€30,00
only 3 left
Swells of feedback and thunderous rhythms transform into orchestral arrangements. The record is an allegory for the sounds of confrontation and construction, where even a demolition turns into a symphony.
Now That You’ve Found It marks the first full-length collaboration between Aaron Turner and Jon Mueller, and their second after In The Falls, released by Turner’s record label SIGE.
The pair are iconoclastic musicians who have been carving singular paths for decades, plying their trades in experimental, metal, and rock genres and pursuing countless collaborations across various disciplines. Amidst Turner and Mueller’s extensive bodies of work, 'Now That You’ve Found It' stands out as a delightfully weird highlight. It pushes the envelope of their practices in wild, untapped, and previously unexplored ways.
The album’s genesis was a dream in which the pair gave a concert where they hardly played a note. "Yet the energy of the performance was very intense," Mueller explains, "like something could blow at any moment. I woke up wanting to recreate that, and somehow I think we did."
€30,00
only 3 left
Swells of feedback and thunderous rhythms transform into orchestral arrangements. The record is an allegory for the sounds of confrontation and construction, where even a demolition turns into a symphony.
Now That You’ve Found It marks the first full-length collaboration between Aaron Turner and Jon Mueller, and their second after In The Falls, released by Turner’s record label SIGE.
The pair are iconoclastic musicians who have been carving singular paths for decades, plying their trades in experimental, metal, and rock genres and pursuing countless collaborations across various disciplines. Amidst Turner and Mueller’s extensive bodies of work, 'Now That You’ve Found It' stands out as a delightfully weird highlight. It pushes the envelope of their practices in wild, untapped, and previously unexplored ways.
The album’s genesis was a dream in which the pair gave a concert where they hardly played a note. "Yet the energy of the performance was very intense," Mueller explains, "like something could blow at any moment. I woke up wanting to recreate that, and somehow I think we did."
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