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The Black Dog - Music for Real Airports
Label / Soma Records
Cat # / SOMA CD083
Released / May 2010
Style / Ambient
Rating / 4.5
RA recommends

The social dissatisfaction expressed by Black Dog in last year's Further Vexations continues with Music for Real Airports, a concept album exploring the dichotomy between the reality of airports and their ideal: Places of numbness and vacancy as opposed to futuristic gateways to the world. This album forms one half of an art installation, with the physical half being done by a group of interactive artists called Human, whose projects include video material at 2009's Miami WMC.

Some will recognise the album's title as a throwback to Brian Eno's similarly ambient (but less rhythmic) Music for Airports: This is Black Dog's reply to that record, which they regard as inaccurate in its mood of hope and serenity, and while most of it was actually recorded and written over three years while waiting for flights in airports on tour, the picture painted is a bleak view of "the way that airports tend to reduce us to worthless pink blobs of flesh," as the press literature puts it. This, however, is only one of a range of angles taken. The album is, broadly, a palette of emotions evoked by the airport experience. "Disinformation Desk," for example, builds morose pads and reverbed drum hits into a looped tension which suggests that they see airports as the embodiment of society's ever-accelerating spiral downwards into chaos and inhumanity.

But while it's true that the overarching message is a desolate, hopeless one, there's far more to it than that; there are few acts that would be able to deal with such a lofty thesis with this amount of poise. Oppression ("Strip Light Hate"), limbo ("Terminal EMA") and tragedy ("Delay 9") are some of the moods we travel through, guided by slow, brooding pads and razor-sharp percussion. It never settles into a tedious pattern though, broken by tracks such as "Empty Seat Calculations" whose lush beauty, somewhat bewilderingly, suggests emergence and sad reflection at once. The two "Sleep Deprivation" tracks are very deftly executed, numb and devoid of feeling, with only sleepless purgatory left tick-tocking along.

A more straightforwardly impressionistic approach is taken in places, "Lounge" being a recording of a noisy departure lounge, a mish-mash of children's shrieks and general bustle, shot through with digital zapsïa scene that's rotten and faulty at its core. But the thing which really elevates the previous collection of songs into something greater is the last track, "Business Car Park," which wraps the package into a whole by exiting the airport, relieving listeners of the heaviness that preceded it and offering a sort of tear-jerking reflectiveness that seems to ask, "Where do we go from here?" Ideally, this would be a background to the situation of Human's installation, but even without that, Music for Real Airports has plenty to say. It's challenging and accomplished in equally large quantities, and hopefully, as happened in the early '90s, an example of a deeper form of art that will be followed by others.



Published /
Mon, 03 May 2010



Buy The Black Dog - Music for Real Airports at
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Tracklist: The Black Dog - Music for Real Airports
01. M1
02. Terminal EMA
03. DISinformation Desk
04. Passport Control
05. Wait Behind This Line
06. Empty Seat Calculations
07. Strip Light Hate
08. Future Delay Thinking
09. Lounge
10. Delay 9
11. Sleep Deprivation 1
12. Sleep Deprivation 2
13. He Knows
14. Business Car Park 9

The Black Dog - Music for Real Airports

 
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The Black Dog prep Music For Real Airports

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taviktwrote
Mon, 25 Jun 2012superb

samoisnotdeadwrote
Tue, 30 Aug 2011Amazing project, amazing label, Brian Eno just wanted to give us relax, ambiant songs for relax us during an 'airport expérience'.
The Black Dog, wanted to transcribe 'real airport' by songs.

djfriendlywrote
Wed, 24 Nov 2010must pick this one up at the 'duty free' record store. one response to the above review & to the aforementioned 'press literature', however: eno's music for airports was not meant to be 'about' the airport experience; it was to be played in an airport to soothe the nerves, exasperation, etc. of the passengers. apparently eno was somewhat uncomfortable with flying. I think it was played in at least one airport, nyc's laguardia. the piano on one of the black dog samples could be a reference... More

SleepClinicwrote
Fri, 27 Aug 2010incredible album, easily one of the best albums of 2010.

nevidlj-IVAwrote
Sat, 15 May 2010this is not 'morning' music but with it its really possible to 'delay thinking' and be lost in the world and landscapes of sounds
great tapisery for 'moonlight daydreaming'
black star-not hole!

GreatAlbumwrote
Sat, 15 May 2010GREAT ALBUM!


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