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Home arrow Recommendations arrow Morning Recordings, The Welcome Kinetic [Loose Thread, 2007]
Morning Recordings, The Welcome Kinetic [Loose Thread, 2007] PDF Print E-mail
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Written by onecaseman   
Tuesday, 20 November 2007

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Calling the second album from Chicago’s Pramod Tummala eclectic would be an severe understatement. The Welcome Kinetic record weaves together trumpets, piano, bass, guitars, saxophones, and dozens of other instruments into a strange but totally cohesive blend of jazz-influenced pop. Vocals stream in and out of the songs, again, in many different ways and directions. What’s so genius about this record is how all of the different sounds and instruments meld together in a way that makes sense without clutter. With Morning Recordings, cacophony becomes harmony because Pramod's arrangements demand it.

Style: Future Jazz, Lounge

RIYL: Tortoise, Nobody & Mystic Chords of Memory

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Download: You've Been Letting Go


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Headphone Commute Review
written by Headphone Commute, March 03, 2008
Morning Recordings is a brainchild of a Chicago based Pramod Tummala, and The Welcome Kinetic is his second full length on Loose Thread Recordings. The album is sprinkled with many guest appearances and musical collaborations, most notable among them is the voice of Drag City's Edith Frost, essentially comprising of a collective of friends. Tummala himself is easily comfortable on guitar, piano and the harmonium on this laid back classic soul, future jazz, and fusion album with elements of Tortoise-like staple vibraphone post-rock sound. The breathy playful vocals remind me a bit of Psapp and Portishead, while the lo-fi treatments and analog tape manipulation is reminiscent of Boards of Canada and Dictaphone. The album effortlessly loops and folds over itself, mostly in major harmonic scale, and serves as excellent background music, while you stare at the clock, watching the hands tick away the stubborn minutes left at work. Many tracks are already stuck in my head. Be sure to pick up a previous album, Music For Places, which features the lovely voice of Lindsay Anderson (think Telefon Tel Aviv's Sound In a Dark Room). Favorite Tracks: Sugar Waltz, The Welcome Kinetic, and Songs From A Hotel Bar.
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