If Aromanticism was an exercise in gently unfurling intimacy, then grę is one in external flair. Scored by Sumney's most vibrant array of instrumentals to date, the San Bernardino musician's second set sees him push outward, swapping Aromanticism's insular fragments for a set of more exposed, yet transient brushstrokes. While Aromanticism's titular focus was concretely conceptual, on grę Sumney gives us something a little less fixed. "Here we go into the Grę," proclaims the warped voice of writer Ayesha K. Faines on opener ...
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If Aromanticism was an exercise in gently unfurling intimacy, then grę is one in external flair. Scored by Sumney's most vibrant array of instrumentals to date, the San Bernardino musician's second set sees him push outward, swapping Aromanticism's insular fragments for a set of more exposed, yet transient brushstrokes. While Aromanticism's titular focus was concretely conceptual, on grę Sumney gives us something a little less fixed. "Here we go into the Grę," proclaims the warped voice of writer Ayesha K. Faines on opener "insula," casting Sumney's second work into the abyss between black-and-white. His poignant self-actualization is told in these "grae" intangible spaces: love and pain swirl around one another on "Cut Me," polyamory and jealousy mingle on "Polly," and platonic spaces spill over into romance on "In Bloom." While Aromanticism's vulnerability is present, it's matched with declarations of self-worth: "Just because you didn't love me/The way I thought I should be loved/Doesn't mean I wasn't wanted" opens the gentle ballad "Lucky Me," placing a self-assured shimmer underneath grę's probing.Sumney's manifesto here -- "I insist on my right to be multiple" -- is clearer than ever. While heart-breaking in their candor, the musician's narratives on "Neither/Nor" and "Bystanders" champion an unpolluted form of identity, held to one's chest even when declared a "breach of decree." Through the epic double-album format, we see every aspect of this image, from the coy norm-warping of "jill/jack" to the tempestuous "You want to slip right in? Amp up the masculine? You've got the wrong idea, son" of "Virile." The execution is just as bold as the vision.With its words bound by multiplicity, it's only fitting that grę makes itself sonically uncategorizable. Shifting from pounding rock to experimental jazz at a feather's touch, the album's sonics provide the theatrical soundscape to Sumney's words, rising and falling in line with his crystalline tones. Flakes of Aromanticism return, too, hovering in the project's most tender moments before dissipating amidst grę's more dramatic ideas. Yet the intimate spaces still prove to be the most stunning; stranded amid a tide of Bon Iver-esque plucks, Sumney sounds transcendent on "Polly," probing his lover's needs with the crushing "Are you dancing with me? Or just merely dancing?"Arguably, grę ends on its most despondent note. The hollow characters of closer "before you go" are caught in a perpetual loop of questioning: "What does it mean to be in love?" poses one voice, another "the aching." Yet perhaps the album's final moments are as freeing as they are fragile: for Sumney, tumbling between the raptures of both aromanticism and romantic love, the nameless can be just as powerful as the defined. ~ David Crone, Rovi
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Add this copy of grę to cart. $18.86, new condition, Sold by Importcds rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Sunrise, FL, UNITED STATES, published 2020 by Jagjaguwar.
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Adult Jazz/Lopatin/; Berglund/Ostrom/Sum; Blake/Sumney; Chabon/Faines/Mille; Coel/Miller/Selasi/; Faines/Selasi/Sumne;... New. New in new packaging. USA Orders only! Brand New product! please allow delivery times of 3-7 business days within the USA. US orders only please.
Add this copy of Grae to cart. $22.43, new condition, Sold by newtownvideo rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from huntingdon valley, PA, UNITED STATES, published 2020 by Jagjaguwar.