Wisp / The Shimmering Hour
Artist Wisp
Album Title: The Shimmering Hour
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Electronica/Dance: General Electronic
Format CD
Released 05/12/2009
Label Rephlex
Catalog No CAT 195 CD
Bar Code No 6 66908 01952 2
Packaging Jewelcase
Tracks
1. Teddy Oggie (3:20)
2. Picatrix (5:31)
3. Keeper of the Hills (6:00)
4. Flat Rock (3:47)
5. Seaway Trail (5:38)
6. Hexenringe (6:29)
7. Cultus Klatawa (6:32)
8. Katabatic (3:25)
9. Summoner's Hollow (7:01)
10. World Rim Walker (4:58)
11. The Shaper (3:22)
12. Hidebehind (5:02)
13. The Fire Above (6:34)
14. Winter of Flight (4:51)
Date Acquired 10/01/2010
Personal Rating
Acquired from Import_CDs (Amazon)
Purchase Price 14.00

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Reviews
All Music Guide Review:

Review by Ned Raggett
The backstory to Wisp's debut for Rephlex possesses a fair amount of attention-getting factors: there's the confusion of Wisp's work for the mysterious "unknown" artist on the label, the Tuss; the fact that The Shimmering Hour is meant to be a tribute to the work of J.R.R. Tolkien; and the various Northern European sources of inspiration he drew on, and so forth. As with everything, though, one has to take the music on its own merits, and Buffalo native R.W. Dunn's work makes for approachable enough electronic listening that is perfectly suited to a Rephlex release. The debt to artists like the Aphex Twin nearly being required, it's a matter of taking it new directions. Happily, Wisp helps put his own stamp on things early in the album with "Picatrix," an effective slice of melodrama that feels like a cinematic early-'80s New Romantic-era instrumental with a strong series of beats helping the song out of a potential glitch cul-de-sac. From there, Wisp's gift for self-contained beauties that hang together as an album turns up more often than not, with songs like "Keeper of the Hills," "Seaway Trail," and "Summoner's Hollow," the latter practically careening out of the speakers thanks to a breathtaking string/synth arrangement, are standouts. Certainly there are numbers that simply rework familiar approaches, like the hyperactive beats/calm melodies of "Hexenringe," but as an extension of the creative tradition combining electronics with archaic forms of artistic inspiration evident in much prog music throughout the '70s in particular, here reworked for newer times and technological advances, The Shimmering Hour is a fine treat.
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