Skinless
by Deco Child
— Released 13th May 2013
Having tinkered quite brutally with These New Puritans' Attack Music, and produced some truly beautiful, electronically affected euphoria in 2012's Pray and S&G, Deco Child (aka south Londoner Alex Lloyd) is back. He's spent his time since his last EPs developing a new, intimate feel to his music. It's a startling turn, one which initially stupefies - as all positively charged, emotive music should – though once the astonishment is allowed to settle, what we're left with is ...
Having tinkered quite brutally with These New Puritans' Attack Music,
and produced some truly beautiful, electronically affected euphoria in
2012's Pray and S&G, Deco Child (aka south Londoner Alex Lloyd)
is back. He's spent his time since his last EPs developing a new,
intimate feel to his music. It's a startling turn, one which initially
stupefies - as all positively charged, emotive music should – though
once the astonishment is allowed to settle, what we're left with is
Lloyd's most accomplished collection to date. It's a brand new take on
electronic music, embodied into a record that's equal parts grace and
guile.
Opener "Skinless Pt 1" plays off the subtle compositional simplicity of
Nils Frahm's Screws and the gentle dexterity of Sigur Rós, and the
result is as plainly cinematic and softly orchestral as the haunting
minimalism of Ninja Tune label mate Jason Swinscoe. A ghostly,
piano-lead intro gives way to a thudding, minimal beat and plunging
bass, before bowing to a sun-flecked crescendo and a trademark,
heart-pumping blow-out of euphoric strings, electronics and vocals.
There's then "Heartbeats" – a silken palpitation fuelled by elegiac
soundbites ("Sometimes my heart starts racing really fast,") lightly
placed upon arresting and languorous keys. The whole thing performed
with a nimble ability picked up during the 'Child's upbringings in
electronica.
"Skinless Pt 2" meanwhile, with its spectral hanging notes and sweeping
grandeur, is arguably the EP's doleful chef-d'œuvre, and is decorated
with Ben Dodson's wistful vocal. Like an aggrieved groan of a floating
spectre, transfixed by the teary-eyed waltz of a once beloved seen only
through the fogged globules of a dangling chandelier. As you can tell,
this an artist with a vision very much his own. "The less you change,
the harder it becomes," the song grieves, before turning agitated;
aggressive, even, around the four-minute mark, as frenzied sirens and
acerbic breaks invade its innate tranquility. As schizophrenic as it is
unequivocally stunning, vocally there are glimpses of Antony and
glimmers of Patrick Watson located within this flittering, seraphic
thing.
Having already garnered plays on Radio 1 and 6Music and cemented himself
as a favourite of Lauren Laverne's, this is a welcome return for Deco
Child. This is a release teetering upon the meeting point of the worldly
and the ethereal, the organic and the electronic, with the techniques
of each seamlessly intermingled with one another. It's the meeting of
aged learning and a new and optimistic outlook; a meeting that's
irrefutably inspiring to the ear that decides to lend itself.
Skinless
by Deco Child
— Released 13th May 2013
Tracklist
Having tinkered quite brutally with These New Puritans' Attack Music, and produced some truly beautiful, electronically affected euphoria in 2012's Pray and S&G, Deco Child (aka south Londoner Alex Lloyd) is back. He's spent his time since his last EPs developing a new, intimate feel to his music. It's a startling turn, one which initially stupefies - as all positively charged, emotive music should – though once the astonishment is allowed to settle, what we're left with is ...
Having tinkered quite brutally with These New Puritans' Attack Music,
and produced some truly beautiful, electronically affected euphoria in
2012's Pray and S&G, Deco Child (aka south Londoner Alex Lloyd)
is back. He's spent his time since his last EPs developing a new,
intimate feel to his music. It's a startling turn, one which initially
stupefies - as all positively charged, emotive music should – though
once the astonishment is allowed to settle, what we're left with is
Lloyd's most accomplished collection to date. It's a brand new take on
electronic music, embodied into a record that's equal parts grace and
guile.
Opener "Skinless Pt 1" plays off the subtle compositional simplicity of
Nils Frahm's Screws and the gentle dexterity of Sigur Rós, and the
result is as plainly cinematic and softly orchestral as the haunting
minimalism of Ninja Tune label mate Jason Swinscoe. A ghostly,
piano-lead intro gives way to a thudding, minimal beat and plunging
bass, before bowing to a sun-flecked crescendo and a trademark,
heart-pumping blow-out of euphoric strings, electronics and vocals.
There's then "Heartbeats" – a silken palpitation fuelled by elegiac
soundbites ("Sometimes my heart starts racing really fast,") lightly
placed upon arresting and languorous keys. The whole thing performed
with a nimble ability picked up during the 'Child's upbringings in
electronica.
"Skinless Pt 2" meanwhile, with its spectral hanging notes and sweeping
grandeur, is arguably the EP's doleful chef-d'œuvre, and is decorated
with Ben Dodson's wistful vocal. Like an aggrieved groan of a floating
spectre, transfixed by the teary-eyed waltz of a once beloved seen only
through the fogged globules of a dangling chandelier. As you can tell,
this an artist with a vision very much his own. "The less you change,
the harder it becomes," the song grieves, before turning agitated;
aggressive, even, around the four-minute mark, as frenzied sirens and
acerbic breaks invade its innate tranquility. As schizophrenic as it is
unequivocally stunning, vocally there are glimpses of Antony and
glimmers of Patrick Watson located within this flittering, seraphic
thing.
Having already garnered plays on Radio 1 and 6Music and cemented himself
as a favourite of Lauren Laverne's, this is a welcome return for Deco
Child. This is a release teetering upon the meeting point of the worldly
and the ethereal, the organic and the electronic, with the techniques
of each seamlessly intermingled with one another. It's the meeting of
aged learning and a new and optimistic outlook; a meeting that's
irrefutably inspiring to the ear that decides to lend itself.