Jasper TX - Singing Stones

Singing Stones

Jasper TX

Available Formats No. of Tracks   Price Buy
Download Album (mp3) 9 tracks £5.99
Download Album (flac) 9 tracks £6.99
Download Album (wav) 9 tracks £6.99
Download individual tracks   from £0.75

Description

Jasper TX - Singing Stones

Jasper TX, known to his friends as Dag Rosenqvist, is a busy man indeed. Besides being one half of the rather amazing post-rock duo De La Mancha, he has released a number of carefully drafted and very well received solo recordings in his Jasper TX guise over the last few years, with labels such as Miasmah, Kning Disk and Lampse.

The visual aspects of Rosenqvist’s music cannot be neglected. Feelings superimposed on feelings; he works his music like a painter, applying layer after layer of colors to his compositions. In these deeply cinematic, drone based pop workings, the guitar is the most commonly featured instrument. It is however not always recognizable as such – his soundscapes could often be anything but. The sound is altered, by gentle hands, until it gets under your skin, into your soul and further.

»Singing Stones« is the fifth album proper from Jasper TX. Over almost 60 minutes, we are told a heartfelt story of windswept islands in past times, a small community surrounded by the dark sea. It’s a story of sadness, of being left behind, a story shrouded in darkness and death, but not without a glimpse of light – in hope of a possible reunion.

This is a personal album, allowing us a glimpse not only of Dag Rosenquist’s unique musical skills, but also his inner life, his beliefs and his compassion. And by echoing our not so distant history, with »Singing Stones« he actually manages to teach us all a little bit about ourselves.

Reviews

Boomkat:

Very much a talent on the ascendence, Dag Rosenqvist returns with a swift follow-up to last year's Closet Ghosts EP, and the full-length on Miasmah, Black Sleep. While those two releases marked out career highpoints for Rosenqviist, Singing Stones finds him continuing on his upward trajectory, serving up a truly beautiful - not to mention accessible - collection of cinematic electronic compositions. You won't hear many artists who are this adept when it comes to wringing emotion from their laptops, and introductory track 'Stillness' provides an instantly breathtaking blend of lyrical digital timbres and immersive field recordings; you'll hear footsteps trudging across muddy ground and far off bells pealing out in the distance - it's lovely stuff. Next comes the exquisitely subtle 'This Barren Land', an electroacoustic drone piece that doesn't initially seem to be doing anything that's especially out of the ordinary, but the subtlety and depth of the piece ensures it worms its way into your heart. Now the tone is set, Rosenqvist opens up with some melodic developments, bringing delicate tuned percussion and filtered guitar progressions to 'They've Flown Away And Left Us Here', while 'Last Boat In' brings together fluttering vibraphone melodies and crashing waves on a beach. The set-adrift feel persists throughout, as cued by titles like 'A Box Of Wood In The Storm', 'Into The Sea' and 'Sleeping Rivers', the latter of which cultivates an Oren Ambarchi-like low-end drone, while flickers of hiss bombard slow-swelling chords. Singing Stones is an exceptional album, artfully constructed and sequenced in a way that preserves its enigmatic feel, continually shifting between coy tunefulness and glorious abstraction. Superb.

The Sound Projector (online), Ed Pinsent:

We’ve been receiving some fairly dark and opaque releases from the excellent Fang Bomb label in Sweden these last few weeks…much of it just perfect fodder to feed my brooding soul…but here comes Jasper TX, whose Singing Stones (FB010) is a sunlit, melodic antidote to much of that industrialised gloom. However, Dag Rosenqvist’s musical episodes are also highly melancholic, all that afore-mentioned sunlight tempered with many a rain-streaked window and a tragedian’s bowed head on this beautiful, valedictory record. With its slow instrumental hymns such as ‘This Barren Land’ and ‘Sleeping Rivers’, you could really use this fogged-out record to contemplate the icy stillness of a February Sunday morning and let it act as a balm to salve thy aching heart. Recommended.

Bagatellen, Paul Baran:

Over the last few years, Gothenburg’s Dag Rosenqvist has been quietly assembling an emotionally charged back catalogue of sonic naturalism, with releases such as the The Darkness and last year’s Black Sleep, making us take notice of an emerging talent. But his Bergmanesque take on a desolate ambient Americana has at last finally found its creative apogee on the Fang Bomb release, Singing Stones.

If there was one criticism to be leveled, it could be that Rosenqvist was somewhat too much in thrall with his influences in the land of Laptopia, in the guises of Tim Hecker and Oren Ambarchi. Yet perhaps there was influence from these artists in carving out his own voice, in the way that Renaissance artists would copy each other’s Disegno to achieve their own singular harmony.

Mastering a spare use of instrumentation from Dictaphone recordings to granulated wind chimes, Rosenqvist sets each piece up via the drama of atmosphere and through a slow magmatic positioning of sound elements. Carefully avoiding the earlier site-specific strategies of say, Brian Eno, with his landmark opus, On Land (1982), Rosenqvist elects a more personal mimesis through the politics of a small island community in Sweden.

“Stillness” begins with a distress SOS drone, not entirely dissimilar in its atonal urgency to populist film composer Hans Zimmer’s “Joker” theme in the film The Dark Knight, before ascending into a sunlit meta-stasis of drone and counterdrone, only hampered by the reliance of tape-looped guitar notes that, for my ears, seem a little too tried and tested.

“This Barren Land” ups the creative ante and the cinematic potency of the album is assured with gentle, processed guitar weaving in an out of imagined shoreline topographies redolent of Casper Friederich’s sublime nature studies.

The pieces stand alone conceptually and usually progress from catharsis to hope in tone. Weather systems seem to come and go like characters on the landscape as much as found musical objects. “A Box of Wood in the Storm” is one such piece that extemporises this approach, opening with a demented impersonation of Henry Cowell and evoking wild storms through heavily reverberated piano, before settling into two cloud-rolling chords.

Indeed, so powerful and pure is the melancholy atmosphere of these pieces, one is reminded of the final scenes of emotive films like Lars Von Trier’s Breaking the Waves, or the 1997 film adaptation of Russell Bank’s novel, Affliction, when we bear witness to the brutal outcome of a family Stockholm Syndrome. The music contained within this CD would be the perfect accompaniment to such emotional catharsis, and for that matter a thousand others.

Dag Rosenqvist has not only outgrown his formative influences on this lovely record, but has found a way of creating a very special brand of musical humanism through an unaffected interface, between the human soul and inhuman technology.

Tracklisting

Download Album (FB010DD)
  1. Jasper TX - Stillness
  2. Jasper TX - This Barren Land
  3. Jasper TX - They’ve Flown Away and Left Us Here
  4. Jasper TX - Last Boat In
  5. Jasper TX - A Box of Wood in the Storm
  6. Jasper TX - Not Leaving, Not Really
  7. Jasper TX - Sleeping Rivers
  8. Jasper TX - Into the Sea
  9. Jasper TX - Mornings After

mp3 downloads

Downloads

Track NumberListen Track NameTrack Length Price Buy
1 Stillness 9m 1s N/A N/A
2 This Barren Land 6m 3s £0.75
3 They’ve Flown Away and Left Us Here 4m 12s £0.75
4 Last Boat In 4m 2s £0.75
5 A Box of Wood in the Storm 7m 35s £0.75
6 Not Leaving, Not Really 3m 57s £0.75
7 Sleeping Rivers 5m 14s £0.75
8 Into the Sea 9m 18s N/A N/A
9 Mornings After 6m 5s £0.75
Entire MP3 Download Album ( 9 tracks) £5.99
MP3 format technical details
These mp3 tracks have been encoded with LAME using the '--preset extreme' VBR setting, providing you with a very rich listening experience. No DRM or copy protection is built in to the mp3s.

wav downloads

Downloads

Track NumberListen Track NameTrack Length Price Buy
1 Stillness 9m 1s N/A N/A
2 This Barren Land 6m 3s £0.75
3 They’ve Flown Away and Left Us Here 4m 12s £0.75
4 Last Boat In 4m 2s £0.75
5 A Box of Wood in the Storm 7m 35s £0.75
6 Not Leaving, Not Really 3m 57s £0.75
7 Sleeping Rivers 5m 14s £0.75
8 Into the Sea 9m 18s N/A N/A
9 Mornings After 6m 5s £0.75
Entire WAV Download Album ( 9 tracks) £6.99

flac downloads

Downloads

Track NumberListen Track NameTrack Length Price Buy
1 Stillness 9m 1s N/A N/A
2 This Barren Land 6m 3s £0.75
3 They’ve Flown Away and Left Us Here 4m 12s £0.75
4 Last Boat In 4m 2s £0.75
5 A Box of Wood in the Storm 7m 35s £0.75
6 Not Leaving, Not Really 3m 57s £0.75
7 Sleeping Rivers 5m 14s £0.75
8 Into the Sea 9m 18s N/A N/A
9 Mornings After 6m 5s £0.75
Entire FLAC Download Album ( 9 tracks) £6.99
FLAC format technical details:
These FLAC tracks are superior to MP3 in that they are compressed without any loss in sound quality. For further technical details or player tips, visit the Help section