Moon Diagrams: Lifetime of Love review – undulating soundscapes for an anxious world

(Sonic Cathedral)

With stress, anxiety and memes taking up ever more of our valuable mental real estate, it is little wonder that the visualisations, mantras and brain-tickling sounds offered by mindfulness and ASMR videos have gone mainstream in recent years. This debut solo album from Deerhunter drummer and co-founder Moses Archuleta – created in a period of turmoil and rediscovery, following the breakdown of his marriage – has much the same effect as listening to crackling static or laboriously chewing a grape.

In it, he seamlessly moulds techno, samples that float in and out of reach like leaves in a lake, and the odd art-pop flourish into soundscapes that undulate with the sense of powering down. Opener Playground hums with the reverberations of a church choir, while Nightmoves pulls you into its gelatinous minimalism, and Blue Ring offers 11 minutes of gentle yet highly textured experimentation with a Cluster/Eno riff and a swelling, gong bath-like close. Magic Killer boasts dark, Neon Indian-style keys, while closing track End of Heartache provides kitsch yet ambient dance-pop, slowly ushering you out of Archuleta’s meditative zone, blood pressure wonderfully stable.


Contributor

Hannah J Davies

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Deerhunter: Fading Frontier review – Bradford Cox's poppiest album yet
The Deerhunter mastermind’s latest musical whims take the band into more straightforward pop territory – but there’s still a deep disquiet to it all

Alexis Petridis

15, Oct, 2015 @2:00 PM

Article image
Bibio: A Mineral Love review – balmy, surreal soundscapes

Harriet Gibsone

31, Mar, 2016 @9:15 PM

Article image
Björk: Utopia review – romance, angst and troublingly thin tunes
The musician’s self-professed ‘Tinder album’ spins from ecstasy to frustration by focusing more on soundscapes than melody

Alexis Petridis

23, Nov, 2017 @12:00 PM

Article image
The Moonlandingz: Interplanetary Class Classics review – gleefully untamed pop

Dave Simpson

23, Mar, 2017 @9:00 PM

Article image
Public Service Broadcasting: Every Valley review – poignant elegy to coalmining

Dave Simpson

06, Jul, 2017 @7:30 PM

Article image
The Trouble With Templeton: Someday, Buddy review – moody Twilight Zone soundscapes

Harriet Gibsone

01, Dec, 2016 @9:45 PM

Article image
The Horrors: V review – spindly indie survivors hit their sweet spot
Against the odds, the Horrors’ fifth album is their best yet, with Faris Badwan’s commanding, world-weary vocals adding to the synthesised thrills and sparkling guitar-pop

Alexis Petridis

21, Sep, 2017 @11:00 AM

Article image
Lou Rhodes: Theyesanseye review – atmospheric, gently pastoral folk

Dave Simpson

21, Jul, 2016 @9:15 PM

Article image
End of the Road festival review – potent bacchanalia and mysticism
‘See you in the twilight zone’ says one musician; EOTR has enough weirdness, charm and shaggy charisma to weather our end-of-days era

Jazz Monroe

02, Sep, 2019 @11:01 AM

Article image
The Big Moon: Love in the 4th Dimension review – nostalgic indie with wide-eyed conviction

Harriet Gibsone

06, Apr, 2017 @8:00 PM