WILLIAM DOYLE – Near Future Residence – LP – Vinyl
$24.99 Original price was: $24.99.$19.99Current price is: $19.99.
LP – Black Vinyl
Its nearing a decade since William Doyle released his Mercury Music Prize nominated debut album, Total Strife Forever, as East India Youth in 2014. A year later, he had toured the world and was releasing his second album, Culture of Volume, but it would be another four years before Doyle returned with his third full album, and the first official release under his own name. The dizzyingly ambitious Your Wilderness Revisited arrived in 2019 and was followed last year by the artpop masterpiece, Great Spans of Muddy Time.
In the years between leaving the old project behind and re-emerging under his own name, Doyle self-released a string of ambient-leaning albums, The Dream Derealised, Lightnesses Vol I and II and Near Future Residence, which now receive a first vinyl pressing via Tough Love as both a highly limited four LP box set, titled Slowly Arranged: 2016-19, and as separate albums.
Near Future Residence is music for an imagined place based on real ideas; the soundtrack for an ecologically sustainable housing development somewhere in a not-too-distant future Britain. The eleven instrumental pieces here come from a place of optimism, imagining a future that is based on cooperation, community and ecological urbanism. It’s music intended to sit in this imagined environment rather than impose upon it, similar in principle to the function of Kanky Ongaku (Japanese environmental music). The ideas contained on Near Future Residence laid the groundwork for – and can be seen as a companion piece to – the album Your Wilderness Revisited, released to critical acclaim in 2019. Doyle explains how the pieces were composed in entirely generative ways using samples of instruments, synthesisers and field recordings I’ve collected and developed throughout 2018. In generative composition, rules are set and parameters are chosen and then put into motion, the results constantly changing and surprising.
Tracklist:
1. Flexford Forest Community Choir
2. Cadence Gardens, 2026
3. Sightings at Tangmere Close
4. Music for the 3rd Floor Atrium
5. Rose Building Improv Group
6. Next Doors Granular Band Practice
7. Hocombe Astral Projection Society (Abridged)
8. New European Optimism
9. Derwenthorpe Rainwater Harvest
10. Municipal Harmonics
11. Near Future Residence
Related Products
-
THE VIEW – Exorcism Of Youth – LP – Red Vinyl
$29.99Original price was: $29.99.$23.99Current price is: $23.99.LP – Indies Exclusive Limited Edition Red Vinyl. First new The View album in 8 years. When The View reconvened last year after five years apart, the three old-friends realised just how much they have missed… well, everything about being in a band: the rush of seeing an audience react to their performances, the camaraderie of being together, a simple…
-
THE WHITE STRIPES – The Hardest Button To Button / St. Ides Of March – 7″ – Vinyl
$10.99Original price was: $10.99.$8.79Current price is: $8.79.7″ – Limited Edition Black Vinyl One of four black vinyl pressings of The White Stripes‘ biggest Elephant-era hits, audio remastered and artwork tidied up. This single features the b-side ”St. Ides of March,’ a cover by The Soledad Brothers, one of Detroit’s most pre-eminent artists in 2003. Housed in ”soft touch aqueous coating” sleeves (yes, really), these are the…
-
THE WEB OF LIES – Nude With Demon – LP – Vinyl
$18.99Original price was: $18.99.$15.19Current price is: $15.19.LP – Black Vinyl Ostrich tuned and chronically distressed, The Web Of Lies is Neil Robinson (Buffet Lunch) and Edwin Stevens (Irma Vep, Yerba Mansa). Having played together years back in Robert Sotelos band and forged a singular connection, the pair have been biding their time, waiting for the perfect moment Nude With Demon, their first LP, lurches from the…
-
THE WEATHER STATION – Humanhood – LP – Black Vinyl
$29.99Original price was: $29.99.$23.99Current price is: $23.99.LP – Standard Edition Black Vinyl.The Weather Station returns with new album “Humanhood“, following up 2021’s critically acclaimed “Ignorance“, and its companion piece, “How is it That I Should Look at the Stars“. In the fall of 2023, Tamara Lindeman gathered six musicians at Canterbury Music Company, where she had recorded Ignorance and How Is It That I Should Look…







Reviews
There are no reviews yet.