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FIBREFORMS - Treedrums

Format: CD
Label & Cat.Number: Infraction INFX 058
Release Year: 2013
Note: recordings from the 90's by this group who later turned into KILN => splendid ambience / instrumental rock, open & wide with wonderful acoustic & e-guitars and long droney passages.. lim. 300 in beautufil mini-gatefold cover
Price (incl. 19% VAT): €13.00


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"Long before KILN turned to the sunset-soaked textures of Dusker, and the sonic-carousels of "Thermals", they made music as fibreforms. Treedrums (1996) documents their transition from live performance trio to sound-art synergists, balancing symbiotic instrumental spaces of kit-drums and treated guitars with lost&found sound to evoke moments that are at once invigorating and tranquil. Seventeen years later, Treedrums is presented here as a re-amped, remixed, and properly restored archival edition of this once buried treasure of sonic curio. One-time numbered edition of 300. Includes two previously unreleased tracks from that early era. These will be housed in a Stoughton mini-lp gatefold sleeve along with an 8 page full color booklet." [label info]

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"...Following Berry I turned to Fibreforms, a trio of Kevin Hayes, Kirk Marrison and Clark Rehberg, who call themselves these days Kiln. They are from Michigan and somewhere along the lines they changed names. 'Treedrums' is an album from 1996, now nicely repacked (all of these releases look actually great, no rush jobs, nothing cheap). Repacked, but also 'economized, re-amped, remixed, and properly restored', so altogether a different release. I looked at the cover of the original on discogs and it might have been something I heard before. Their ambient is of a different nature; it's more the rockist agenda that is being played, and in particular the post-rock variation. All of this is instrumental of course, with lots of spacious guitars, reverb on the drums and much electronics. Think Tortoise, think Trans AM, Windy & Carl, but I also would like to mention something like O Yuki Conjugate; not because of the ethno rhythms, but of the ambience Fibreforms puts forward when the rhythm plays a more minor role. This ambient of the rock variation is actually very nice, certainly when it's part of a larger ambient bundle. It offers that bit of variation that you may need here. It also proofs that there are more ways 'to do' ambient than just computer processing field recordings. It sounds dated, perhaps, and then it also sounds entirely fresh. Great CD." [FdW/Vital Weekly]