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Maze of Woods [Limited Edition] [Remastered] [LP]

Current price: $15.99
Maze of Woods [Limited Edition] [Remastered] [LP]
Maze of Woods [Limited Edition] [Remastered] [LP]

Barnes and Noble

Maze of Woods [Limited Edition] [Remastered] [LP]

Current price: $15.99

Size: CD

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When ambient pop duo
Inventions
came together for the release of their self-titled 2014 debut, its strengths were no surprise based on the pedigree of the bandmembers.
Mark T. Smith
had spent all of his sonic energy up until that point playing in sprawling instrumental rock act
Explosions in the Sky
and
Matthew Cooper
had produced gorgeous ambient music under the name
Eluvium
for over a decade when the two friends formed new project
. The washed-out textures and loose electronic beats of their debut were by no means standard sounds for either player, yet somehow they made sense as the strange fruits of a wild new combination. Less than a year after that album, the pair returned with sophomore album
Maze of Woods
, an enthusiastic and farther-reaching second chapter to their quickly developing sound. The album begins with "Escapers" setting the tone with a vocal sample of a voice proclaiming "I wanted to do something that I don't know how to do." In an album heavy on manipulated vocal sounds and heavily processed choir samples, these are the most intelligible words, and not accidentally. You can feel how this sentence speaks to an intensity of purpose for
, two established artists trying on very different styles. The stumbling beats and dub blips of the song are augmented by soft guitar leads and stabs of synth, but even the more familiar sounds here feel especially distant and alien. The duo integrates samples derived from human voices on most tracks, giving an ambient bedding that can be either calming and heavenly, as with the
Aphex Twin
-like jump of "Wolfkids," or haunting on more abstract pieces like "A Wind from All Directions." While some of the same beautiful electronic rumblings that
Cooper
brings to
pop up on the record's more melancholic moments like "Moanmusic," the sounds he and
Smith
craft together gel in a way far more urgent and quickly unfolding than most
material, taking
into a place that seems less quietly observant and more driven to explore, attempt, and understand. ~ Fred Thomas

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