Antonymes Reviews

Antonymes “The Licence To Interpret Dreams” – AbsolutePunk

February 16th, 2012

“Getting into the zone for The License To Interpret Dreams is difficult at first. Opener A Fragile Acceptance sets the rulebook right away; there are no hooks or choruses to speak of. Just a lone piano, striking as if it were a clock at noon, fading in and out of the patchwork before waves of mournful strings come in and draw you fully into the ocean. The Siren, Hopelessly Lost is just as glacially morose, content to take its sweet time incepting you into this cloudy, mystical world Antonymes has built. But those who are willing to take the plunge with him will be rewarded handsomely with one of the most quietly powerful albums of the year.

For those unfamiliar with this ambient artist’s mantra, here’s a snippet from his Bandcamp:
‘Antonymes’ music emerges from the adjustments and erasures where music expresses nothing but itself, from the relationship between continuity and repetition rather than of contract and interplay, from secrecy, from quietness, from pause, from thought, from emptiness, from time, from far off, from itself, from where it is set and where it is setting off to..’

The Licence To Interpret Dreams largely reflects this emphasis on empty spaces. Save a few lively moments, Antonymes isn’t so much a party rocker as he is a philosopher—all twelve of these tracks are sparse compositions, deeply detached and yet completely personal. You, the listener, have been plucked from your spot in the bustling chaos of modern life, and all this dude wants is to take a walk with him into the forest of his—and your—mind.

Generally, the moments where Antonymes tries to step outside this backdrop are where the album suffers. Oradour-Sur-Glane is inches from submerging you completely with its bits of music box melodies floating in a bubbling lake of synths, yet the voice sample utilized here is a rare step into indulgence for Antonymes. As a result, instead of falling completely under his spell, you’re shocked awake at jilted, startling intervals. Doubt commits a bit more fully to the gimmick, thus coming closer to fooling you into assimilating it with the rest of the landscapes back here, but the voice sample just doesn’t fit in with the isolation at display here; it’s a slab of concrete amidst a forest of trees. The end of the track works the best, when the philosophical snippets aren’t spelled out for you but fade into the background, leaving you to find the stories behind them yourself.

When Antonymes lets the music speak for itself, though, this is an absolutely captivating dream. Womb Of The Great Mother begins slowly before gradually building, then whittling itself down until you can almost taste the melancholy. Even the shorter tracks are moving in their own little ways: A Light From The Heavens layers repetitions upon repetitions, the tension cresting until it hits a brutal peak.

Towards the end of your sojourn, you’re offered a few rays of sun: Endlessly is just as minimalistic as what came before it, but it’s a rare moment of peace in an environment full of angst. The Door Towards The Dream, too, is solemnly uplifting, replete with horns, strings, and a choir section. The sentiment isn’t awash in gaudy Hallmark-card sap, though, and after an album’s worth of deliberation, reaching the end of the tunnel is a worthy reward.

More and more, it seems like there simply isn’t any way for one to escape the spectacles of daily life. The value of silence—taking a few minutes to think about things, about the world, about yourself, even—has all but been forgotten. Sometimes, you have to tune everything out and find yourself again, though, and when you do so, Antonymes is the guy that’ll lead the way.”

AbsolutePunk

Antonymes meets Slow Dancing Society “We Don’t Look Back For Very Long” – Luna Kafe

February 16th, 2012

We Don’t Look Back For Very Long is Antonymes (a.k.a Ian Hazeldine) going to the slow dance club, as he has reworked and re-titled (not remixed, mind you) 4 tracks by fellow Hidden Shoal artist Slow Dancing Society (a.k.a. Drew Sullivan). It starts with “The Grey Sea And The Long Black Land”, which is an interpretation of “Be There”, off the album The Sound of Lights When Dim (2006). “As If Viewed From A Distance” is Antonymes take on “The Time We’ve Spent”, off The Slow and Steady Winter (2007). Then follows “That Moment”, which is based on “Forever Young” from Priest Lake Circa ’88 (2008). Fourth and final track, “A Feeling of Being Closer” is a remake of “By Your Side”, which appeared on Under The Sodium Lights (2010).

Antonymes put out The Licence To Interpret Dreams last April, and it was a transcendental experience, and a sheer beauty when it comes to quiet, slow floating music. We Don’t Look Back… was released some two months ago but I was to slow to check it out before a new year came. This EP holds, as his album of last year, delicate ear candy (or rather, head candy?) of the transcendental type. Ambient minimalism of the fragile kind. Slow-floating compositions working as mind-massage. We Don’t Look Back… is nearly 30 minutes of delicate compositions. Or, should they be called re-composition? Because this is far from being regular ‘cover versions’. Anyway, this is atmospheric stuff, trademark Antonymes. Meaning almost not of this earth. We Don’t Look Back For Very Long is the delicate sound of Antonymes meeting Slow Dancing Society in some secret, stardusted place, and the result is stellar. Nevermind the remade songs; they appear as new compositions. Or ‘soulmate songs’.”

Luna Kafe

Antonymes + Slow Dancing Society ‘We Don’t Look Back for Very Long’ – TwiceRemembered

November 12th, 2011

Excerpt: ….It’s the perfect marriage of Sullivan’s 80′s era Ambient meet Hazeldine neo classical minimal ambient. To top it off it’s mastered by Wil Bolton (Hibernate records artists and the owner of the fine “Time Lapse” album) and comes in a limited edition of 100 copies that are letter pressed on 700gm GF Smith board designed by Ian himself. The release is/was a pre-order available from the Hidden Shoal store with 60 copies being there and the remaining 40 going to Norman Records and Stashed Goods. 2011 has been a very productive year for Antonymes, this being the third release on Hidden Shoal (the others being “The Licence to Interpret Dreams” album and the companion piece “Lost in waves of Light”) as well as the release on Time Released Sound and the quality has been there through all the releases. Quite an achievement.”

TwiceRemoved

Antonymes ‘The Licence to Interpret Dreams’ – Sonomu

August 8th, 2011

Excerpt: “Welsh composer Ian M. Hazeldine, billed as Antonymes, pulled off a balletic balancing act between delicate and distinct, movement and rest with his short debut album ”Beauty Becomes the Enemy of the Future”, released 2009 on Cathedral Transmissions. With his third effort, he maintains that equilibrium admirably, with one huge slip-up. Inspired by Morton Feldman´s idiosyncratic description of music as a surface, Antonymes opens with ”A Fragile Acceptance”, nearly non-existent piano becoming engulfed in whispy clouds of strings which soon mass into a brace of rather muscular and insistent violins. As the album progresses, a genuinely exquisite dream state is maintained, sculpting with air or sitting and thinking aloud at the piano, all rendered with great eloquence. An odd but not oddly out of place piece entitled ”Doubt” appears midway through, in which one Jan Van Den Broeke recites a poem by one Paul Morley. I don´t know who either of these chaps are, but its weirdly halting, Dutch-robotic inflected cadence is somehow mesmerizing. Unfortunately, Hazeldine stumbles into overblown Emerson Lake and Palmer territory with ”The Door Towards the Dream”, which doesn´t get any better when a Rick Wakemanesque choir and keyboards section takes over. Pompous and sticky. This in striking contrast to the dignified, restrained chorale ”On Approaching the Strange Museum” with which the record ends.”

Sonomu