2009, Planet Mu
VINYL FORMAT. Sometimes described as "the Stanley Kubrick of electronic music," having released an album most recently nine years ago, Jega (a.k.a. Manchester's Dylan Nathan) has finally completed his brand new record for the Planet Mu label. In 2003, a draft version was leaked onto the internet, forcing Nathan to return to the drawing board and re-write vast chunks of material. Since then, he relocated first from Manchester to New York, and then to Los Angeles, delaying the project even further. The completed eighteen-track double album bears little relation to the leaked material of so many years back.
Variance is split into two nine-track journeys, each given its own disc. "Volume One" is the light, with beautiful synth arpeggios battle with sampled flutes and organic hip-hop- and soul-inspired breaks. On "Antiphon," a lone piano weaves around synthetic rhythms like insects chirping, and plastic-sounding strings give a futuristic feel to the song. The mood is one of joy and hope, with many of the melodies featuring rising cadences of notes resolving in the major. "Volume Two" is the darkness, altogether starker, starting with "Tensor," an electro-acoustic sound sculpture, and building up into the dystopian melodies, electro beats, and dubstep bass of "Shibuya." On "Kyoto" and "Hydrodynamic," digital processing and harsh jungle breaks heighten the tempo and the mood toward the end of the disc.
Variance is split into two nine-track journeys, each given its own disc. "Volume One" is the light, with beautiful synth arpeggios battle with sampled flutes and organic hip-hop- and soul-inspired breaks. On "Antiphon," a lone piano weaves around synthetic rhythms like insects chirping, and plastic-sounding strings give a futuristic feel to the song. The mood is one of joy and hope, with many of the melodies featuring rising cadences of notes resolving in the major. "Volume Two" is the darkness, altogether starker, starting with "Tensor," an electro-acoustic sound sculpture, and building up into the dystopian melodies, electro beats, and dubstep bass of "Shibuya." On "Kyoto" and "Hydrodynamic," digital processing and harsh jungle breaks heighten the tempo and the mood toward the end of the disc.
Tracklisting
Disc 1
Disc 2
| 1 | Soulflute |
| 2 | Antiphon |
| 3 | Moment |
| 4 | Girl Who Fell to Earth |
| 5 | Sakura |
| 6 | Eva |
| 7 | Dreams |
| 8 | Aqueminae |
| 9 | Zenith |
Customer Reviews





