Journey Within

24,00

only 2 left

why we love this

Crafted with the delicate strum of a gently reverberating guitar, it's as soft as it is haunting, as if it were improvised under a moonlit sky.

about the record

Shortly after releasing the inimitable Light Patterns, David Horridge recorded a handful of demos in 1982. These sole artifacts from Dave capture the same Mancunian melancholy presented on Light Patterns, and offer an insight into Davidโ€™s contributing piece of the puzzle. It comes as no surprise that every track laid to tape from that era is an absolute gem.

Davidโ€™s playing comes in the form of well-timed melodies and carefully placed basslines. Nothing forced or rushed, and each movement really sits with a mood. Journey Within is an even more sedated, mellow effort than Light Patterns. The songs were perhaps even sketches for a follow up that never manifested. The albumโ€™s greatest strength is in setting a peaceful, pastoral mood that allows for a relaxed listen all the way through. Hypnotic stuff.

The only deviation is the final song, One Note Bossa, which came as a surprise with its use of a drum machine. A feature that demonstrates what might have been were David have continued to experiment and release albums.

  1. 1 - A Pale Smile 3:26
  2. 2 - At First Sight 3:11
  3. 3 - Journey Within 3:25
  4. 4 - Dark River 5:42
  5. 5 - One Note Bossa 3:42

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Journey Within

24,00

only 2 left

  1. 1 - A Pale Smile 3:26
  2. 2 - At First Sight 3:11
  3. 3 - Journey Within 3:25
  4. 4 - Dark River 5:42
  5. 5 - One Note Bossa 3:42

Embed

Copy and paste this code to your site to embed.

why we love this

Crafted with the delicate strum of a gently reverberating guitar, it's as soft as it is haunting, as if it were improvised under a moonlit sky.

about the record

Shortly after releasing the inimitable Light Patterns, David Horridge recorded a handful of demos in 1982. These sole artifacts from Dave capture the same Mancunian melancholy presented on Light Patterns, and offer an insight into Davidโ€™s contributing piece of the puzzle. It comes as no surprise that every track laid to tape from that era is an absolute gem.

Davidโ€™s playing comes in the form of well-timed melodies and carefully placed basslines. Nothing forced or rushed, and each movement really sits with a mood. Journey Within is an even more sedated, mellow effort than Light Patterns. The songs were perhaps even sketches for a follow up that never manifested. The albumโ€™s greatest strength is in setting a peaceful, pastoral mood that allows for a relaxed listen all the way through. Hypnotic stuff.

The only deviation is the final song, One Note Bossa, which came as a surprise with its use of a drum machine. A feature that demonstrates what might have been were David have continued to experiment and release albums.

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