We're ecstatic to announce today a very special show for Dan Deacon next February at Islington Assembly Hall. The show will take place on February 16th in support of Dan's new album 'Gliss Riffer' out on Domino the same week. You can read more about the album and hear/watch Dan's frenetic trailer for it below, for those of you who like to cut to the punch here's the show listing!
Tickets now onsale via Wegottickets and Songkick!!
Upset The Rhythm presents...
DAN DEACON
Monday 16 February
Islington Assembly Hall, Upper Street, Islington, N1 2UD
7pm | £15.00 | http://www.wegottickets.com/event/301155
DAN DEACON – GLISS RIFFER
With
the success of Dan Deacon’s 2007 album Spiderman
of the Rings, came an opportunity for the electronic-music iconoclast to
increase the breadth and depth of his entire musical project. Deacon moved from
self-contained computer music to orchestral epics. His interactive live show,
honed in DIY spaces, was taken to museums and concert halls. He frequently
expanded his performances to include a horde of side musicians. Gliss Riffer, an entirely self-produced
record of almost all electronic sounds, is a return to Deacon’s Spiderman of the Rings-era process. He
calls it “easily the most fun [he’s] ever had making a record.”
After a string of large ensemble
projects (including 2009’s Bromst and
2012’s America) Deacon longed for the
“simplicity” of the days when he did nearly everything himself. So he made
plans to sequester himself in his studio and conjure an album from the sketches
and songs he had begun in the back of the van on the European leg of the America tour.
Those plans were upended when he
received a last-minute invitation to tour with Arcade Fire in August. Rather
than lose momentum by pushing back his recording schedule, Deacon continued to
make the record on the road. “I was mixing and arranging in the green room before
sound check and each night back at the hotel.” Deacon said, “On days off I'd
find a studio to track vocals or mix. When a studio couldn't be found I
dismantled a hotel bathroom, sealing the vents with towels and using all the
bedding to turn it into a control room.”
This is his first record to showcase
his newfound appreciation for his vocal cords, an appreciation he gained after
going through an extended bout of laryngitis. “I started thinking about how the
voice is an instrument that expires,” he said, “and that made me want to make
an album with the voice more exposed.” And that he did. While Gliss Riffer contains all the
instrumental layering we’ve come to expect, the vocals are mixed with a
prominence (“Feel the Lightning,” “Learning to Relax”) and, at times, a clarity
(“When I Was Done Dying”) that have never been heard on a Dan Deacon record
before. All the vocals are performed by Deacon himself, even the female voice
on “Feel the Lightning” °™ the product of vari-speed recording techniques.
This album also marks the first time
Deacon replaced his digitally realized parts with analog synthesizers, giving
Deacon the opportunity to experiment with synthesizers in the same way he
experimented with strings and wind instruments on America. Deacon travelled to Asheville, N.C., to record with Moog’s
at-the-time-unreleased Sub 37 analog synth. Gliss
Riffer is the first record in the world to feature the instrument.
Despite being predominately
electronic, Gliss Riffer’s sonic
palette is informed by his post-Spiderman
material. The Disklavier, a MIDI-fed player piano first heard on Bromst, is present here. (This time
around, Deacon ran it so hard it broke.) Cross-rhythms suggestive of America’s orchestral opus “USA” and
Deacon’s art music work (including a Carnegie Hall performance and film score
for Francis Ford Coppola) are also in evidence. What Gliss Riffer shares with Spiderman
of the Rings as a musical experience is
an aesthetic directness and ecstatic energy. Gliss Riffer trades in exuberant, uncontained fun.
Lyrical images of lightning, oceans, lakes,
and roads crop up frequently as stand-ins for freedom and self-realization. The
tracks were started on the ever-changing landscapes that greet a touring
musician. The lyrics, on the other hand, were mostly written in Deacon’s
studio, a room with no windows and no air conditioning in Baltimore’s
sweltering summer where it was easy to imagine being somewhere else.
So while Gliss Riffer is all about fun, it’s figured dramatically. It’s a
euphoria tempered by yearning and set in defiance of life’s nagging anxiety.
“Happiness takes time,” we are reminded by tremolo vocals in the middle of the
supremely danceable “Mind on Fire.” The bliss on this record is well-earned.
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