A Letter from Mars
By
David Gómez
Written by
Steve Sheppard
David Gómez is a new name to me, so I was eager
to hear the contents of this brand new offering from the artist entitled A Letter From Mars, at its conclusion I
felt truly moved, the essence of the album was quite profound and would remain
with me for the remainder of the day.
The opening piece is wonderfully ambient, yet has tinges of a
reflective and almost mournful mood. I am referring of course to the title
track, A Letter From Mars, and one
simply has to respect a musician who places this artistic beginning of all
canvases at the opening piece on the album; I have played this piece several
times now and still I find It incredibly emotive.
The album itself is a 10 track collection of ambient piano
with added instrumentation that carries with it a special energy, one that is
akin to holding the keys to a memory palace of musical reflections, a fine
example of that is the mood filled opus of Live
in Another Life.
We can drift through the eddies of tracks like Spacewoman, a smooth and incredibly
fluent offering that holds an emotional mood beautifully, or the light-hearted
reverie of Thousands of Pianos Floating
on the Moon, all just go to highlight what a sublime album this most
certainly is.
The penultimate track also has a resonance of its very own
with its symbiotic string and piano construction in the song Between Jupiter and Saturn, a piece
that seems to coalesce around itself, and the concluding composition in Welcome to Nuwa, a track that holds
textures and layers of a happier refrain and arrival within its overall
arrangement.
A Letter from Mars by David Gómez has to be the most unique album I have had the pleasure
to listen to this year by far. The artist creates an ambience to his music,
which then manifest’s into a warm comforting pastiche of colour, where the
listener can simply float and drift with the music as they wish.
A Letter from Mars by David Gómez is an album I would have in my collection at all costs,
as this is a release that offers something different, yet still holds the
security blanket of musical comfort firmly between its fingers.
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