Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Scholars

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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2019年01月18日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルBrassland
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 BRSL256102
SKU 632662561027

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:37:15
If you remember Buke and Gase as that experimental duo who play the instruments they built themselves, you might want to adjust your expectations before listening to 2019's Scholars, their first full-length album after a five-year recording layoff. In their previous work, Aron Sanchez and Arone Dyer constructed their music around two instruments of their own creation, the buke, a large, six-string relative of the ukulele played by Dyer, and the Gass, a fusion of the guitar and the bass used by Sanchez. However, while both instruments are part of the mix on Scholars, this time around the duo have pared back on organic instrumentation and jumped deep into electronics. Keyboards and digital percussion are dominant in the mix, and synthetic manipulation of the voices and instruments give this music a new personality that's playful but curiously alien, as if this is herky-jerky pop music from some alternate universe. Of course, Dyer and Sanchez have always been more interested in angles than clean lines, and in many respects this follows the framework of instrumental interplay that was the foundation of their most compelling music on 2010's Riposte and 2013's General Dome. But if the theory is not dissimilar on Scholars, the practice gives us an album that sounds bigger and bolder but less intimate than their most engaging work. At the same time, there's a wry tone to Scholars that has been largely absent from Buke and Gase's material; "Grips" generates something close to a groove as the buke echoes down the hallways, "Pink Boots" gives Dyer a chance to sing like a diva and it suits her, the short bursts of "QI Ball" and "Temporary" show these folks are having fun messing with the new noises at their fingertips, and the strut of "Derby" could be an R&B hit in another world. There are moments on Scholars where Buke and Gase are clearly still finding their feet in their new electronic landscapes, but the album is an ambitious and adventurous set of music that's every bit as engaged as anything they've ever released, and there's an undertow of discovery that makes their new music an adventure worth a spin or two. ~ Mark Deming

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Stumbler
    2. 2.
      Scholars
    3. 3.
      Derby
    4. 4.
      Pink Boots
    5. 5.
      Temporary
    6. 6.
      Wrong Side
    7. 7.
      Grips
    8. 8.
      Qi Ball
    9. 9.
      Flock
    10. 10.
      Eternity
    11. 11.
      No Land
    12. 12.
      Ranger

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Buke And Gase

オリジナル発売日:2019年

商品の紹介

If you remember Buke and Gase as that experimental duo who play the instruments they built themselves, you might want to adjust your expectations before listening to 2019's Scholars, their first full-length album after a five-year recording layoff. In their previous work, Aron Sanchez and Arone Dyer constructed their music around two instruments of their own creation, the buke, a large, six-string relative of the ukulele played by Dyer, and the Gass, a fusion of the guitar and the bass used by Sanchez. However, while both instruments are part of the mix on Scholars, this time around the duo have pared back on organic instrumentation and jumped deep into electronics. Keyboards and digital percussion are dominant in the mix, and synthetic manipulation of the voices and instruments give this music a new personality that's playful but curiously alien, as if this is herky-jerky pop music from some alternate universe. Of course, Dyer and Sanchez have always been more interested in angles than clean lines, and in many respects this follows the framework of instrumental interplay that was the foundation of their most compelling music on 2010's Riposte and 2013's General Dome. But if the theory is not dissimilar on Scholars, the practice gives us an album that sounds bigger and bolder but less intimate than their most engaging work. At the same time, there's a wry tone to Scholars that has been largely absent from Buke and Gase's material; "Grips" generates something close to a groove as the buke echoes down the hallways, "Pink Boots" gives Dyer a chance to sing like a diva and it suits her, the short bursts of "QI Ball" and "Temporary" show these folks are having fun messing with the new noises at their fingertips, and the strut of "Derby" could be an R&B hit in another world. There are moments on Scholars where Buke and Gase are clearly still finding their feet in their new electronic landscapes, but the album is an ambitious and adventurous set of music that's every bit as engaged as anything they've ever released, and there's an undertow of discovery that makes their new music an adventure worth a spin or two. ~ Mark Deming|
Rovi

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