)

SCQ: What have been some of your favourite records of 2009? Gush away.

Lokai - "Transition"
Hey-O-Hansen - "Sonn Und Mond"
Fuck Buttons - "Tarot Sport"
Neil Landstrumm - "Bambaataa Eats His Breakfast"
The XX - "XX"
Kvadratklang - "Pulsemotel"
Martyn - "Great Lengths"
Burial + Four Tet - "Moth / Wolf Cub"
Yagya - "Rigning"
The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart - "s/t"

SCQ: Be it from the radio, lost on Myspace or from your roster, what song(s) could you not stop spinning?

Stars In Coma - "Borderline"
Falty DL - "To New York"
Porn Sword Tobacco - "I Love Riding My Bicycle"
Few Nolder - "Fluttery"
The Motifs - "Little Things"
Rebolledo feat. Matias Aguayo - "Pitaya Frenesí"

SCQ: Seldom celebrated but crucial to The Album’s identity is cover-art. Can you offer any shortlist of personal favourites from the past year?

Sufjan Stevens / The BQE

SCQ: When you look back on what transpired this year, what will stand out as your most memorable professional moment(s) of 2009?

djing on June 25, with just three Jackson-songs in the bag

SCQ: Most of us probably haven’t thought as far as New Years Eve plans but still, looking forward, what do you have on the horizon for 2010?

working on new tracks for my next album, and playing with Cushion Caroms (side project with 1605munro and Takeshi Nishimoto)

Friday, June 5, 2009

A To B - Miwon











A To B

Miwon
City Centre Offices.

SCQ Rating: 82%

I’ve learned a few truths as a record-buying Canadian: (1) never order an album from a major-chain record store, (2) never pay an import-price for an album that is making waves on your end of the globe… eventually it will not only be available for less, but often with extra material, and (3) never expect to find a physical copy of any Miwon album at any store, ever. Having spent thirteen months hunting down Miwon (AKA Hendrik Kroz)’s 2006 debut Pale Glitter, I hardly expected his sophomore to land unexpectedly in my lap… and it didn’t. Released last November by the thankfully resurrected City Centre Offices, A To B finally found its way across the ocean to me this Spring. The wait was worth it.

Over a brooding bass-key and cut-up beats, a quiet array of birds can be heard chirping at the onset of ‘Shinkansen’, a track that wastes no time establishing an interesting contrast to Pale Glitter. Instead of Kroz imbedding his fresh soundscapes with the techno-speed thumps that characterized that beguiling debut, A To B looks inward; still forcing an unconscious head-nod from entranced listeners but digging deeper into texture and mood. His few previous down-tempo tunes – ‘Rain or Shine’ and ‘When Angels Travel’ spring to mind – seem positively experimental and alien in light of these new compositions, which provide one-listen proofs that Kroz has been working to perfect his style. From the spellbound cruise of ‘Matchbox’ - its ticks like a speedometer snapping, its echoed keys like the blurs ebbing passed – to the finger-picked acoustic window-watching of ‘Lillilullaby’ to the wet-pavement haze of ‘They Leave in Autumn’ (a song which, when heard on headphones, sounds immersed in distant, muddled sirens), one really can’t ask for a better title than A To B. As complimentary to night-driving as it is to daydreaming, this record showcases how atmospheric Kroz’s compositions can become, finally shape-shifting into the piano reverie of ‘Daylight Promise’; an instrumental of unfazed break-beats and wintry keys that shuffles brilliantly towards its close of far-off birds. Now I’m not about to make more of bookending one’s album with bird-sounds than I really should, but it is a deserving detail of Miwon’s evolution; A To B is more cohesive and vaporous than anything he has touched in the past.

As monotonous as electronica subgenres can be, it’s impressed upon me that Miwon has managed to craft his own sound so profoundly in just two albums. Admittedly, a reasonable excuse for Miwon’s clairvoyance could be that A To B doesn’t sonically distance itself enough from Pale Glitter (‘Kisses To Cure’ and ‘Round and Round’ would’ve fit nicely on his debut)… and that’s fair. But like Boards of Canada (who’ve also treated their sound territorially), Miwon is taking this second album as an opportunity to flesh out and dig into untested possibilities from his debut, and consequentially, he trumps it altogether. So if somehow, dear North American reader, you ever unwittingly discover a Miwon album, you know what to do.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Pale Glitter - Miwon (City Center Offices)



Pale Glitter

Miwon
Towerblock/City Center Offices Records.

SCQ Rating: 80%

For those not in-the-know, Boomkat is perhaps the very best place to discover, listen and buy independent electronic music. However, don’t tease yourself with the expectation of finding many of the UK site’s releases in your local record store, as many of them, being on tiny labels from Europe, will either be increduously expensive or absent altogether. Such was my experience with Pale Glitter, a record I frequently visited Boomkat to listen to but waited a year to finally own. Its title-track, all dense-synth lines and relentless 4/4 beats, had me on first listen, and I could only hope the rest of Miwon’s debut was similarly spectacular.

What Pale Glitter suggests is that underground clubs beneath the glowing downtown of Berlin must all be spinning this record. Its mood wavers between celebratory and ominous but remains propulsive, even when drenched in ambient flourishes (‘Seraforma’) or shaken by industrial noise (‘Flakes’). Even the few cuts that lack a dancefloor beat are ideal for the night: ‘When Angels Travel’ is when whatever medicine you’re taking that night turns on you, leaving you unable to find your friends, or lost in a back-alley you don’t recall walking toward, while ‘Rain or Shine’ is that peaceful, forgotten walk home.

Miwon’s anonymity in indie-circles is most confounding when hearing Pale Glitter’s pop tracks; 7” single ‘Brother Mole’ and ‘No Need for Sanity’ are both vocal-drenched electro-pop tunes, proving Miwon capable of being playful and chilled-out when the BPMs slow down. A multifaceted dance record, Pale Glitter is a promising debut that never dulls or loses focus. Click here to check out Boomkat and taste some Berlin nightlife.