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Television Landscape

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Download links and information about Television Landscape by William Brittelle. This album was released in 2010 and it belongs to Rock genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 49:39 minutes.

Artist: William Brittelle
Release date: 2010
Genre: Rock
Tracks: 11
Duration: 49:39
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Vivid Culture 5:19
2. Dunes of Vermillion 4:23
3. Hey Child 3:49
4. Sheena Easton 4:47
5. Pegasus in Alcatraz 6:20
6. Halcyon Days 2:30
7. Wasteland 2:58
8. Rio Rio 5:01
9. Eyes of the Ocean 2:26
10. Television Landscape 7:01
11. The Color of Rain 5:05

Details

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One might be tempted to call William Brittelle's Television Landscape art rock, if the term hadn't been tainted so many times in the past by artists whose pretension walked hand in hand with their ambition. Certainly, the New York City composer/multi-instrumentalist's second album is appropriately expansive, operating on a grand scale that easily accommodates both sophisticated, classically minded compositional structures and visceral rock & roll impact. Brittelle has plenty of experience in both camps, having worked as an acclaimed composer of modern classical works and fronted the almost-famous New York post-punk band the Blondes. On Television Landscape, Brittelle shows himself as something of a maximalist, deeming all of his disparate influences fair game and incorporating them at will, sometimes within the same song.

Consequently, there's a little bit of everything here; "Pegasus in Alcatraz" moves from pastoral, rather romantic orchestrations to a shredding, Eddie Van Halen-worthy guitar solo complete with hammer-ons. The title track blends pointillistic brass punctuation with piercing, Frank Zappa-like guitar work, while "Dunes of Vermillion" lays contemporary-sounding touches like artfully applied Auto-Tune atop moments that seem like they could have come from a mid-‘70s Genesis album. Before he's through, Brittelle traverses electronica, prog rock, neo-classical, avant-garde, alt rock, and more on Television Landscape. But anyone can — and often does, these days — make a record stacked high with eclectic influences; the real master stroke here is the way Brittelle makes all these elements flow together as though they'd always been part of the same musical universe, and he achieves a surprising degree of easiness on the ear with this deceptively dense, conceptually complex piece of work. ~ J. Allen, Rovi