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Fractions
2005
Details
Reviews


Somersault Soundtrack
2005
Details
Reviews


Somersault Soundtrack
2004
Details
Reviews


Decoder
Ring
2002
Details
Reviews

Spooky
Action At A Distance
2002
Details
Reviews
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FRACTIONS video clip

Fractions
2005
http://www.myspace.com/decoderringfractions
****
Daily Telegraph Feature Album
"..soaring, savage and simply superb creation,
so compelling and original that it almost hurts..a mark of real
genius"
CD of the Week Drum Media
" A brilliant album from one of the most ingenious bands out there."
**** The Australian
"Epic, grand otherworldly"
****1/2 Feature
Album Rave
"Fractions is probably the most human exercise in musical dreaming
for years. A brilliant and captivating work."
Sydney
Morning Herald
Since Decoder Ring won the Australian Film Institute award for best
original music score and an IF award for best soundtrack for the
2004 movie Somersault, they have been confronted with the
challenge of "Where do we go from here?"
The answer, as their third album demonstrates,
is to push beyond their already adventurous boundaries while providing
more of the gorgeous same.
Australia has no great tradition of experimental
electronic music so Decoder ring's imaginative live light shows,
explorations in electronics and dance rhythms, adventures in improvisation
(shades of Tangerine Dream in the 1970s) and their ability to create
extraordinarily beautiful soundscapes (shades of Brian Eno) have
had to find new audiences prepared to be challenged and amazed.
At times they sit on the pulsating edge of electro dance (Escape
Pod and the mesmerising 451), at other times they seem
like an '80s pop band (Out Of Range), early Pink Floyd (Traffic)
and a sublime cross between Eno and Neu (Remainie).
Bruce Elder
In
The Mix
Sydney-based six-piece
band Decoder Ring experienced a massive leap in terms of their public
profile last year as a result of their acclaimed musical score for
Cate Shortland's movie Somersault, which received plaudits
from all around the world, including a standing ovation at the prestigious
Cannes Film Festival. While Decoder Ring's earlier releases such
as 2002's Spooky Action At A Distance EP and their debut
self-titled album showed the six-piece outfit blending analogue
synths with indie-rock guitars to create a streamlined electro-rock
fusion, the Somersault score showed the band's already filmic
sound stretching out into even more lush and ambient territory.
In the wake of the band winning the coveted AFI award for the Somersault
score and also working on the score to Tony Krawitz's film Jewboy,
the second album proper from Decoder Ring Fractions shows
the band's sound taking on even more lush textural qualities informed
by ambient electronics, krautrock and shoegazer rock, with the increasing
expansiveness of their sound a quality definitely informed by their
soundtrack work.
Opening track Jets starts things
on a gliding indie-pop trajectory, with colourful jangling guitar
chords that call to mind early period New Order or Galaxie 500 rippling
their way over phasing New Wave synths and clattering live drums
as vocal Lenka's (who joined the band circa Somersault is
now a firmly-installed full-time band member) delicate breathy intonations
slide over the synthetic-edged rhythms in some mid-point between
Broadcast's Trish Keenan and Slowdive. Serac takes things
down into glacial instrumental beauty that calls to mind Somersault's
ambient orchestral wash, with melancholy stretched-out cello chords
making their way effortlessly over an icily precise backing of slow
drum loops and twinkling synths, before Escape Pod locks
things down into clicking electro-house rhythms, some choppy delayed
guitar riffs that carry a hint of The Edge circa Unforgettable
Fire spiralling around the beats as things suddenly drop down
into a delicate yet sinister breakdown of eerie chiming tones and
looming bass.
Traffic features Art Of Fighting's
Ollie Browne on vocals, his world-weary sounding tones floating
through a backdrop of gently plucked acoustic guitars and delayed-out
fretboard howls that call to mind Bends-era Radiohead, ambient
synth drones lurking just slightly out of view as the guitars swell
up beneath Browne's epic chorus, while the downright sinister 451
places a punk-funk bassline below some dark electro synths that
carry more than a hint of EBM-industrial stomp, the buzzing arpeggios
accelerating towards the redline as snare buildups and dark distorted
guitars scream their way through the mix. To Die reintroduces
Lenka's rich multitracked vocal harmonies over a swooning backdrop
of sweeping orchestral textures, jangling indie guitar riffs and
live drums in a moment that recalls mid-nineties 4AD act Lush's
widescreen pop, before closing title track Fractions takes
things out on a shimmering electro-pop tangent, jangling guitar
chords intertwining themselves around distorted rock riffs and some
oddly disco-tinged synth sequences as Lenka's breathy tones glide
effortlessly over the complex rhythms below.
A stunning second album from Decoder Ring
that shows the six-piece outfit continuing to shift their music
towards a more lush expansive and flowing incarnation that carries
hints of the mechanistic rhythms of Krautrock acts such as Can and
Neu! as much as it does soft-focus echoes of the early / mid-nineties
'shoegazer' sound typified by the likes of Slowdive, My Bloody Valentine
and the 4AD label roster. If you were captivated by the deep sensous
blend of sonic textures and eerie-yet-beautiful female vocals Decoder
Ring brought to bear on their work for the Somersault score,
Fractions promises to take you on a seriously engrossing
journey with plenty of emotionally poignant crescendos along the
way. One of the best releases I've heard this year, easy.
http://www.inthemix.com.au/reviews/music/23095/
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