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Overloaded Ark

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Download links and information about Overloaded Ark by Masaki Batoh, Helena Espvall. This album was released in 2009 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Psychedelic genres. It contains 9 tracks with total duration of 54:45 minutes.

Artist: Masaki Batoh, Helena Espvall
Release date: 2009
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Psychedelic
Tracks: 9
Duration: 54:45
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Little Blue Dragon 2:26
2. Overloaded Ark 11:10
3. Until Tomorrow 12:21
4. Sueno Con Serpientes 4:57
5. Pro Peccatis Suae Gentis / Nun fanget an 3:08
6. Tourdion 1:06
7. Over the Luminous Land 10:33
8. Vem Kan Segla 1:23
9. Sham No Umi 7:41

Details

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The second collaborative effort between Masaki Batoh and Helena Espvall finds the two musicians' union on even stronger footing than before; while their debut was enjoyable, there's a sense of them not simply wanting to rest on their laurels for the sheer novelty of their first collaboration. Beginning with a rollicking version of the medieval song "Saltarello," here titled "Little Blue Dragon" and underscored with a sped-up delivery (in comparison to the slightly more familiar Dead Can Dance version), Overloaded Ark mixes original compositions from the two plus a number of reinterpretations. While elements of their work in Ghost and Espers and elsewhere again inevitably come to mind, what's most noticeable about Batoh and Espvall's joint work is that nothing on the album sounds like simply one or the other band, instead suggesting new explorations for both as well as the three other musicians on the album, all Japanese performers and associates of Batoh (Junzo Tateiwa in particular deserves note for his strong percussion work underpinning the songs). Moments like the sudden cutaway to moody, steady bass for a few seconds in the title track and the cello-led elegance and dissonance of "Over the Luminous Land" exist very much in their own sphere. Meanwhile, the audibly discernible tradeoffs between Espvall's string performances and Batoh's various approaches on guitar, electronics, and other instruments — solos and shades that always seek to drive each song forward — provide a window into the heights of their even more powerful live work together and, as of 2009, in Ghost itself. Hearing Batoh's delicate guitar on "Until Tomorrow" carefully matched and shaded by Espvall's cello and then her voice, all as an introduction to the album's most detailed, exploratory song, is simply a breathtaking moment, full stop.