Closer to Home
By
Sensitive Chaos
Written by
Steve Sheppard
I remember way back in 2011 Jim Combs contacting me with regard to the release of Seeker After Patterns, I felt back then
he had something unique to give to the world of electronic music, and
throughout the years that have passed since then, and with the release of this
his vast new work entitled Closer To
Home, it seems I was right.
Unique has been joined now by greatness, as this new release
stands tall and proud and contains a fine array of added musicians to help the
cause, take the opener for example, a fine mix of electronica meets Jazz and
you have Fauna Funk Fusion. The
brass section is impressive, Combs doubly so, and proves the symbiotic
collaboration of a multi-instrumental nature works perfectly to gift us our
first very classy offering.
The more traditional stamping ground of electronic mastery
for Jim Combs can be found on the
track Snow Laughing Matter, this was
one of many personal favourites from the album, and includes the beautiful
voice of Diane Arkenstone, and
incorporating the single most inspired performance on keyboards by Combs,
couple this with both Brian Good and Brian Donohoe with a fine brass
construction, and you have a sublime winner of a piece.
We now go short form with the piece Fort Hamilton Parkway - Prospect Park, the footsteps create a sense
of mystery and the wind rushes around us now, if there is one thing I
appreciate it is the skill of capturing really good field recordings, it is
something I adore in my musical compositions as well. Here the Crow plays with
the wind, and the streams leads us onward forever, whilst above a plane flies
into infinity, utter ambience and quite magical.
Backyard Limbo is our next port of call, the guitar
of Tom Carleno features here and adds
a nice texture to the piece, one that dances perfectly with the keyboards and drum
machines of Combs. If you ever wanted an example of how to build and progress
an arrangement, then this one is a perfect example of just how to do that.
On Cosmic Tune-up
you have just that a field recording of an orchestra tuning up, but that does
lead us perfectly into Cosmic Orchestra,
one of the most ambient pieces off the album, and another favourite of mine.
Utilising the talents of Josie Quick
on Violin, Brian Donohoe on Tenor Sax
and one heck of a crafted and sensitive performance on percussion by Mitchell Sosebee, you have a combination
of greatness that manifests a smooth and really chilled composition.
One of the longest tracks on the album at just over the 15
minutes is Fast Driving Open Road,
but not the longest; we shall save that until last. The tempo and style here is
perfect, and reminds me in content of some of the early chill out music we used
to hear from the Buddha Bar back in
the day. This is really idyllic and without deliberately using a pun, right
down Combs road, using for the first time synth king Paul Nagle and Ryan Taylor
on Bass, Combs creates a truly quality long-form chilled arrangement of
wonderful class and classic structures.
The title track is up next, and Closer to Home continues this wonderful weave of unique electronic
music ambience and creative vibes, to enthral us with the tone and timbre in between
the weave of the composition. The slow and mood filled beginning reminded me
greatly of old UK EM band Code Indigo
in parts, the synths here were simply amazing, as was the returning brass
sections of Brian Good on Soprano
Sax, this for me is what title tracks should all be about, the main canvas to
illustrate the overall concept, and achieved brilliantly by Combs.
As we move into the deep waters of the release we come across
an offering entitled As Night Unfolds.
A wonderful subject to get ones musical teeth into so to speak, and Combs does
that with such a delicate yet onward construction, that it literally lays
itself open to the hours of darkness ahead. The collective element is strong
here, and Combs the master narrator is in full musical bloom, in a radiance as
bright as the moon itself.
The penultimate offering has a soft and soothing passage in
its early stages and entitled Watching
Embers Glow. Combs work is very pictorial and his story telling narrative
and constructive artistic abilities are very compelling. This is one of those
ambient constructs that I could literally listen to for hours, maybe even while
embers are glowing upon a winter fire.
The curiously entitled Kimono
My Bliss is the last doorway of the album, and one of the longest ending
pieces I think I have ever heard at just over half an hour in duration. However
that hovering intensity on keyboards by the artist is certainly scene setting
and mood filled. The build and progression here is so wonderfully splendid that
when we reach the half way marker of the track we literally feel lifted by
Combs brilliant synths, and on its conclusion one will feel so soothed and calmed
by its tones and peace filled vibes.
Closer to Home by Sensitive Chaos is easily the best body of work the artist has thus
far created; surrounding himself with a fine array of classy musicians has
helped created a field of vision within this album that is utterly vast and
deeply compelling. Closer to Home by
Sensitive Chaos is the complete deal
of an album, it is a recording that will sit in the annals of musical time, as
the artists seminal piece in the industry, it is that good.
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