@ht73 Thank you ! It’s definitely music with heart(s), there’s a lot of me in it, and it’s always a challenge for me to release it because it feels like exposing very deeply burried part of myself. I love the cover too, I’m super happy to see people respond to it positively, and I’m just thankful I’ve got something so fitting to accompany this music.

@dan_derks I don’t know how to express my gratitude for your work and for taking the time to listen to mine :slight_smile: if music is a conversation, I definitely had a lot of discussions with Phylum last year, and it informed a lot of my thought process on noise, what it could mean musically, how it could move, and how more acoustic or traditionnally electronic sound should answer to it and blend in and out of it.

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Listening to this first track is really an enjoyable experience.

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Thank you @thom :pray: I decided to share this one first because it had the title in it and I felt it was a good statement about what the whole EP was about.

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This is dope. Gives me of Raz Ohara and the Odd Orchestra vibes. Wishlisted for release!

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Didn’t know about them so I’m just checking them out right now (listening to “The Burning (desire)” because I liked the title), makes me want to take the guitar out again and try to see what comes out of it, but that’s somewhere on the schedule for next year anyway :-). Thank you anyhow ! I think the rest of the EP has a lot to offer, I hope you’ll like it too !

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Love this. Great stuff!

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Really lovely. Preordered, can’t wait to listen to the whole thing. This first track hit me :black_heart:

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@BonJoey Thank you for taking the time to say nice things :slight_smile: I’m very happy you liked it !

@jacobino Thank you so much ! I think the black heart is kind of a fitting rally sign for this one song.

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We’ve received the test press this week and gave them several thourough listens, and they sound great. It’s such a thrilling and emotional thing really, to listen to your own music on vinyl, the impressive physicality of it, the kind of sacred ceremonial of taking the time to listen to it properly, it’s a bit terrifying and exilirating everytime, to press play and put the needle on.

The master for vinyl was done by Cem Oral at Jammin Masters in Berlin, and it was cut on Master Lacquer by Fredi at MPO in France which I’ve come to trust over the years.

I’m really happy with the result, the vinyl mastering and the way it sounds is slightly different, but I feel like the format fits this release especially well, and overall it just felt like a huge accomplishment that it sounded the way it does. Pressing vinyls is both a commitment and a priviliege, and you’ve got to make sure you really want to go through the hassle of doing it, but after a few careful listen I feel like it just makes sense, and I just can’t wait to be able to share more about it.

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It’s my birthday today, so in order to have some kind of celebration I decided that I’d share another track because sharing music is my idea of fun.

Hope you’ll enjoy it, it’s a very different energy from the first one but it definitely comes from the same place in my heart / head.

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Happy Birthday Louis! Will listen to it now and say something later! :blue_heart:
Can’t wait for the full release, mid September?

Absolutely, September 17 ! I received the Vinyls recently they look and sound great, I’m really excited that the whole thing finally comes out in a few weeks (which is kinda why I’m sharing one more track before it does really !).

Also in other matters, I’ll see if I have the strength to adress more of the themes behind this EP in the coming weeks with actual written words. It takes a great deal of energy from me mentally to comment on my own work, since it’s exactly there for me NOT to have to speak. But I also feel at the same time that it could be a valuable addition to this particular release so maybe I’ll give it a go if I have the strength, I don’t know.

Anyhow I will never say enough how thankful I am for the support of the people here. It’s extremely touching for me.

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Tonight I had the pleasure of listening to a second song from this new album.
It was perfect timing. The song helped me find peace at the end of a difficult day.

Thank you again for sharing @LLK !

edit : For those who haven’t listened to it yet, the song can be played on the Bandcamp page of the album.

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That’s probably the best thing any musician can hear, especially during these times, they take a toll on all of us, so I’m very happy if my music could help, even just a little.

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So “Was this part of what you believed?” is now released and you can all listen to it in full on Bandcamp. It’s also available as pictured above in glorious (white) vinyl fashion, a physical object I’m very proud of as it feels like both an accomplishment and an artistic proposition of its own. I probably won’t release everything I do under that format systematically, but I think this particular piece of work deserved it and I hope people who bought the vinyl will enjoy their copy.

I hope listening to the thing as a whole beats listening to each tracks individually. I really more than ever meant it as a journey, each song influenced eachother, the way it all flows together sometimes felt more important to me than what every track meant on its own, so I do hope this sense of continuity and story telling through variations of sensory experiences translates in the finished release.

More humbly, I just hope it’ll resonate with you. Those 5 songs carry the influence and the musical and technical input of so many of you on lines, Norns is the most beautiful demonstration that music however isolated it can feel through the process of making it, is always, at its core, a collaboration and a collective process. There’s many of you all in there, I’ll never thank you enough for helping me reach new musical territories, and finding new ways to express myself through music, it means the world to me.

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Beautiful stuff. For me this kind of marriage of songwriting, instrumentation and arrangement is pretty much the holy grail of music. I’d personally love to hear more about your process as it’s a mystery to me how you’d make something so complex sound so natural. Don’t have a record player but I’ll be buying a digital copy. :heart:

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Thank you so much, I can’t quite express how much it means that people are touched by what I’m trying to do, so much of it is solitary and perplexing, like I’m asking this grand, neveranswered questions, only to send my timid and uncertain answers into the void. Whenever I hear something back from the other side of the rift where the listeners stand, it feels extraordinary.

I’d be more than willing to answer a few questions about process, or do some blog posts about it myself, it’s really a matter of finding a starting point and a way to describe them in the most interesting and useful way so that it’s a worthwhile addition to the music discussion. Also, it’s already so much work to put something like this out, and I put so much care into everything I share that even a blogpost about my process I tend to overthink it a bit, I’ll try to be more spontaneous about it if I can !

Thank you a lot for your comment anyway :slight_smile:

Maybe it’s easier if I ask some questions if you don’t mind sharing a little about your process? Words done well in this context often seem the most mysterious to me so it’d be great to know how much of the lyrics (if any) you generally have an idea for before making music, and do they seem to come to you unexpectedly or is it a sustained directed effort? Also do you use a ‘traditional’/ acoustic instrument like a guitar/ piano etc to write before making what you have here? No worries if you want to leave your process more of a mystery, I’m just nosy. Thanks again for sharing.

Oh absolutely no mystery here ! To me if a music’s mystery can’t hold through the scrutiny of its writing process, it wasn’t all that mysterious to begin with.

I don’t think learning more about how something was made makes the finished artpiece any less powerful. If anything, I always enjoy pieces of art where you “see the strings” of how it was made, and it somehow still manages to move you, it stills feels like its own thing.

As for your question about the lyrics, I tried to gather my thoughts to answer you more precisely.

Lyrics are something I think about all the time, and they’re a crucial part of my writing process. They can inform what kind of “attitude” I want the song to have, they can impact a whole part of the song’s structure, if I want a specific sentence to appear at a specific time. As such, the writing of the lyrics is really intertwined with the writing of the songs, sometimes it comes very early on, I’ll do a sketch on the OPZ, or write something with the acoustic guitar, and I’ll have a bunch of ideas and themes that start to take shape in my head. Most of the time, very early on, the “feel” of what the song needs to convey appears through a connection of words and sounds, or words and harmonies, or words and rhythms.

I say “the feel” because it’s not necessarily a “theme” or a “narrative”, I’m not into making songs that say something specific, it’s more exciting and fullfilling for me to create strings of words that convey a meaning aching more to a sensory experience. When you feel the wind on your skin, and you enjoy or dislike that feeling, the wind on your skin isn’t “making sense” in the usual lexical way, and you feeling it isn’t telling a story, yet there’s a kind of meaning to it, a connection to something deeper you can’t quite reduce into a word. I want my words to generate these kind of things, in that sense, I’m not afraid to “make no sense”, but I’m also very concerned of what I’m saying because it’s uneasy to challenge meaning. So once I feel like the connection between the words and the music creates that kind of sensation, it’s all about balance and that’s where most of the work goes.

I must precise though, that this doesn’t mean I reject actual meaning as a whole, first because you can’t (even your choice of instruments carry cultural / social signifiers), second because if I wasn’t interested in words I wouldn’t use them at all and stick to instrumental. What interests me about words, is the space between their meaning and the impression they make from interpretating them. I don’t think there’s such thing as an “honest” word, they always seem to mean something but make us feel something else on top of it. I think poetic is about exploiting the hidden force in between those two things, harnessing the doubt under the words. And music, by creating a setting for them to be expressed in, can enhance that power and make words and ideas that much more powerful.

That’s why sometimes I know a lyrics line or verse has to be at a precise point in time, but the music I’ve written didn’t quite match that, doesn’t add much to it, so I’ll work on the instrumentation over and over until it does. Sometimes it’s the opposite, I’ll find a new instrumentation or harmony that’s got such a strong force to it, that it’s pushing the song in a direction the lyrics can’t follow, or it’s weakened by it, and if they’re not as powerful to me than the music, or not connecting to it in some meaningful way, then I’ll either change them or even just take them out of the song altogether.

Sorry if this is a little all over the place but as you can see, it’s very hard for me to put into words the complex mechanics of using “words” to go beyond their meaning, and using the partially abstracted artform that is “music” to generate new forms of meaning through words.

So, I feel like I’ve partially answered that question already but yes I do and no I don’t it really depends. Obviously the last song “The Bird, The Bones” (or not obviously what do I know!) has been written on the Piano first. Then I jammed on it with norns and a folk guitar which is all the little bits of stereo fx sounds you hear left and right. But also “Misaligned” was written on the OPZ (even if in the end there’s almost nothing left of the original jam, except I used the OPZ to sequence the arpegiatted sounds made on a Vermona Perfourmer throughout the track). So it’s kind of a split. I love acoustic instruments, and I love how they keep me in check about the harmonies and the overall “flow” of what I’m writing, the human nature of it and the imperfection that stems from it. But then I also feel frustrated at some point that I rely so much on muscle memory to the point that it’s hard to fight that and be creative. Which is where the electronic gear comes into play, because I feel much more freedom from myself when writing through electronic means than I do when sitting with an acoustic instrument.

I also do a lot of little percussions to trigger ideas and rhythms and they’re often a good starting point for a song. I made myself a little “toy table” corner where I can play and record and bang on various little things that make noise and it’s a very nice way to start things up. It looks something like this (the toothbrush on the left has bells in its handle and sounds fantastic by the way) :

I hope this was an interesting answer that justified writing such a long post !

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Beautifully written. This expresses so clearly many things that I’ve been thinking about for a long long time. Thanks so much for your generosity.

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