The occult and folk music have been friends for a while. In the 21st century, hauntology and the resurface of some cult soundtracks from the 1970s and 1980s helped to create a new sense of folk, not associated with the typical acoustic feeling, but more relatable with library, krautrock/kosmische and industrial music. JoĂŁo Kyron and Tony Watts, long time collaborators since the late 1990s with their band HipnĂłtica, and more recently with Beautify Junkyards (Ghost Box) are well acquainted with this friendship. Hidden Horse is their new project as a duo and âOpalaâ their first release.
With eight tracks and almost thirty minutes, their first release explores dense and greyish urban utopias. The song titles explore ideas that mix sci-fi, horror, science, space and urban phobia, and the music Kyron and Watts create delivers, using electronics and drums with great relish. Their relationship as musicians, which spans more than two decades, can be felt in the way their music flows with a continuous dialogue.
âOpalaâ is always keen to take you to another dimension. It lives in its own twilight zone, where the obscure entangles the most obvious senses of reality. It sounds like Jacques Tati âPlaytimeâ with a hauntology soundtrack: it kind of feels that this imaginary world is real, but itâs not. And it sucks you in to be a part of it and enjoy it: close your eyes and let yourself go while listening to âLevitação MagnĂ©ticaâ or âFantasmas do Planetaâ. You will feel like a foreigner in a new city.
Holuzam