
Stian Westerhus "Redundance" CD
IF STIAN WESTERHUSâs previous album Amputation sounded like a corporeal attack, a war being waged between voice and music, Redundance is the (relative) calm after the storm. Thatâs not to say itâs any less vital or engaged â just that a dĂ©tente has been reached, the debris of conïŹict stripped back. Westerhusâs re-markable vocals are more upfront than ever â naked, raw and achingly melodic .â while the instrumentation serves the songs rather than threatening to over-whelm them.
The passion and intensity remains though. Redundance confronts psycholog-ical trauma head on, Westerhus addressing an intolerable situation, cutting away at his personal history in order to forge a new way forward. Thereâs anger and sadness in here, but also a righteous desire to redeïŹne the turbulence of the past, to tell the truth and to move on. As Westerhus sings on the title track, âSwal-lowed my pride just to keep us alive, but never ever againâ.
Redundance faces out onto the world as well. Opening track âChase The New Morningâ is a timely polemic against an oppressive Chinese regime that controls its citizens via online propaganda, a challenge to freedom that has been met with ïŹerce resistance in Hong Kong. It was writing about this political struggle and ïŹghting for whatâs rightfully yours that inspired Westerhus to reïŹect on his own situation and revisit songs heâd previously ânever dared to record (for being) too direct, too simpleâ.
Against a synthetic, often minimal, backing, the deep, resonant cadences of Westerhusâs voice represent the indomitable human spirit on Redundance. Heâs vulnerable on the jagged distress call of âAll Your Wolvesâ before soaring on an ascending choral wave, while the spiky, skeletal groove of âVeronaâ is transïŹg-ured by Westerhusâs harmonic acrobatics. And even as his voice is distorted and submerged on the industrial funk of âThereâs A Lightâ, heâs a man digging his way out of darkness, tunnelling through the earth to deliver another blackly ec-static chorus.
Westerhusâs reputation as a questing, idiosyncratic guitarist â both in collab-oration (most recently with Ulver) and as a solo performer â is further enhanced throughout. Yet Redundance also shows a more lyrical side to his playing. Per-haps the most surprising track here is âWalk The Lineâ, a celestial acoustic ballad that edges into traditional singer-songwriter territory, before a dramatic swell of electric fretwork jolts us from our reverie. At the other end of the spectrum, âHold Onâ is a grimy slab of sinister, robotic garage rock, Westerhusâs guitar wailing with glee.
Redundance is a mesmerising cry of deïŹance, a cathartic throwing oïŹ of des-tiny. Westerhus shares the same singularity of vision, commitment to boundary- pushing and talent for avant-rock ear-wormery as artists such as Nick Cave, Scott Walker and David Bowie. On the strength of this album, it doesnât feel hy-perbolic to include him in such exalted company.
1. Chase the new Morning
2. All your wolves
3. Verona
4. There's a light
5. Walk the line
6. Hold on
7. Redundance
IF STIAN WESTERHUSâs previous album Amputation sounded like a corporeal attack, a war being waged between voice and music, Redundance is the (relative) calm after the storm. Thatâs not to say itâs any less vital or engaged â just that a dĂ©tente has been reached, the debris of conïŹict stripped back. Westerhusâs re-markable vocals are more upfront than ever â naked, raw and achingly melodic .â while the instrumentation serves the songs rather than threatening to over-whelm them.
The passion and intensity remains though. Redundance confronts psycholog-ical trauma head on, Westerhus addressing an intolerable situation, cutting away at his personal history in order to forge a new way forward. Thereâs anger and sadness in here, but also a righteous desire to redeïŹne the turbulence of the past, to tell the truth and to move on. As Westerhus sings on the title track, âSwal-lowed my pride just to keep us alive, but never ever againâ.
Redundance faces out onto the world as well. Opening track âChase The New Morningâ is a timely polemic against an oppressive Chinese regime that controls its citizens via online propaganda, a challenge to freedom that has been met with ïŹerce resistance in Hong Kong. It was writing about this political struggle and ïŹghting for whatâs rightfully yours that inspired Westerhus to reïŹect on his own situation and revisit songs heâd previously ânever dared to record (for being) too direct, too simpleâ.
Against a synthetic, often minimal, backing, the deep, resonant cadences of Westerhusâs voice represent the indomitable human spirit on Redundance. Heâs vulnerable on the jagged distress call of âAll Your Wolvesâ before soaring on an ascending choral wave, while the spiky, skeletal groove of âVeronaâ is transïŹg-ured by Westerhusâs harmonic acrobatics. And even as his voice is distorted and submerged on the industrial funk of âThereâs A Lightâ, heâs a man digging his way out of darkness, tunnelling through the earth to deliver another blackly ec-static chorus.
Westerhusâs reputation as a questing, idiosyncratic guitarist â both in collab-oration (most recently with Ulver) and as a solo performer â is further enhanced throughout. Yet Redundance also shows a more lyrical side to his playing. Per-haps the most surprising track here is âWalk The Lineâ, a celestial acoustic ballad that edges into traditional singer-songwriter territory, before a dramatic swell of electric fretwork jolts us from our reverie. At the other end of the spectrum, âHold Onâ is a grimy slab of sinister, robotic garage rock, Westerhusâs guitar wailing with glee.
Redundance is a mesmerising cry of deïŹance, a cathartic throwing oïŹ of des-tiny. Westerhus shares the same singularity of vision, commitment to boundary- pushing and talent for avant-rock ear-wormery as artists such as Nick Cave, Scott Walker and David Bowie. On the strength of this album, it doesnât feel hy-perbolic to include him in such exalted company.
1. Chase the new Morning
2. All your wolves
3. Verona
4. There's a light
5. Walk the line
6. Hold on
7. Redundance
Original: $12.99
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$4.55Description
IF STIAN WESTERHUSâs previous album Amputation sounded like a corporeal attack, a war being waged between voice and music, Redundance is the (relative) calm after the storm. Thatâs not to say itâs any less vital or engaged â just that a dĂ©tente has been reached, the debris of conïŹict stripped back. Westerhusâs re-markable vocals are more upfront than ever â naked, raw and achingly melodic .â while the instrumentation serves the songs rather than threatening to over-whelm them.
The passion and intensity remains though. Redundance confronts psycholog-ical trauma head on, Westerhus addressing an intolerable situation, cutting away at his personal history in order to forge a new way forward. Thereâs anger and sadness in here, but also a righteous desire to redeïŹne the turbulence of the past, to tell the truth and to move on. As Westerhus sings on the title track, âSwal-lowed my pride just to keep us alive, but never ever againâ.
Redundance faces out onto the world as well. Opening track âChase The New Morningâ is a timely polemic against an oppressive Chinese regime that controls its citizens via online propaganda, a challenge to freedom that has been met with ïŹerce resistance in Hong Kong. It was writing about this political struggle and ïŹghting for whatâs rightfully yours that inspired Westerhus to reïŹect on his own situation and revisit songs heâd previously ânever dared to record (for being) too direct, too simpleâ.
Against a synthetic, often minimal, backing, the deep, resonant cadences of Westerhusâs voice represent the indomitable human spirit on Redundance. Heâs vulnerable on the jagged distress call of âAll Your Wolvesâ before soaring on an ascending choral wave, while the spiky, skeletal groove of âVeronaâ is transïŹg-ured by Westerhusâs harmonic acrobatics. And even as his voice is distorted and submerged on the industrial funk of âThereâs A Lightâ, heâs a man digging his way out of darkness, tunnelling through the earth to deliver another blackly ec-static chorus.
Westerhusâs reputation as a questing, idiosyncratic guitarist â both in collab-oration (most recently with Ulver) and as a solo performer â is further enhanced throughout. Yet Redundance also shows a more lyrical side to his playing. Per-haps the most surprising track here is âWalk The Lineâ, a celestial acoustic ballad that edges into traditional singer-songwriter territory, before a dramatic swell of electric fretwork jolts us from our reverie. At the other end of the spectrum, âHold Onâ is a grimy slab of sinister, robotic garage rock, Westerhusâs guitar wailing with glee.
Redundance is a mesmerising cry of deïŹance, a cathartic throwing oïŹ of des-tiny. Westerhus shares the same singularity of vision, commitment to boundary- pushing and talent for avant-rock ear-wormery as artists such as Nick Cave, Scott Walker and David Bowie. On the strength of this album, it doesnât feel hy-perbolic to include him in such exalted company.
1. Chase the new Morning
2. All your wolves
3. Verona
4. There's a light
5. Walk the line
6. Hold on
7. Redundance















