"Wir sitzen in unseren Zimmern und draußen wird unsere
Zukunft zerstört."
We sit in our rooms and outside our future is destroyed.
This
line sets the tone for Apoptoses's sixth longplayer "Die Zukunft".
Sometimes you
don't have to travel far to see and feel desolation.
Your hometown, your room or
even your head can turn into an overwhelming world full of fear or confusion -
from initial alienation to the unsettling moment when just the voices in your
head seem to know what is right or wrong.
All this is palpable in the songs of
"Die Zukunft".
Instead of painting these voices in colours of terror, Apoptose
shows their inherent beauty in super dark electronics with slow motion
rhythms.
In the four years of production Apoptose selected a wide range
of different singers for this album.
Most outstanding is classical trained tenor
Daniel Sans.
He sings "What Power Art Thou" - a song that was composed by Henry
Purcell in the late 17th century.
Apoptose and Sans preserve the complex
harmonic structure of the original translating it into a breathtaking five
minute ride in apoptotic soundspheres.
They succeed in conjuring up Purcell's
"cold genius" that had already fascinated legendary countertenor Klaus Nomi in
the 1980s.
Other voices on "Die Zukunft" include the gloomy spoken words of the
advance single "Time-lapse City", the lost girl's voice on the title track and
two female singers on "Dornen".
Consistent with the album title Apoptose does
not look back, but is heading for novel territories within the dark ambient
music genre.
Tracklist:
1. Two Hours
2. What Power Art Thou (Cold
Song)
3. Time-lapse City
4. Medizin
5. Dornen
6. Das Jenseits
7. Au
Ciel
8. Die Zukunft
Old Europa Cafe AVS
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