
Ora Sono Un Lago
Like the emerald merkiness emerging from the cover photograph, Bono / Burattiniâs new album Ora Sono Un Lago transcends elements, a tenacious and brooding collection of work that testifies the duoâs growth and ghostly ability to immerse kosmische landscapes, stripped electronica and oscillatory psychedelia and emerge with songs meticulously constructed, dense and unforgiving, full of richly assembled textures and echoed out other-worldly choirs. Some might call it confessional mysticism. âOra Sono Un Lagoâ was recorded and produced impeccably by Grammy Award winning engineer Francesco Donadello (Hildur Gudnadottir, Johann Johannsson, Modeselektor & Thom Yorke, David Sylvian, Ben Frost, Nils Frahm) giving Francesca Bono (vocalist, performer, founder of Ofeliadorme and member of the Donnacirco collective) and Vittoria Burattini (percussionist, multi-faceted drummer and member of influential Italian avant-rock band Massimo Volume) the freedom to truly explore different compositional directions after their acclaimed debut âSuono In Un Tempo Trasfiguratoâ. The palette is wide, from the standout title-track, where scintillating complex sequences leave space to a spellbinding synth, to the menacing âProve dâesistenza/Il gestoâ lead by itâs funked-out robocop drums or its evil twin âAcrobataâ, all hovering choppers and Carpenter existentialism. Pastoral minimalism and spiritual elegance take over on âFragili danzeâ, a mesmerizing dance that mixes the emotional engagement found in Laurie Spiegelâs compositions and that constant search for human fabric. This is an element that is widely explored on the masterful album closing sequence of âOltre le palpebreâ and âLonely blue starâ where acoustic instrumentation pinpoints Bono / Burattiniâs silky stratifications creating a sense of three-dimensional space and gentle propulsion. A mysterious mix that touches on the obscure rumblings of early UK post-rock greats Bark Psychosis/Disco Inferno while keeping a hand deep in the pockets of Italian archival folklore and 70s tradition. Songs like âCome Un Riflessoâ are a good reminder that the duoâs rhythmical complexion definitely takes nods from Liebezeitâs playbook but are set on the duoâs own pace, a lone voyager on a hallucinatory trip. âOra sono un lagoâ is an album of staggering depth, a pointillist manifesto of contemporary futurism and hand-cranked emotionalism inspired by the poetry of Sylvia Plath and Patrizia Cavalli, where hypothesis and suspension become Bono / Burattiniâs brushes for their distinctive blend of intimacy and reckoning. Burattini crafts tense, hollow drum patterns that she pairs with Bonoâs alien melodies, komische-influenced soundscapes and sparse, choral-esque vocals that ebb and flow throughout the LP. - Ransom Note "Italian library music meets Ghost Box meets Morricone ripples and pulses in the synth-laden sound world of Italian duo Francesca Bono and Vittoria Burattini" The Wire.Â
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Ora Sono Un Lago
Like the emerald merkiness emerging from the cover photograph, Bono / Burattiniâs new album Ora Sono Un Lago transcends elements, a tenacious and brooding collection of work that testifies the duoâs growth and ghostly ability to immerse kosmische landscapes, stripped electronica and oscillatory psychedelia and emerge with songs meticulously constructed, dense and unforgiving, full of richly assembled textures and echoed out other-worldly choirs. Some might call it confessional mysticism. âOra Sono Un Lagoâ was recorded and produced impeccably by Grammy Award winning engineer Francesco Donadello (Hildur Gudnadottir, Johann Johannsson, Modeselektor & Thom Yorke, David Sylvian, Ben Frost, Nils Frahm) giving Francesca Bono (vocalist, performer, founder of Ofeliadorme and member of the Donnacirco collective) and Vittoria Burattini (percussionist, multi-faceted drummer and member of influential Italian avant-rock band Massimo Volume) the freedom to truly explore different compositional directions after their acclaimed debut âSuono In Un Tempo Trasfiguratoâ. The palette is wide, from the standout title-track, where scintillating complex sequences leave space to a spellbinding synth, to the menacing âProve dâesistenza/Il gestoâ lead by itâs funked-out robocop drums or its evil twin âAcrobataâ, all hovering choppers and Carpenter existentialism. Pastoral minimalism and spiritual elegance take over on âFragili danzeâ, a mesmerizing dance that mixes the emotional engagement found in Laurie Spiegelâs compositions and that constant search for human fabric. This is an element that is widely explored on the masterful album closing sequence of âOltre le palpebreâ and âLonely blue starâ where acoustic instrumentation pinpoints Bono / Burattiniâs silky stratifications creating a sense of three-dimensional space and gentle propulsion. A mysterious mix that touches on the obscure rumblings of early UK post-rock greats Bark Psychosis/Disco Inferno while keeping a hand deep in the pockets of Italian archival folklore and 70s tradition. Songs like âCome Un Riflessoâ are a good reminder that the duoâs rhythmical complexion definitely takes nods from Liebezeitâs playbook but are set on the duoâs own pace, a lone voyager on a hallucinatory trip. âOra sono un lagoâ is an album of staggering depth, a pointillist manifesto of contemporary futurism and hand-cranked emotionalism inspired by the poetry of Sylvia Plath and Patrizia Cavalli, where hypothesis and suspension become Bono / Burattiniâs brushes for their distinctive blend of intimacy and reckoning. Burattini crafts tense, hollow drum patterns that she pairs with Bonoâs alien melodies, komische-influenced soundscapes and sparse, choral-esque vocals that ebb and flow throughout the LP. - Ransom Note "Italian library music meets Ghost Box meets Morricone ripples and pulses in the synth-laden sound world of Italian duo Francesca Bono and Vittoria Burattini" The Wire.Â
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Like the emerald merkiness emerging from the cover photograph, Bono / Burattiniâs new album Ora Sono Un Lago transcends elements, a tenacious and brooding collection of work that testifies the duoâs growth and ghostly ability to immerse kosmische landscapes, stripped electronica and oscillatory psychedelia and emerge with songs meticulously constructed, dense and unforgiving, full of richly assembled textures and echoed out other-worldly choirs. Some might call it confessional mysticism. âOra Sono Un Lagoâ was recorded and produced impeccably by Grammy Award winning engineer Francesco Donadello (Hildur Gudnadottir, Johann Johannsson, Modeselektor & Thom Yorke, David Sylvian, Ben Frost, Nils Frahm) giving Francesca Bono (vocalist, performer, founder of Ofeliadorme and member of the Donnacirco collective) and Vittoria Burattini (percussionist, multi-faceted drummer and member of influential Italian avant-rock band Massimo Volume) the freedom to truly explore different compositional directions after their acclaimed debut âSuono In Un Tempo Trasfiguratoâ. The palette is wide, from the standout title-track, where scintillating complex sequences leave space to a spellbinding synth, to the menacing âProve dâesistenza/Il gestoâ lead by itâs funked-out robocop drums or its evil twin âAcrobataâ, all hovering choppers and Carpenter existentialism. Pastoral minimalism and spiritual elegance take over on âFragili danzeâ, a mesmerizing dance that mixes the emotional engagement found in Laurie Spiegelâs compositions and that constant search for human fabric. This is an element that is widely explored on the masterful album closing sequence of âOltre le palpebreâ and âLonely blue starâ where acoustic instrumentation pinpoints Bono / Burattiniâs silky stratifications creating a sense of three-dimensional space and gentle propulsion. A mysterious mix that touches on the obscure rumblings of early UK post-rock greats Bark Psychosis/Disco Inferno while keeping a hand deep in the pockets of Italian archival folklore and 70s tradition. Songs like âCome Un Riflessoâ are a good reminder that the duoâs rhythmical complexion definitely takes nods from Liebezeitâs playbook but are set on the duoâs own pace, a lone voyager on a hallucinatory trip. âOra sono un lagoâ is an album of staggering depth, a pointillist manifesto of contemporary futurism and hand-cranked emotionalism inspired by the poetry of Sylvia Plath and Patrizia Cavalli, where hypothesis and suspension become Bono / Burattiniâs brushes for their distinctive blend of intimacy and reckoning. Burattini crafts tense, hollow drum patterns that she pairs with Bonoâs alien melodies, komische-influenced soundscapes and sparse, choral-esque vocals that ebb and flow throughout the LP. - Ransom Note "Italian library music meets Ghost Box meets Morricone ripples and pulses in the synth-laden sound world of Italian duo Francesca Bono and Vittoria Burattini" The Wire.Â











