Xylitol, a.k.a. producer and DJ Catherine Backhouse, shifts up the
refinement and musical breadth for her second album Blumenfantasie, the
follow-up to her Planet Mu debut Anemones.
While Anemones pulled together her formative influences of early jungle,
garage and kosmische musik, interspersed with elements of early central
and eastern european electro to draw connections and contrasts between
dance music and vintage electronics, in Blumenfantasie mitteleuropean
melancholy comes to the fore, particularly drawing on the work of
Sarajevo-born minimal synth composer Miaux, whom she recognises as “a
kindred spirit in terms of her directness and melancholy, as well as her
lightness of touch.” She cites her as her “single biggest inspiration
in the shift between Anemones and Blumenfantasie and I think the shift
of mood and palette is quite apparent, even if our music is very
different in how it presents.”
A fitting analogy of the album’s feel can be found in the origin of its title:
“When I stayed in Berlin earlier this year to play for the Planet Mu
30th Anniversary show I had a vivid flashback to my last stay in the
city some 20 years earlier. I was out raving every night
with a friend who was squatting in a disused flower shop; the trip was a
kind of therapeutic letting go but the memory fragment that stood out
to me was the GDR era signage above the front window in brown tiles
embossed in beige reading ‘Blumenfantasie’ in that kind of classic 1970s
psychedelic font.”
In her new album these crossing timelines, collisions of memory and aesthetics tessellate precariously together.
With Blumenfantasie, Xylitol wanted “to make space and for the music to
float and propel at once”, finding routes through the pointillistic
figures, cascading synths and the meditative stillness of kosmische
musik and bolder breakbeat programming. She reaches this delicate
balance through careful subtraction, hoping “to convey a sense of
intimacy and sadness but without sentimentality” which she manages with a
feel and sound that's raw and intuitive.
Blumenfantasie rolls through detailed jungle workouts that flutter and
bleep, through beatless ambience, taking a rare dip below 160 bpm for
the elegiac Mirjana, the album’s most explicit nod to Krautrock with a
drum break chopped up from Amon Duul II’s anthemic ‘Archangel’s
Thunderbird’, through to a bare bones grime rhythm that calls to mind
the missing link between industrial pioneers Nurse With Wound and
Wiley's Eskibeat.
For Blumenfantasie, Catherine cast her net to draw in experimental
audiovisual duo Sculpture and Reading based post-rock band The Leaf
Library as collaborators, pulling the former’s whirling eddies of
musique concrete into a slice of sublime aquatic jungle, and the
latter’s radiophonic folksong into a dark and disorientating breakbeat
workout equally indebted to Source Direct as to Broadcast.
Blumenfantasie moves with a confident, self-effacing fluidity which has
been informed by DJ Bunnyhausen’s more regular DJ gigs. She speculates
“if this album feels more cohesive than its predecessor it's likely
because I've been DJing a lot more, with Worthing Techno Militia, with
central and eastern european electronica collective Slav to the Rhythm,
as well as being part of Italo Disco crew Flex. Moving between these
zones seemed to open up hidden pathways between the disparate musical
trajectories they represent.”
While Anemones contrasted the rough and the delicate, its successor is
an album built for the head, hips and heart, with painterly sounds and a
sense of intimacy that encourages deep listening while keeping its eyes
on the strobelight and its feet on the dancefloor.
Tracklist:
1. Chromophoria
2. Blumenfantasie
3. Tilted Arc
4. Melancholia
5. Mirjana
6. Sudwestwind
7. Lights
8. Bowed Clusters
9. Halo
10. Falling
