Description
- Chill Crystal Zone [4:40]
- Midsummer’s Eve [6:17]
- Midsummer’s Morning [5:41]
- Midsummer’s Day [5:58]
- Seduction Crossing [6:43]
- Right of Ascension [7:35]
- Drowning someone’s sorrow into the ocean pt. I [6:48]
- Drowning someone’s sorrow into the ocean pt. II [11:15]
- Drowning someone’s sorrow into the ocean pt. III [4:35]
- Midsummer’s Night [5:48]
Dynamic and versatile
Manuel Lemos Murads / Ultima Fronteira Radio –
Nuevo trabajo que nos llega gracias al sello holands Groove Unlimited, se trata en esta ocasin del proyecto Picture Palace Music”.Este es un proyecto nacido en el ao 2003 en Berln
Sylvain Lupari / Guts of Darkness –
Its quite difficult to describe the music of Picture Palace Music so much that shes so disparate. Since the release of Somnambulistic Tunes in 2007, Thorsten Quaeschnings group doesnt stop amazing by an impressive variety of styles and tones. Midsummer, their 1st album on Groove Unlimited was revealed during the E-Live2010 festival during a hectic concert that totally amazed the audience. And with good cause! Beyond a hymn to summer, its solstice, the sun and its worshippers, Midsummer embraces big synth rock and keeps an attentive ear to rustles o bluish nights, there where festivities of a world of excitement cross the parallelism of dualistic universes of Picture Palace Music.
Chill Crystal Zone reminds us above all that the leader of PPM is also behind the keyboards of Tangerine Dream. Midsummers introductory track starts with a slightly fluty synth dandling on a fine sequential line which waves such a prismatic rivulet on a cozy bed of twinkling arpeggios and guitar notes scrolling in loops. The rhythm is nervous, crossing the wriggling guitar of The Edge (U2) as well as naive and tremulous sequences of Dream from the Rockoon years. A feverish guitar of which riffs are fading behind floating vocalizes shapes a strange melody gnawed by a latent madness. The pace is increasing with more sustained percussions and crystalline chords which waddle innocently before the guitar becomes more mordant and that an avalanche of percussions tumbles with crash, dividing Chill Crystal Zone between a soft melody and an astounding musical fury that PPM had already flooded us with Damsel Dive and Help Murder Help which we find on Fairy Marsh Districts. Moreover, Midsummer will constantly be torn between melodies and anguishes as well as between brightness and blackness.
Midsummers Eve follows with an introduction rather similar to Chill Crystal Zone weakened rhythm, except that the rhythm explodes heavily with furious percussions, a line of hemmed bass and nervous guitar riffs which plunges us into the somber universe of King Crimson (Red and Starless and Bible Black). An explosive track where the guitar drags its solos on a hybrid structure with a rhythm broken by short aired interludes, leaning over heavy riffs and dark lines of synth which roar in a cacophony of sounds reminding us that Midsummer is also an album for sound divers as well as for baptism ceremonies, but surely baptisms of another religious order. Sounds, sounds and sounds.
Midsummers Morning is full of those and this up to the last hidden recesses of its mystery. Its a wonderful ode to schizophrenia with a delicious piano which spreads a magnificent meditative melody where voices drag in a furrow disturbing of emotionalism and eclecticism. A soft piano which reminds me the Aoranza on Curicculum Vitae 1 whose atmosphere is similar to it with all this array of sounds as heterogeneous as troubling which crosses this delicate duel piano / flute.
Midsummers Day cross a little bit the light rhythmics of the Dream in the Miramar years with its lively tempo where guitar riffs flow on nervous percussions and limpid sequences fidgeting beneath delicate strata of synth. A track which flirts a little more towards the big synth rock, quite as the powerful and colliding Right of Ascension Day, and which knows its increases of creativity with a beautiful guitar and vocals of festivities which plunge Midsummers Day in an unreal African rave-up, especially with vuvuzelas which buzz around vocoders.
Seduction Crossing is also tinted of this Tangerine Dream universe, but a darker Dream brought out of Legend paths. A fine sequence swirls after an atonal intro with anguishing breezes. A sequence of which chords are trickling away under good striking of muffed percussions and others which are deeply colliding quite as on Legend. A line of bass fed this spiral sequence where keyboard keys water this strange melody of glass tones. A great track which depicts a nightmarish paranoia, especially when are adding superb spectral guitars strata which sway with stridence, tearing this suave to schizophrenic seduction which lives in Seduction Crossing, one excellent track within Midsummer.
Our eardrums, still knocked out by strikes of the heavy and captivating Right of Ascension, are wrapped by the eclectic and hollow intro of Drowning Someone’s Sorrow into the Ocean Part I. Drops stream in the echo of dark caves of which curves go on towards a heterogeneous sound universe where caustic reverberations cross an array of fluty breezes and metallic hoops. A sequence is emerging from it and discreetly astride this plain fossilized of metallic humming.
The movement is delicate and is increasing with the appearance of the Part II where the universe of PPM crosses the tribal tones of Steve Roach‘s world with a surprising mixture of percussions which teems on a pace spinning in spiral. The tempo becomes more incisive and swirls with such a swiftness that the vertigo takes the lead over the hypnotic magnetism.
Dark, intense and stuffed with composite tones Drowning Someone’s Sorrow into the Ocean Part II quenches ones thirst of furious rhythms on a structure finely hatched where reigns a multitude of percussions and sequenced chords which are bickering beneath howling synths and monastic choirs which are make hearing with the opening of the Part III. Swirling tribal dance, Drowning Someone’s Sorrow into the Ocean is a splendid trilogy where the somber incantations of PPM are fed of a stunning malefic and charming spirit.
After this world of blackness Midsummer’s Night concludes Midsummer with an infernal rhythm. A big synth pop which crosses synth techno beneath an avalanche of percussions and a twirling structure where keyboard keys tinkle around a vocoder perfectly split with a synth to titanic sonorous flood. A powerful great track which depicts the hybrid universe of Midsummer where the dark and eclectic approach of Picture Palace Music clears superbly well with a more pop, more rock approach and definitively more accessible approach.
I think its the best way of learning about the tortuous universe of PPM.
2010. Sylvain Lupari / Guts of Darkness