Album

Golden Hour by Sevish

Netlabel: split-notesSPNT001
Released: 03 Jan 2010
Tracklist
  • 1
    Islands
    03:32
  • 2
    Sean's Bits
    02:54
  • 3
    Dirty Drummer
    04:21
  • 4
    Tapestry
    04:14
  • 5
    Umbriel
    05:11
  • 6
    Fifteen
    04:38
  • 7
    Mako Haze
    04:01
  • 8
    Calabi-Yau Manifold
    05:38
  • 9
    Callisto
    01:45
  • 10
    The Mersh Tune
    02:21
  • 11
    Wicked Rhythm
    03:56
  • 12
    Ganymede
    06:30
  • 13
    Light Cone
    01:39
  • 14
    Whitey
    04:55
  • 15
    Parliament of Moon
    05:14
00:00:00 / 00:00:00

Come hear our very first release on Split Notes - from that lovable drum and bass enthusiast from the United Kingdom, Sevish. This album titled Golden Hour touches on dubstep, breakbeat, IDM and hip hop, but has a big d'n'b slant as you'd expect from Sevish.

"Since last year's LP I have changed my techniques and ideas about music... I've been looking beyond traditional Western tonality to find the new moods you can make with alternative tunings - microtones. Meanwhile, my promiscuity with different styles of electronic music and my endless search for beautiful atmospheres and beats both remain!"

Golden Hour is arguably the most exciting work by Sevish yet.

"I think I've got all bases covered on Golden Hour... I'm really into my messed up complicated tracks so you'll see plenty of those (Tapestry, Whitey) but I also wanted to bring back some straight-ahead sounding stuff (Mako Haze, Fifteen, Calabi-Yau Manifold) because people really liked that about my earlier music."

Photo of Sevish with a cup of coffeeThe use of alternative tunings to achieve new emotions requires Sevish to retune his synthesisers using software. Only then is it possible to play the 'notes between the notes'. Few of the rules that apply to the old way of doing music are true in the new way, but the results from this new way of composing are stellar and great to listen to:

"Ok, so people's first reaction to this sound is often 'that sounds out of tune'. In reality, it's 'in tune differently'. That's something to embrace because those differences give a new character to the music that just aren't possible with the 12 tone system. Take the Bohlen-Pierce scale. It sounds absolutely weird for the first few minutes you hear it! It's exciting, but it's shocking - and it takes a while to make sense of it. What's going on is that you are unlearning your ideas about what is 'in tune' before you understand that the Bohlen-Pierce scale can be extremely dynamic sounding, either chillingly alien (used in Mako Haze) or serene and restful (Callisto), and a new experience in listening that you've never had before.
Then take the 5-tet scale (used in the track Fifteen) which has an oriental character and doesn't seem to sound out of tune to many people. Actually it's quite badly out of tune but we think it's great anyway. Its sound is quite familiar but otherwise the feeling of 5-tet is simply impossible to recreate in the Western 12 tone system.
Those two scales are just the beginning. I used several more in the making of Golden Hour. I wanted to explore as much as I possibly could!! Why wouldn't you, if a new world has been opened up to you?!"

Download
License license