Particles & Waves 2004 (Album)
Particles & Waves 2004 (Album)
Tracklisting
1.Vanishing Point
2.K56
3.Every Town
4.Here Comes The Snow
5.Particles & Waves
6.Avenue A
7.Astronauts
8.Far From the City
9.Streams
10.Light Song
11.Particles & Waves (Remix)*
Price £ 7.00 for the whole album download, including extra track* album artwork files, front and back cover, poster artwork and selected lyrics.**
*extra track and **lyric pages exclusive to download (not on CD version of album)
Ali Shaw sings of love, astronauts, snowflakes and the mysteries of time and space with well-honed eccentricity. As intriguing, intoxicating and boundlessly evocative as ever. Uncut
Particles and Waves is clearly the work of a band playing and writing at the very peak of their abilities and not for the first time either…bold ideas writ large as some fairly serious musicians throw around the type of energies more usually associated with sets from Telecaster-destroying teen delinquents. Artrocker
The perfect accompaniment to the insomnia of these hot summer nights (4/5) Independent on Sunday
Particles and Waves (2004)
Cranes' continual refining and reworking of their sound over the years has become a hallmark — while Alison Shaw's distinct, childlike vocals remain an immediate calling card, the music she and her brother Jim create finds new shapes and paths. In that regard, Particles & Waves is both a logical continuation from Future Songs, the album that reestablished them as a working band, and its own lovely, mysterious self-contained effort. The sense that the Shaws' interest now lies in moody electronic music as much as guitar-based efforts has only grown, and often the combinations of the two sides make the best results. "K56" has both a brisk almost jangle and a layering of soft chimes and tones. But it's the almost mantra-like way that they work with electronic melodies — an extension of their seemingly simple but powerful, obsessive work from earlier — that gives Particles & Waves its distinct feeling. Everything from Brian Eno's late-'70s work to later avatars like Aphex Twin can be heard in moments like the loops on "Avenue A" and the swirling high piano part of "Astronauts." Where the air of the band's earlier work comes in strongest is more by way of contemplative suggestion — the slow, steady drums and low bass on "Here Comes the Snow," the sparkle and shimmer on "Far from the City." Perhaps the most surprising song is "Every Town" — due not only to its downright gentle electric guitar chime (it's probably the warmest song the band's ever done) but the identity of the singer, Jim Shaw. Hearing his raspy, slightly hurt voice instead of Alison's instantly recognisable singing is quite literally a bit of a shock, but it shows again that Cranes do still have the ability to surprise and try something unexpected, and have it work beautifully.
VANISHING POINT
K56
HERE COMES THE SNOW