
SHOEB AHMAD:
Sea Songs, Dead Ends & Sleeping Pills

01. Electric Fields (5:09)
02. Headlights in My Eyes (3:17)
03. Falling Slow (7:24)
04. Soft Disasters (7:04)
05. Tangled (6:22)
06. Travelogue (6:28)
07. Birthday Girl (4:00)
08. Headlight Reprise (3:26)
09. This is How You Fall Apart (5:13)
format:
CD-R
edition:
75
packaging:
Hand-made envelopes,
hand-numbered, screenprinted inserts
&c:
A nine track follow-up to Shoeb Ahmad's
last release Sonar Love Songs
featuring bedroom sketches recorded
during a year long stay in Wollongong in 2006.
With guitars processed through layers of static
& vocal takes from the dead air of night,
Sea Songs, Dead Ends & Sleeping Pills
encapsulates the space afforded by the coast
& the distance between home and loved ones.
Features contributions by M.Rösner,
William Ryan Fritch (Sole & the Skyrider Band),
Machinefabriek, Plinth & Felicity Mangan (Function).
listen:
press:
It’s hard to define the work of Shoeb Ahmad,
but amorphousness and ambiguity is the beating heart of his latest album,
Sea Songs, Dead Ends and Sleeping Pills.
It’s the kind of record that exists at the indeterminable periods
between night and day, when you’re not quite sure
whether it’s a bright night or a murky day.
In much the same way that Adrian Klumpes plays the piano,
Ahmad processes his guitar to the point of no return,
transforming it into the sound that forms the basis for
most of the songs on this record. It’s interspersed with
myriad field recordings and noises that I can’t quite place.
The music feels taut and brittle, awash with treble,
adding to the fragility and, at times, uncomfortable stasis of the sound.
Sea Songs… opens with the fidgety and haunting ‘Electric Fields’,
layered with recordings of birds and rough metallic objects.
For its five minutes it builds up a state of tension which never feels resolved.
There’s an annoying white noise flooding the track which also appears on
‘Soft Disasters’ and most prominently on ‘Tangled’,
much to the deficiency of the latter because
it noticeably detracts from the listening experience.
The scratchy two-chord meditation ‘Headlights In My Eyes’
sucks you into its delay-soaked vortex, and Ahmad’s distant vocals
renders a dream-like state within the maelstrom.
‘Birthday Girl’ is an unequivocal highlight, and also doubles as
one of the barest numbers on Sea Songs. Spacious and ambient,
the layers of guitars are meticulously interwoven to create
a gorgeous piece of minimalism. Ditto the record’s final vignette,
‘This Is How You Fall Apart’, propelled forward by delayed guitar harmonics
and faint brushstrokes of background noise.
It’s a shame Ahmad didn’t explore this avenue further on Sea Songs,
because it’s easy to hear his skill when he allows the space.
-Dom Alessio, Cyclic Defrost