Mark Van Hoen's fifth solo album is an eloquent meditation on the allures and dangers of memory, regret and nostalgia. . The album's foundation was shaped by a memory and a chance encounter. While remastering some of his early '90s releases and Peel Session tracks, Van Hoen -- a founding member of Seefeel, who also worked as Locust and in Seefeel offshoot Scala and has collaborated with Slowdive, Robert Fripp, Edison Woods and Esben And The Witch, amongst others -- happened upon a track he had recorded in 1982. Attracted by its simplicity, he was inspired to record the basis of The Revenant Diary on 4-track tape, using a minimal set-up, reminiscent of his first early '80s musical adventures as a young teenager. The recollection of one of these -- a 13 year-old Van Hoen's experiment in reel-to-reel tape recording of an ineffectual pop song playing on the radio, which spuriously transformed it into a spooky amalgam of backwards church organ and unintelligible voices -- provided an evocative inspiration. The Revenant Diary pivots on this combination of complex reflection and simplified technology, brimming with Van Hoen's signature sounds: immersively-decayed drones, almost broken ambient surfaces and lulling rhythms, with granular crackle providing spectral grit.
| 1 | Look into My Eyes |
| 2 | Garabndl X |
| 3 | Don't Look Back |
| 4 | I Remember |
| 5 | No Distance (Except the One Between You and Me) |
| 6 | 37/3d |
| 7 | Where Were You |
| 8 | Why Hide from Me |
| 9 | Unknown Host |
| 10 | Laughing Stars at Night |
| 11 | Holy Me |





