Via Negativa (In the Doorway Light) - Ruby Red LP
Artist
Format
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Label
Release Date
11/15/2024
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Price
Ruby Red.
Catalog Number: DAIS235lp-C1
Color: Red
Format: LP
UPC: 0683950558021
The eighth and latest slate of refined retro-futuristic synth-pop by Liz
Wendelbo and Sean McBride aka Xeno and Oaklander is named after and
inspired by "the study of what not to do, a negative image of a
positive, the other side, the other:" Via Negativa (in the doorway
light). Recorded in the fall of 2023 at their modernist Connecticut
home fashioned into a two-story synthesizer laboratory and mixing
studio, the album is uniquely visionary in spirit yet precision in
execution, a contrast central to the duo's enduring chemistry. Embryonic
piano sketches were translated to nuanced modular systems, which
McBride weighted with "harmonic padding," tuned percussion, and a
spectral transfer device capable of "rendering spasms of rhythmic
overtonal filigree." Despite the technological complexity of their
craft, emotively the songs require no deciphering - these are
technicolor widescreen anthems of the cybernetic age.
The eponymous opening track sets the pace, soaring sleekly over
glittering synths and call-and-response vocals about arias, shattered
light, and faces in stereo. From there the record expands and contracts,
cycling through a gallery of moods and masks, animated by the band's
fascination with drama, "the idea of personae," and theatrical
characters. Track by track, a murky, tragic backstory
reveals itself: forlorn figures navigating a treacherous mercury mine,
alternately poisoned by fumes or buried in collapsing caverns. The
tension between Teutonic, utopian synthetic pop and lyrical narratives
of ghosts in silos, ruined mills, and the traumas of mineral excavation
creates a compelling friction, alternately futurist and obsolete,
elevated and subterranean. Wendelbo describes the music's polarities
perfectly: "The heavy machinic din of extraction in contrast with the
enchantment of the mined precious gems and metals."
From bilingual odes to bloodstones ("O Vermillion") to cosmic chrome
dance floor classics ("Lost and There" "The present tense can never
feel real / So many pasts conspire in the burning sun") to strutting EBM
sensualities ("Actor's Foil"), Xeno and Oaklander re-prove themselves
masters of the axis of technology and poetry, snaking cables and
synesthesia, mining melodies and myths across 15 years of focused
artistry. Theirs is a muse still gilded and gleaming, burnished red and
silver, attuned to "the unobservable, the unfamiliar, that which you
don't see directly."