Modern Art
By
Hanslik & Moniz
Experiment
Written by
Steve Sheppard
Alan Hanslik and Steve Moniz are two of the most creative experimental musicians
around today in the field of electronic and guitar styled offerings, they have
plied their trade as the Hanslik &
Moniz Experiment for some 30 years now, and this ever green, and ever
growing concept, may have well reached another peak with this their latest
album entitled Modern Art.
For me this is like being a kid in a sweet factory, as I
adore Modern Art with David Hockney and the late but great Howard Hodgkin being but two of an
amazing multitude of true inspiring modern artists that I am very passionate
about.
This brilliant new album is set to become a literal walking
companion of music that can assist ones mulling over art works in any modern
gallery, the opening foray of great music is the flight full tones of Eye of the Beholder, at times airy and
uplifting, but the latter half of the composition manifests a darker half of
the piece that is truly appealing.
Expressionist follows next with its lush brush
strokes of deep tone and timbre and its ambient music dimensions, the
Expressionist art movement flourished in Germany in the early 20th
century with creators like Matisse
and Fauves being two among the many
geniuses. Here Hanslik & Moniz
bring to our ears a fascinating arrangement, one that has great fluency, but
also a deep seated desire for a minimalistic aspect within its halls of musical
plenitude, both the guitar and synths parade a strong yet moving flow of a very
skill filled canvas of electronic music to encapsulate the listener completely.
Deeper we go, the more each piece gains its own colour and
texture, gentle shorter narratives like Tapestry reverberate with an almost
progressive rock like nature, one could see this whole piece fit quite nicely
into an opus like Suppers Ready (Genesis)
for example, on its own this is one of the finest performances ever from Moinz
on guitar, one that literally takes us by the hand and walks us into the arms
of the following composition.
Impressionist is our next painting of quality and depth,
and as it turns out would be one my personal favourites from the album, its
dark and rangy corridors of character and ambience were simply stunning, this
is a piece I could get lost within whilst gazing with admiration at a work from
say Monet, perhaps the beauty of such
work as the Japanese Bridge or his
oil works like Poplars on the banks of
the River Epte. For me this is a wonderfully creative offering, one that contains
aspects of a neo classical nature, mixed with the ambience of someone like Eno, from his musical location of Lightness: Music for the Marble Palace album.
We are now rounding the corner of this musical modern art gallery
and as we do so we come across the title track itself, and of course entitled Modern Art, this crisp yet effortless
piece simply drifts between the then and now, manifesting a perfect balance and
allowing us movement from one major musical painting to the next.
That splendid art form we now listen to intently is Starry Night and as well as being the
longest track off the album at well over 12 minutes in duration, it is also the
penultimate manifestation from the album. There is a deep well of sound here
that is incredibly attractive, mixing elements of an almost space like synth
with ethereal vocalisations, and an inventive and explorative guitar; tracks
like this make albums not just good, but great, and I can say without a shadows
of a doubt that Starry Night has to
be one of the most compelling pieces I have ever heard from the duo, it is that
good.
Our last art form to gaze upon is entitled Woodland Pixies, a piece that would at
first seem somewhat chaotic, but given the subject matter the energy, movement
and magic that evolves from this artistic arrangement, one can then witness a
whole field of Pixies in a moonlit dance perhaps, concluding, that therefore
this has to be one of the most original and imaginative pieces of all time to
end this current project with.
Modern Art by Hanslik & Moniz Experiment is without doubt their best work by
far; this resourceful and ingenious combination of musicians has lifted them
into the realms of electronic mastery, perhaps one could be even so bold as to
say visionary. The next time I find myself walking around a gallery in the
future, I will most certainly use this album as my soundtrack for that very
event. Modern Art by Hanslik & Moniz Experiment is
brilliant, if you are a fan of artists like Tomita,
Iasos or Brian Eno, then you are going to utterly revel of this glory of
this fantastic new album.
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