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Moon Ate The Dark - Molt And Grow album

Moon Ate The Dark - Molt And Grow album

  • Performer: Moon Ate The Dark
  • Genre: Electronic / Classical
  • Title: Molt And Grow
  • Released: 2013
  • Style: Modern Classical, Ambient
  • Country: UK
  • MP3 version size: 1928 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1215 mb
  • Other: MP1 WAV MMF MP2 MPC AUD DTS
  • Rating: 4.3
  • Votes: 244

Description

From "Moon Ate the Dark".

Moon Ate the Dark - Студийный альбом от Moon Ate the Dark. В альбом вошло 7 треков.

Moon Ate the Dark II - Moon Ate the Dark. Открывайте новую музыку каждый день. Лента с персональными рекомендациями и музыкальными новинками, радио, подборки на любой вкус, удобное управление своей коллекцией.

Molt and Grow is a brief yet beautiful dip into a pool of piano and electronics, presented by Anna Rose Carter and Christopher Bailey, who once again impress with clear vision and solid development. Last year, Moon Ate the Dark presented itself with a stellar, self-titled debut album. It impressed everyone who heard, including the proprietor of tiny, tasteful Brian Records, who was lucky enough to receive this very positive answer to his request that the duo record something for his label. At a mere three and four-odd minutes, pianist Anna Rose Carter’s playing is so charismatic and characterful it is difficult to determine whether Christopher Bailey did any of his usual electronic accenting at all, until you realize that the subway drone arching over Verse Porous Verse is his.

Contact Moon Ate The Dark. Streaming and Download help. If you like Moon Ate The Dark, you may also like: 新しい日の誕生 by 2814. supported by 7 fans who also own Moon Ate the Dark II. Purple flow of eternal rain. Slow Meadow by Slow Meadow. poetic, beautiful, sensitive pascalina.

Sand That Remembers the Rock It Once Was. Moon Ate the Dark. Explosions in a Four Chambered Heart.

Anna Rose Carter + Christopher Brett Bailey. Moon Ate the Dark I + II (black vinyl) Christopher Brett Bailey. 10 Mart 2017, 13:16 · Herkese Açık. 2 Yorum · Haberin Tam Boyutu. Moon Ate the Dark, Boomkat. com'un fotoğrafını paylaştı.

Moon Ate the Dark - s/t. Debut record out on sonic pieces (LTD CD). Moon Ate the Dark is the shadowy moniker of Welsh pianist Anna Rose Carter and Canadian producer Christopher Bailey. Between them, the two London-based transplants make a soundtrack to longing, memory and displacement and inject fresh life into the solo piano subgenre. That's not to say that the album isn't incredibly beautiful at times, but the darker moments serve to accentuate a track like 'She/Swimming', which brings to mind the pastoral warmth of Virginia Astley or Peter Broderick with its bright, twinkling optimism. Moon Ate the Dark' is an album of depth and complexity; a record which would be equally at home on the shelves of avid early 4AD fans as it would in the ranks of any contemporary classical collection.

Tracklist

1 Verse Porous Verse 3:24
2 Sand That Remembers The Rock It Once Was 4:14

Credits

  • Electronics [Uncredited] – Christopher Bailey
  • Mastered By – Nils Frahm
  • Piano [Uncredited] – Anna Rose Carter
  • Recorded By [Uncredited] – Joe Garcia

Notes

Limited edition of 100 copies.
Housed in tracing paper wraparound with manilla insert.

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
0000012 Moon Ate The Dark Molt And Grow ‎(Lathe, 8", S/Sided, Ltd, Cle) Brian Records 0000012 UK 2013

Comments

Thetalas Thetalas
Track "Verse Porous Verse" was later released on Moon Ate The Dark - Moon Ate The Dark II, and track "Sand That Remembers The Rock It Once Was" was later made available in WAV format for download from CC14 (Camden Crawl 2014)'s soundcloud page: https://soundcloud.com/thecamdencrawl/moon-ate-the-dark-sand-that-remembers-the-rock-it-once-was
Kuve Kuve
The 2nd track most likely takes its title from: http://www.sandatlas.org/sand-that-remembers-the-rock-it-once-was/
Visonima Visonima
A Closer Listen ReviewLast year’s self-titled debut from Moon Ate the Dark enchanted our readers, who made it our most popular review of 2012. The head of Brian Records was so taken by the album that he asked the duo to record a 2-track follow-up for his label, and they kindly obliged. Molt and Grow is a brief yet beautiful dip into a pool of piano and electronics, presented by Anna Rose Carter and Christopher Bailey, who once again impress with clear vision and solid development. This time around, Brian Records has chosen to present the pair in two formats: 8″ lathe cut and 3″ CD. This does increase the options, but interested parties are urged to act quickly, as the last few remaining copies are about to be released through Norman Records.“Verse Porous Verse” begins with an electronic hum, but Carter wastes no time getting to the ivories, nor does she slow down once her fingers hit the keys. This sprightly piece advances at a rapid rate, eager to get to its Big Moment, which arrives at 2:12. Following a second of silence (no time to waste!), the notes grow even more urgent as a drone rises from the background to the fore. “Sand That Remembers the Rock It Once Was” (featured below) is slightly more introspective, as one might intuit from the title. In this piece, the swiftness of Carter’s right hand is balanced by the measured cadence of her left. The contrast is as sweet as that between the sand and the sea. And then all too soon, it’s over, and we’re left wanting more; hopefully more will arrive on a not-so-distant tide.Taken from https://acloserlisten.com/2013/08/09/moon-ate-the-dark-molt-and-grow/Igloo Magazine ReviewLast year, Moon Ate the Dark presented itself with a stellar, self-titled debut album. It impressed everyone who heard, including the proprietor of tiny, tasteful Brian Records, who was lucky enough to receive this very positive answer to his request that the duo record something for his label.At a mere three and four-odd minutes, pianist Anna Rose Carter’s playing is so charismatic and characterful it is difficult to determine whether Christopher Bailey did any of his usual electronic accenting at all, until you realize that the subway drone arching over “Verse Porous Verse” is his. Carter plays precise, repetitive Philip Glassian patterns with the hyperreal clarity of a time-lapse nature documentary. “Sand That Remembers the Rock it Once Was” is, as its title plainly announces, more reflective, more sedate, a little doleful, a lot alone.Taken from http://igloomag.com/reviews/moon-ate-the-dark-molt-and-grow-brianWas Ist Das review can also be found here:http://www.wasistdas.co.uk/molt%20grow.htm