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Torben
Floor
Live Music in the Apartment
label: waterdog music
released: 04.13.99
our score: 4.0 out of 5.0
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This is
Not Live, It Is Life
by:
bill aicher
Torben Floor
have been called "the pride of Ottawa, Illinois," and
rightfully so. Not since the debut of Smashing Pumpkins with their
album Gish has there been an album from Illinois that shows
as much promise as Torben Floor does with Live Music in the
Apartment.
Their sound
is truly that of a band, not simply a gathering of musicians.
This stunning feat is accomplished through the musicianship of
a quartet composed of Carey Ott (vocals), Chris Ott (bass, vocals),
John Mooney (guitar, vocals), and Doug Sale (drums).
Recorded in
their former aparment (except for the last two tracks), this album
is brimming with masterful works. The band's influences, including
Jeff Buckley, John
Lennon, and, perhaps most notably Radiohead
are readily apparent throughout the album.
"One
for Me," a love song which bears sincere truthfulness of
internal feelings, could have easily been a b-side from Radiohead's
The Bends. The next tracks,
"Storms of Loss," is eerily reminiscient of Mercury
Rev, with it's dissonant vocal chords placed at the ends of various
verses, giving it an hauntingl feeling of emptiness.
This is music
to lose oneself in. The heartfelt singing strikes a chord within
the listener. In the instances when the vocals are backed by brother
Chris Ott, the singing is enough to take the listener to another
level, a level above the static everyday existence to a more wondrous
plane.
It is solely
on this etheric level that we can find the music to not only accompany,
but complement the emotionality of Ott's lyrics. Mooney's guitarplaying
displays sheer intensity without being obnoxious. It is an intensity
of feeling, and intensity of love and hate and loss and redemption,
an intensity displayed equally throughout the band.
On the surface,
this album appears to wallow in simplicity - an album of acoustic
guitar and gentle meanderings from a lost soul. But as you can
see, by simply attempting to explain its simplicity, by exploring
what is going on here, one can become entrapped and enthralled
by the simple nuances. This is the test of pure beauty - that
of making a thing so simple that below the surface, if one takes
the time to feel, one can find the true beauty and complexity
found therein - a beauty Torben Floor does not simply possess,
but emenates.
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