| Petersonic: Touch#6 All of which is fine and good but what really matters is what's happening in the eleven tracks. On that note, while the album's neither genre-defying nor earth-shattering, Baert keeps things interesting by infusing the album with imagination and diversity. “Neilla Deum,” for instance, offers the unusual sound of lamenting choir voices juxtaposed with rippling clicks of static and repetitive bass throbs, while “Zodiac Love” layers scraping, spindly noises over burbling techno pulses. His affinity for edits is spotlighted on “Who We Are” where spoken words (like “How is it that we know who we are?”) are mutilated while beats splatter, groan, and grind below. In general, Baert presents an appealing array of sounds but the album sometimes suffers compositionally, with pieces sounding more sketch-like than fully-developed: a track comprised of a looping base and overlaid noises may be interesting, for instance, but impresses more when dramatic narrative flow configures the sounds more meaningfully. Still, there's no disputing the title track's lovely ambient blur and the bucolic splendor of the pretty outro “Writing.” April 2005 |