Ataraxia continue to unfold their panoply of folk tableaus with
ever an aesthetic eye and no less in this release, "Arcana Eco", which is
a voluminous and luxurious book with seven newly recorded tracks, four
exclusively released, on the disc that comes with Arcana Eco. While this
reviewer was not privy to the book itself, if the promo pack that arrived
was anything to go by, it was as professional as any digipak with an extra
disc featuring full flash navigation and pages sampled from the book in
PDF format, lots of pages.
The book is divided into six main
chapters about which satellites preface, discography, history and a
lengthy and personal interview including lyrics. All pages are boutiques
of art in print with subtle halftones, full colour photographic inserts
generously flourish the book. From personal writings and poetic
intimations by the members of Ataraxia this manual on these modern
minstrels unfolds a breadth of informative reading on the band. The six
main chapters are based on the symbols of stone, water, passages, dream,
contemplation, and light, attributes that not only thematically are to be
found in the select tracks but in all matters Ataraxia. Well written,
eruditely poetic, esoterically so, the book is ripe with ornate enjoyment
for the lovers of Ataraxia's music.
While only four of the seven
tracks on the "Arcana Eco" discs are exclusively new, all are fresh
recordings from Ataraxia, with the other three being reinterpretations of
earlier recordings. Like the chapters of the book that symbolizes their
themes so too do these seven songs capture the cross section, kaleidoscope
of stylistic capillaries veining the body of Ataraxia. 'Cobalt'
sways a dolorous décor, lush guitars and operatic voices sky evanescent
strands of trailing tendrils of cloud. A stronger focus on the earthly
spiritual is revisited in the temple, 'Astimelusa' wherein ode to
Aphrodite echoes with bells of ceremony. The second exclusive track,
'Mirsolo' gyrates tribal influence and gypsy guitar before the
lumbering shadows of darkwave choruses. Gypsy flamenco orates the meter,
rhythm and melody of 'Fire in the Wood', a cinder of swirling
eastern ritual. A new studio version of 'Nossa Senhora dos Anjos'
drifts planes betwixt suffering and beauty, with the "baroque
divertissement version" of 'De Pourpre et d'Argent' reclining in
formal parlour performance. The last and exclusively new track is the
surreal haunt of 'The Island of Docteur Moreau' (sic), a
disturbed umbilicus of the island‚s sounds of nature and the unnatural
ululations that well deep from within the genetic playground of author,
Wells' antagonist.
NYR
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