
Mister Water Wet’s Things Gone and Things Here Still is an album that expands the project’s purview while preserving the homespun warmth and oblique tactility that have long defined Iggy Romeu’s work. Where earlier records tilted toward the dusty swing of sample-based beatcraft or spectral minimalist jazz, here Romeu opens the frame to a more ensemble-minded approach, inviting a stellar cast of supporting musicians, including Memotone and K. Freund, into the fold.
The result is an album that feels both broader and more intimate, with live instrumentation such as piano, strings, and reeds woven into MWW’s signature lattice of hand percussion, production sleights, and slippery time signatures. Acoustic and electronic textures bend toward each other like plants angling for the same light. Bowed strings blur into vaporous pads, brushed drums scatter beneath riffing guitars, and a horn phrase lingers in the same space as a cracked cassette loop.
A tension between decay and presence, the “things gone” and the “things here still,” runs throughout the record. At times, the music evokes a chamber session refracted through waterlogged tape. At others, it recalls the afterimage of a hip-hop instrumental slowed into an oneiric haze. In the world of MWW, memory functions less as nostalgia and more as a living fabric, mutable and resonant. Things Gone and Things Here Still finds Iggy Romeu at his most expansive, offering a generous record of open spaces and porous boundaries.
€32,00
in stock

Mister Water Wet’s Things Gone and Things Here Still is an album that expands the project’s purview while preserving the homespun warmth and oblique tactility that have long defined Iggy Romeu’s work. Where earlier records tilted toward the dusty swing of sample-based beatcraft or spectral minimalist jazz, here Romeu opens the frame to a more ensemble-minded approach, inviting a stellar cast of supporting musicians, including Memotone and K. Freund, into the fold.
The result is an album that feels both broader and more intimate, with live instrumentation such as piano, strings, and reeds woven into MWW’s signature lattice of hand percussion, production sleights, and slippery time signatures. Acoustic and electronic textures bend toward each other like plants angling for the same light. Bowed strings blur into vaporous pads, brushed drums scatter beneath riffing guitars, and a horn phrase lingers in the same space as a cracked cassette loop.
A tension between decay and presence, the “things gone” and the “things here still,” runs throughout the record. At times, the music evokes a chamber session refracted through waterlogged tape. At others, it recalls the afterimage of a hip-hop instrumental slowed into an oneiric haze. In the world of MWW, memory functions less as nostalgia and more as a living fabric, mutable and resonant. Things Gone and Things Here Still finds Iggy Romeu at his most expansive, offering a generous record of open spaces and porous boundaries.
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