
2814 — Pillar / New Sun
Pillar fades in with rumbling subs and quick-fire snares around which the duo fold their characteristic pallet of "dreampunk" sonics. Layered ambience with an emphasis on FM synth sounds is the foundation, out of which float distant foreign (usually Asian) voices contributing to an overall woozy and dreamlike atmosphere. The essential difference here when compared to their recent albums Rain Temple (2016) and Birth of a New Day (2015) is the bpm, which hardly got off the floor on those releases. Here it's hovering around the 120 mark. At this pace the sampling style and overall cinematic feel brings obvious comparisons with Burial's post Untrue output; particularly tracks like Street Halo and Rival Dealer, though 2814 give it all a very washed-out Sinofuturist vibe.
New Sun opens as a vaguely dub inflected stepper before more of those vaporwave inspired antique electronic sounds, blurred voices and field recordings start floating about. Fans of Rod Modell's recent output will likely find things to appreciate here. Like all of the music coming out of this project, the trippy atmospheres skilfully avoid any potential New Age clichés. A light bell tone or gamelan melody joins in as the track gets going, adding some sideways movement to the otherwise steadfastly forward pace.
This is a surprising and well executed slab of contemporary techno by a duo that have been at the forefront of developing the inherent possibilities of the vaporwave moment. Credit to Warp for giving them the opportunity and actually using the sub label idea to promote lesser known artists. Hopefully this won't be an exception for 2814 and we could see a full album in this style at some point.
