17 OCT 2024 - Welcome Back to TorrentFunk! Get your pirate hat back out. Streaming is dying and torrents are the new trend. Account Registration works again and so do Torrent Uploads. We invite you all to start uploading torrents again!
TORRENT DETAILS
(2021) John Dwyer, Ryan Sawyer, Greg Coates, Wilder Zoby, Andres Renteria - Gong Splat [FLAC]
TORRENT SUMMARY
Status:
All the torrents in this section have been verified by our verification system
(2021) John Dwyer, Ryan Sawyer, Greg Coates, Wilder Zoby, Andres Renteria - Gong Splat
Review:
Beginning with 2020’s Bent Arcana, John Dwyer of Osees released a series of all-star group improvisations recorded at his house, each with a different lineup. 2021 concluded with Gong Splat, the fifth of these releases, and perhaps the best yet. Drummer Ryan Sawyer, upright bassist Greg Coates, and percussionist Andres Renteria all make return appearances, and this time Wilder Zoby, a synth player who was in Chin Chin and has collaborated extensively with Run the Jewels, joins the fold. The title seems more likely to be a reference to the band Gong than the instrument, as it has a bit of a whimsical space-rock vibe, while also inhabiting the freakier side of jazz fusion. The opening title track applies cuica and scorching bursts of synth and guitar feedback to a lopsided yet funky groove, setting this wild ride in motion. “Cultivated Graves” has a faster tempo yet feels a bit mellower and more spaced out, with Coates’ hopeful bassline standing at the center and everything else flowing in waves around it. The nine-minute “Yuggoth Travel Agency” is an astral sleigh ride equipped with bells and siren-like synths, maintaining the most relaxed mood on the album yet spiking it with enough noise so that it never gets too comfortable. The remaining tracks are all shorter bursts, but “Hypogeum” has perhaps the most fluid, celebratory groove on the record, with whooshing synths rotating around the rhythm section like it’s a maypole. “Minor Protocides” is the album’s shortest and most chaotic track, and it’s sandwiched in between two very different pieces that both incorporate bowed bass. “Oneironaut” is a spellbinding Krautrock-esque rhythm dribbled with spacy effects, and “Giedi Prime” is more of a free-floating, weightless resolution. Like all of Dwyer’s improv collaborations, Gong Splat has the anything-goes feel one would expect from an impromptu jam session, but there’s something in this one’s combination of cosmic glide and shocked-out panic that elevates it beyond the previous releases.