Jansen, Steve: Slope LP

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Steve Jansen, the co-founder of new wave legends Japan and bona fide collaboration multi-hyphenate, is releasing his first two solo studio albums: Slope and Tender Extinction. But how to accurately parse Steve Jansen's path through music? It's a journey that's taken him from 80s royalty as what The Guardian calls “a key component” of one of the UK's premier new wave acts, releasing classic records like Tin Drum and Quiet Life, to a renowned collaborator, working with artists as diverse as Ryuchi Sakamoto, Anja Garbarek, Annie Lennox, and, most recently, Maiya Hershey. His is a career of ever-changing styles and genres, from blissed-out electronica made with YMO's Yukihiro Takahashi, to his work with jazz-rock group Nine Horses, to the heavy atmospheres of his transcendent Exit North project, and far, far, beyond. Based on his consistently excellent creative output, it's not surprising that he's also had time to fit in a clutch of excellent solo albums. Although on first listening the music on Slope and Tender Extinction may seem austere and chilly, it certainly bears further listening. Songs that might seem impenetrable can shyly give up their secrets - a moment of tenderness, say, or soaring strings, or a wistful chord change. Slope, his debut, was described by The Observer upon its release in 2007 as “unclassifiable”, a description that goes some way to detailing the album's crystalline synthetic peaks, dusty analogue depths, and wide experimental sweep. To hear the icy IDM of 'Grip' rubbing up against the drone-led modern classical in 'Sow The Salt',

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