Praise A Lord Who Chews But Which Does Not Consume - Zach
Fucking chill out with the album titles, would ya? I always want to recommend Yves Tumor to friends:
“Dude, you gotta check ‘em out. ‘Heaven With Lots of Scythes’ or ‘An Asymptomatic Worldview’ or something like that. There are some classics on those ones.”
Yves Tumor takes what most people think of as cold, sterile science and dresses it up in flowers, silken drapes, and bandpass filters. This album clearly addresses the laws of thermodynamics through a spiritual lens. “Praise A Lord Who Chews But Which Does Not Consume” even describes the idea in the name itself. The essence of life, which comprises all of us, is morphed, mangled, and manured through time, but it is never taken from or added to: It is simply reimagined. Energy takes a cyclical journey around the universe, which is why Yves recognizes god as a circle. The energy that we’re made of never goes away, so all the love and passion we are able to express to each other in the physical world never goes away. Our essence still exists even after our physical forms do not. Being free from physical pain, our emotions reach an ideal space in which to roam. This is heaven. Heaven is all around us. It surrounds us like a hood. And you didn’t need Siddharta Guatema or Alan Watts to preach that bullshit to you. All you needed was to crank the fucking volume knob up on some Yves Tumor.
A Type A personality might have an issue with the structuring across this record. A lot of their stuff is through-composed, focusing less on where the breakdown, versus, and choruses belong. Yves turns this into a strength. All transitions between sections of songs and even between songs are exciting. Making their songs shapeless helps the record remain true to its themes. The listener can feel celestial inside of the album’s graceful and vast soundscapes. And yet the mixing on this album makes a lot of its elements seem out of reach. The distant vocals, the filtered guitars, the reverberant pad synths: They all conjure an image in which the subject is off in the distance, and Yves Tumor appears as the psychopomp who guides us through this surreal place in search of that subject. Do we find it? That is up to you.
I have to do a quick shoutout to “Purified by The Fire” on this album, which totally came out of left field in terms of its sound. This album follows a pretty standard indie art rock style until the intro of this song kicks in, which sounds like a sampled hip-hop beat (actually reminiscent of “Rhinestone Cowboy” [DOOM, not Campbell]). The nature of sampling, taking a pre-existing piece of music and recycling it to take on new purpose while still retaining the essence of its source, brilliantly aligns with the theme of the project. Yves Tumor goes further with it, and turns the piece into a thrashing, nightmarish dance number, like if all the Titans from The Rumbling started two-stepping in this mother fucker.
Working Title for the Album Secret Waters - Quinn
I have not felt the way I feel about this album in a long, long time. To me, it is a masterpiece. It is unique, it is infused with passion. If you listen to this whole album and feel nothing, wipe yourself off my friend, because you are dead. That line was pretty much stolen completely from dunkey’s review of Mario Odyssey. But I digress. I am listening to Song 10 on loop right now, one of my favorites off this album. It is almost 1 A.M. I feel good. I might even feel great. But I don’t think I will feel great when I wake up. We’ll see.
“Take a step back so we can all push upwards, lock hands with your brother, pull up or get pulled under, locks hands with your sister, unified it gets bigger” (Song 10)
Working Title feels like coming home after your first semester at college. Nostalgic and very melancholic, like the fall. I find the title perfect- it puts this album in a sort of ‘in progress’ context. Each song sounds like it was found in the attic of an old house years and years after they were made, as if someone was working on them their whole life but never got around to releasing them. The confident yet unbothered delivery and flows along with the seemingly Dilla influenced sampling and overall production, matched with the mixing makes this album feel so personal. Like I said before, you can feel the sheer passion going into this project, which is expected from Cities Aviv at this point. I haven’t listened to all his albums yet, but each one I’ve listened to has impressed me in different ways. He is quickly becoming one of my favorite artists. Talib Kweli has a line on the first Reflection Eternal album, Train of Thought, that goes:
“I freak with word power, my man speak with beats” (Memories Live)
When I first heard this line, it made me think about the state of hip-hop, and what makes an album good. Nowadays, hip hop is a very over saturated genre of music, and many people do not view rap as an art. I do not blame them. The main stream, ‘popular’ hip-hop, with the exception of a few artists, is not very good. It is not very personal, it feels too motivated by the industry working behind it, and that industry is superficial and evil. The beats are often formulaic and uninspired, and serve as a home to formulaic and uninspired verses. If you aren’t looking for the hip hop that is art, you won’t find it. People who refuse to conform to the status quo of hip-hop and the constant moving machine of industry simply get overshadowed by the artists who have entire companies backing their work, dealing with distribution, promotion, and many other things. Cities Aviv is one of those people. He is simply in his own lane, doing his own thing, and I feel he is very overshadowed. I won’t say underrated, because the people who are aware of him know how special he is. A Working Title for the Album Secret Waters is a work of art both in terms of production and song writing. In the words of Talib Kweli, he freaks with word power and speaks with beats. This album is a home to some of the most beautiful beats I have heard in my past couple years of being a hip-hop fan. To name a few: Chozen/The Prevalence of Issues, the second beat on Funktion, Song 10, 4 Quarter Talks, and Connection’s Chance. This is Cities Aviv at his best, in my opinion.
“Give the body some time, to detox from the illness stillness, meet too gracefully can we build from the emptiness?” (Chozen)
Working Title is my anthem to change. I am going through a lot right now. I am lucky because I have many things to lean on for support. I have wonderful people all around the world who care about me and want to see me thrive. I have great music that I can always occupy my time with. If paintings are art to occupy space, music is art to occupy time. I can paint over my lonely moments with songs that fill me with hope and strengthen my resolve to keep going no matter what life throws at me. Things don’t always work out. And that’s ok. But most importantly, I have myself. I know my worth, and I know what I have to offer. This album is a constant reminder to invest in myself before anybody else, which is something I often forget.
“So- this is it, y’know, I’m not gone get another self, who I am is who I am, y’know, quit comparing yourself to whether you look like other people, or what other people have, and fall in love with yourself. There’s something about you, that you like about yourself. Take that and magnify it. Y’know what I’m saying?” (Towards Understanding)
Being at college, I often feel I am lacking in purpose, due to the fact that I have no idea what will happen to me once I get my diploma. Existential dread is a hard thing to get past. Strange Ways a Coming.
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