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Yesterday & Today
 
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Yesterday & Today

The Field
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews) More about this product

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (May 19, 2009)
  • Original Release Date: May 19, 2009
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Anti
  • ASIN: B001WBK99S
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #12,857 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #30 in  Music > World Music > Europe > Scandinavia > Sweden
    #42 in  Music > Dance & Electronic > Techno
    #77 in  Music > Dance & Electronic > Ambient

 
1. I Have The Moon, You Have The Internet
2. Everybody's Got To Learn Sometime
3. Leave It
4. Yesterday & Today (feat. John Stanier)
5. The More That I Do
6. Sequenced

Editorial Reviews

Product Description

The Field is Axel Willner, and 2007's "Here We Go Sublime" was one of the year's most acclaimed releases, receiving a 9.0 from Pitchfork as well as universal praise. It was a soundtrack to the spit-shined airport of your dreams - faceless, futuristic, and fuzzy. Now, Willner's label, Kompakt, has teamed with Anti to release this record. Willner expands his palette, continuing the oblique sampling strategy while building up the rhythmic architecture. Look for The Field on tour starting this spring.

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5 Reviews
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 (3)
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Big improvement over the first album; "Leave It" is gorgeous., May 19, 2009
At first, I expected this to be a rehash of From Here We Go Sublime, which I thought was over-rated. Indeed, the first track is made strictly according to the Sublime template. The beat in "I Have The Moon..." is straightforward and conventional, and backed by a humming one-note drone. The bright keyboard fragments that open the song are very similar to the ones in "Everday." There is nothing in the composition to distinguish the song from anything on The Field's first album -- although, granted, if it had appeared on that album, it would have been one of the better songs, like "Everday" or "Silent."

But that first track makes a deceptive impression. Miraculously, Axel Willner manages to put a new spin on the old sound. The songs on Yesterday And Today have less hazy echo and more energy than the songs on Sublime. The highlight of this album is "Leave It," which uses Willner's usual drone-heavy compositional style, but hits on a brilliant idea in the form of a cold, reverberating chime that floats dispassionately above the chugging house beat. Willner then adds swaths of anthemic keyboards, which do what they always do in techno music and turn the track into a sweeping rush, a bona fide dancefloor anthem. It is twelve minutes long, but never drags. The last techno album where I could say that was Vocalcity. DJs everywhere, take note.

The second track "Everybody's Got To Learn Sometime" is a cover, which may explain why it departs from Willner's template more than anything else here. Most notably, it doesn't have the 4/4 house beat that Willner usually relies on. Instead, it has a curiously stuttering, machine-hip-hop sort of rhythm. Willner's patented wall-of-haze sound is present in the production on the sweeping, melodramatic strings, but the rhythm is built on manipulated piano lines. The chimes from "Leave It" show up here too, in a less prominent role.

The ending track "Sequenced" is less impressive, but still not bad. Like "Leave It," it's an attempt to give the Field sound a bit more dancefloor edge. This time, it's driven by a pattering mechanical synth that is common to some European techno (recent Solaris Heights singles are full of this kind of thing). The typical Field melodic hum (like in "I Have The Moon...") is laid over the top and sounds quite pleasant. The beat is a bit harder and more detailed than usual, which is a good touch. There is some languid variation over time. Fifteen minutes is a bit long, though -- after eleven minutes, the song changes tone and goes into a chilled-out ending, which is listenable, but not really attention-grabbing.

The structure of these songs is less fragmented compared to the first album. On Sublime, even the good songs were obviously just alternating between a couple of droning segments, without much in the way of transition. Here, the different sections blend together better.

Unfortunately, that still leaves two weak tracks on the second side. "The More That I Do" does the album a disservice as the lead single. It would have fit perfectly on the first album -- not on the first side with "Over The Ice" and "Good Things End," but on the second side with repetitive and unremarkable productions like "The Deal" and "Sun And Ice." It revolves around the repetition of a single vocal note, much like "The Deal," but the rhythm is more aggressive. This makes it sound like a broken record, which is irritating. As for the title track, it is another dancefloor production, but the compositional style repeats "Over The Ice" and "Good Things End," particularly in the way the blaring rhythm periodically congeals into a brief burst of noise. In the last three minutes, there is some relief from the rhythmic monotony in the form of a live-sounding percussion breakdown. However, the drums are accompanied by formless, generic synth waves, which makes the ending sound like an unfocused jam session.

On the whole, this album leaves a much better impression than From Here We Go Sublime. It is less monochromatic, less obvious about repeating the same ideas. "Leave It" is outstanding, a whole new level above anything on Sublime. The rest uses many of the same ideas, but often makes them sound vibrant. There's only one truly poor track, compared to the entire second side of Sublime. Still, a full third of the album's running time does suffer from monotony; it's pleasant listening, but not the IDM masterpiece Willner wants to make. The difference is that "Leave It" suggests that he's getting closer.
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A solid follow-up, May 19, 2009
By somethingexcellent (Lincoln, NE United States) - See all my reviews
  
Although some dismiss him as a sort of one-trick pony, Axel Wilner no doubt broke through with his debut full-length From Here We Go Sublime and pretty much didn't slow up after it was released, putting out an iTunes-exclusive epic 4 track album under commission and touring all over the world. His sample-clipping style hovered somewhere between ambient and dance music and I personally found it to be invigorating, even though it was essentially trance lite.

Following almost exactly 2 years on the heels of that debut album is Yesterday And Today, and while it plays out almost like you'd expect for a second album, it has more than enough stunning moments to give it the feel of another solid body of work. Oddly enough, the album is even receiving a co-release in the United States on the rapidly-expanding Anti label (home of Tom Waits, Nico Case, Bob Mould and others), so Kompakt no-doubt thinks that this one can chip into the consciousness of the world even more.

The main thing that second albums usually do is find artists shaking up the formula just enough so that people won't completely nail them into a corner, but not enough that they're going to alienate fans of their past work. To that end, this 6 song effort succeeds, throwing in a couple nice tricks while offering up more jaw-droppingly gorgeous electronic music in other places. As one might guess from the lack of total tracks, the overall length of cuts is much longer this time out, with only a single one clocking in at under 8 minutes and a hefty average of over 10. The unfortunately-titled "I Have The Moon, You Have The Internet" kicks things off with a slow build of the familiar looped samples, taking forever to get going before it splashes into a dew-covered morning about halfway through and doesn't slow down.

The follower of "Everybody's Got To Learn Sometime" is one of the curve balls, a cover that finds Wilner slowing down what was once a British pop song into an ultra-white, almost R&B style number that's gorgeous at times but feels just a bit on the long side.

After that, though, the switch flips and "Leave It" drops as what is easily one of the better tracks on the album. Running 11 minutes in length, it's relentless out of the gate as choir samples, bells, and a super juicy bassline push things forward.

On paper, "Yesterday And Today" sounds like another probable barn burner (with John Stanier of Battles on drums), but it actually plays out much more gently, with the usual short wisps and impeccable programming wafting to a gentle crescendo before Stanier adds some crisp crackling and a few good rushes. Instead, it's the album-closer of "Sequenced" where Wilner completely strays from his usual sound, veering off to inhabit a dense, winding analogue cut that sounds something like Studio crossed with Lindstrom. I'm not sure if it's the hint of a new direction or just a stab at something different, but it certainly closes the release on a high note.

So, while Yesterday And Today definitely ventures into some new territory and stumbles just a bit in a few places, none of the issues are cause enough to detract from the strength of the album as a whole. If you enjoyed his first, this is another well-crafted album of electronic music that stretches out with a bit more range.

(from somethingexcellent.com reviews)
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars oh my god, September 11, 2009
By Nate (Los Angeles) - See all my reviews
People need to understand that this album is amazing. I bought "From Here We Go Sublime" and I loved it, but once I started listening to "Yesterday & Today" my opinion of electronic music changed forever. The songs on this album have more plays than any song in my iTunes library by an order of magnitude. I listen to it to write, to sleep, to drive, to live. It is one of the best albums I have ever listened to. The deceptively-disappointing 1-2 opening of "I Have The Moon, You Have the Internet" and "Everybody's Got To Learn Sometime" gives way to a foursome of songs too amazing to describe, and they wouldn't be as amazing without the slow-build intro of the first two songs. "The More That I Know" is my favorite song of the year and one of the best tracks I've ever heard. Ever. If you purchase this album, you will not believe how many times you will want to listen to it. Music rarely gets this good.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Extraordinary
Simply genius.

Axel does it again.

A totally unique perspective.
Published 3 months ago by Boony

4.0 out of 5 stars More chill than Field
How do you top the wonderful, "From here we go sublime"? Answer: You don't.
Here's a rundown:
"I have the moon, you have the internet": A too long piece that goes... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Jmark2001

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