Afar (album)

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ReleasedJuly 31, 2012
Recorded2011
Winter Station
(Brooklyn, New York)
LabelUnderwater Peoples
Afar
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 31, 2012
Recorded2011
Winter Station
(Brooklyn, New York)
Genre
LabelUnderwater Peoples
ProducerKurt Feldman
Ice Choir chronology
Afar
(2012)
Designs in Rhythm
(2016)
Singles from Afar
  1. "Two Rings" / "The Ice Choir"
    Released: November 15, 2011
  2. "Teletrips"
    Released: May 9, 2012
  3. "I Want You Now And Always"
    Released: June 12, 2012

Afar is the debut studio album of Ice Choir, the project of former the Pains of Being Pure at Heart drummer and the Depreciation Guild lead Kurt Feldman. It was released on July 31, 2012, by Underwater Peoples. It received mostly positive reviews from critics, with positive reviews highlighting Feldman's use of the 1980s influences and more varied responses criticizing the cheesiness.

Ice Choir frontman Kurt Feldman performing with The Pains of Being Pure at Heart in 2009.

Towards the end of the Depreciation Guild, Kurt Feldman began writing music without any of the NES programming of the band's previous works, and the other members also started losing interest and focus of the project. Considering that it was much more "guitar-pop" than Ice Choir, there were certain limitations and aspects in writing that Feldman did not want to go through, so he decided to try new things and start over with a new project.[2][3] Afar was written from October 2010 to May 2011 while on tour,[2][4] with "The Ice Choir" as the first song written.[3]

Afar was produced from May 2011 to January 2012,[2] Jorge Elbrecht mixed the record at Static Recording from November to December 2011, before being mastered by Jaakko Viitalähde.[5] It is primarily a synthesizer-based record, with 90% of it being programmed by Feldman using MIDI. He described making the album as "a really interesting experience", considering he wrote stuff for guitar before: "I had some experience with this very obscure form of electronic music production which is known as trackers. It’s closer to programming than it is actually interacting with a keyboard instrument. It’s pretty far removed from actually composing, which I guess helped me get over the learning curve of MIDI. It was kind of easy for me to do it, but it was definitely a weird approach."[3]

Composition

The official press release from Underwater Peoples explains Afar "challenges conventional perceptions of 80s technopop, highlighting its musically progressive and literate roots and re-imagining them to create a startlingly original sound", also noting elements of italo disco, avant-garde pop, classical music and smooth R&B.[6] Feldman have claimed obscure new-wave bands like the Danish electropop act Gangway, Bill Nelson, Japanese synthpop and shoegaze bands as influences.[3]

Afar opens with "I Want You Now and Always", a track that Popmatters critic Brice Ezell described as a "resurrected Tears for Fears B-side".[7] Consequence of Sound's Adam Kivel said the song's electronic bass tones "sound straight out of a high-fiving We're Having Fun Montage from any number of '80s films, and the cheap bell tones on the title track aren’t far behind."[8] Evan Minsker of Pitchfork Media described "Teletrips" as a "slinky jam" with an influence that is from somewhere between Spandau Ballet and the song "Human Nature" by Michael Jackson.[9] Tiny Mix Tapes critic Guy Frowny noted "The Ice Choir" and "Two Rings" as two "odd moment[s] when the beats are ramped up (though never to dancefloor proportions)".[10]

Singles

"Two Rings" and "The Ice Choir" were released as one single and Afar's lead single on November 15, 2011.[11] Pitchfork Media premiered "Teletrips" on May 9, 2012,[9] while "I Want You Now And Always" premiered on Stereogum on June 12.[12]

Critical reception

Credits and personnel

References

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