Making the Saint
Download links and information about Making the Saint by Chris Schlarb. This album was released in 2014 and it belongs to New Age, Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 4 tracks with total duration of 38:47 minutes.
Artist: | Chris Schlarb |
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Release date: | 2014 |
Genre: | New Age, Rock, Alternative |
Tracks: | 4 |
Duration: | 38:47 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Making the Saint | 19:08 |
2. | Great Receiver | 3:08 |
3. | The Fear of Death Is the Birth of God | 14:34 |
4. | My Foolish Heart | 1:57 |
Details
[Edit]Southern California producer/composer/multi-instrumentalist Chris Schlarb took his always restless muse to places of blissful pop experimentalism with his Psychic Temple series. The first volume, released in 2010, was a sprawling collision of large-ensemble chamber pop and Schlarb's background in free jazz and improvisation. 2013's Psychic Temple II traded in on the long-form pieces of its predecessor for more direct pop productions, going so far as to include reworkings of lesser known songs by the Beach Boys and Frank Zappa. These albums were heavy on collaborators, intricate arrangements, and guest vocalists, all of which culminated in an incredibly dense finished product. The complexity and enormity of the Psychic Temple albums also make the contrast between them and Making the Saint all the more stark. Recorded in a remote cabin built during the mid- to late-19th century gold rush, Making the Saint is a hushed, insular affair consisting of sounds made solely with guitars, joined minimally by Schlarb's vocals on one track. It's a huge left turn from the ornate pop of the records directly before it, aiming for soft, thoughtful meditation and reflection rather than dense, often catchy jazz-pop hybrids. Two of the four pieces are built on droning loops, beginning with the 19-plus-minute title track, a lingering and tentative dance between Schlarb's pastoral leads and a static drone sounding more like a harmonium than anything made with a stringed instrument. A similar approach on "The Fear of Death Is the Birth of God" yields more interesting results, with a haunting, off-kilter riff looping underneath sustained and distorted guitar harmonies, eventually dissolving into staccato blips of Morse-code like ambient noises. "Great Receiver" is a short acoustic ballad with slight, buried vocals and the album ends with another acoustic sketch just shy of two minutes, the fully instrumental "My Foolish Heart."