Articles
2007 Ten Favourite Labels
Backtracking Greg Davis
Shackleton Interview

Albums
John Luther Adams
Joseph Auer
Commix
Dartriix
Floratone
Furniture
Shuta Hasunuma
Richard Hawley
Hologram
Icarus
Kiln
Kobol
Labradford
Last Days
M83
Mai
Darren McClure
Near the Parenthesis
David Newlyn
Objekt4
OK Ikumi
Ontayso
Wendel Patrick
Phon°noir
Pocahaunted / Robedoor
Poostosh
Prefuse 73
Quosp
Rapoon
The Retail Sectors
Skull Disco
Socos
Supersilent
Tigrics
Trentemøller
Zuydervelt / Baars / Veld.

Compilations/Mixes
Airport Symphony
Devil in the Detail
Dinky
EXPANSION | contraction
Funckarma
Little Darla v. 25
One Five Zero
Playgroup / Alter Ego
Signal Path
Soul Jazz Singles
U-cover Mix 03 [IDM]
Ricardo Villalobos
We Are All Cotton-Hearted
Well Deep

3"/ 7"/ 10"/ 12"/ EPs
Basic Unit
Bodycode
Kit Clayton & Sutekh
Dartriix
Ditch
INKlings
Insanic4
Lackluster
Najem Sworb
Ontayso
Sutekh
The Tamborines
Telafonica
Zainetica

Rapoon: Time Frost
Glacial Movements

Time Frost by Rapoon, an alias of one-time zoviet* france member (and co-founder) Robin Storey, deviates to some degree from the two prior Glacial Movements releases, Netherworld's Morketid and the Cryosphere compilation. In place of desolate, frozen tundra, we get celestial formations that drift through the empyrean in a beatific style that could make Marsen Jules jealous. Storey used tiny fragments of The Blue Danube by Johann Strauss (specifically, vinyl locked grooves lifted from the version included on the 1968 2001 soundtrack) as starting points which he then manipulated and re-arranged to form the hour-long disc's five settings. Though Rapoon's material may sound sonically different from his label predecessors (during the album's first half in particular), conceptually the release stays true to the label's ‘glacial and isolationist ambient' vision: Time Frost aurally documents the frozen preservation of cultural fragments during a new ice age and their eventual discovery and interpretation by future archaeologists.

In “Glacial Danube,” swooping choir-like tones pan from side to side amidst static and crackle, while immense waves of hazy strings swirl and shudder during the Gas-like “Thin Light.” Needless to say, such pieces, as effective as they may be, are dwarfed by the colossus “Ice Whispers” which spreads its glacial wings for thirty-four minutes. The piece's dark industrial-ambient style brings Time Frost closer in spirit to the label's signature style: winds howl, vaporous clouds billow, chains rattle, and sweeping spectral tones rise from subterranean chambers and cast vast shadows, plunging the terrain into near-darkness. As it advances towards its end, its epic quality diminishes, and the panning tones and crackle of “Glacial Danube” reappear, bestowing upon the release a satisfying unity. Time Frost is about as accomplished a piece of dark ambient as one might hope to find, something that, in itself, shouldn't surprise too much, given Storey's CV.

December 2007