KAMMARHEIT "The Starwheel" CD Reviews
From the Somowhere Cold webzine (U.S.A.)
Hailing from Sweden, Kammarheit is a dark ambient
artist that paints lush soundscapes that are both ominous, beautiful,
and breathtaking. The Starwheel is a brilliantly moving album that has
a depth to it that is meditative in quality. The album begins with the
apropos "Hypnagoga," a track that starts off with what sounds
like winds and the eruptions of volcanoes mixed with a beautiful drone.
The mood is more of resplendent marvel than one of ominous foreboding.
The track is deeply layered and complex with keyboard type voices coming
up through the mix at regular intervals. This is followed by the windy
distortion of "Spatium." Space like elements float along upon
a breeze of thick ambient textures and rumbles. This track has a much
darker tone than the pervious track, making the mood of the album eerier
as it progresses. "The Starwheel [Clockwise]" begins with
some klanky, reverberating sound on top of a flowing drone. Reverb and
loud sound move in and out of the mix as a dark soundscape develops.
The drones hum in the speakers while ominous sounds move across the
treacherous soundscape. "Klockstapeln" is an eerie and perhaps
darker than the prior track. The sounds remind me of flocks of carnivorous
birds flying amidst the haze and smoke of a volcanic landscape. Ok,
so the visions I see through the music probably aren't the artists,
but they certainly prove that the music evokes very strong images. "The
Starwheel [Counterclockwise]" begins with the sounds of what might
be giant cogs churning. The drones are still dark, but they resume their
spacey feel. Bangs, pops and clicks work their through the drifting
soundscape. This track almost reminds me of breathing as it pulses and
drones throughout its 4:46 time. "A Room Between the Rooms"
is a quieter track with brief moments of elevated volume. There are
what seems to be distorted water dribbles in the mix and dark drones
flowing throughout the track. The mood continues the surreal dream that
is soundtracked by Kammarheit. "Sleep After Toyle, Part After Stormy
Seas" begins with a more subtle and hopeful tone. Eventually, very
cool melodic samples echo midst the drones. This is joined by a loud
drone that comes into the mix and develops as the track progresses.
As the soundscape builds throughout the album as a whole, you really
get a sense of change throughout, as if the theme of an altered landscape
permeates the album. "All Quiet in the Land of Frozen Scenes"
finishes the album with a soft drone, feedback, and underlying rumbles.
The wind once again blows over the soundscape and ends the disc on a
peaceful and beautifully dark note. 5/5
From the Moving Hands webzine (Sweden)
In the vein of Swedish Dark Ambient project; Raison
dêtre comes Kammarheit, also from Sweden and the dark melancholic
child of a Mr Pär Boström. Even if The Starwell
reminds me of Raison dêtre this is quite different on the
same time. Quite hard to explain but this has a more mystic and melancholic
feeling to it. Its a very complex kind of Dark Ambient with lots
of different sounds and noises and with great diversity between the
tracks. I wonder where he gets all those sounds and I really would like
to see into the mind of this composer.
I like the fact that the sound grows in some of the songs and gets a
bit louder and breaks out a bit from the ordinary dark ambient low-pitched
sound. The artwork to the album is also great and for those who buy
this CD a poster is enclosed with a really dark and sombre painting
of a dead tree and some birds which also is the cover to the digipack
which it is released on. Of course you see a very small sample of the
cover here but check it out in full size instead.
I can talk on and on about what inner visions I see when I hear the
different tracks on this release but that is up to you to do yourselves.
Mr Boström has captured the dismal and dark feeling in a great
way and I get extra caught in myself when I hear the track Klockstapeln.
Mmmm, great stuff.
8/10, Johannes van der Meer
From the Re:Gen magazine (Sweden)
Kammarheit is Pär Boström, a dark ambient
composer in the same vein as many artists on the Cold Meat Industry
roster. His latest release conjures up a range of sonic environments,
from foggy, gull-flecked ocean skies to desolate wastelands. Many of
these compositions are less grim and ominous than quietly mournful.
“Hypnagoga,” for example, begins the album with soft fuzz,
reminiscent of distant locomotives heard from across windswept plains,
and then eventually adds clearer, higher-pitched tones; the effect is
lonely, yet peaceful. “All Quiet in the Land of Frozen Scenes”
is similarly tranquil, with tidal rumblings that fade into soft waves,
evoking the stillness after a thunderstorm has passed, while “A
Room Between the Rooms” starts out epic and menacing, but ends
with gentle buzzing and tinkling chimes. The ebbing and flowing layers
of “Spatium” are more foreboding, while “Sleep After
Toyle, Port After Stormie Seas” is almost abrasive at times, with
echoing clangs and harsh whirring sounds interrupting the bleakly hypnotic
arpeggios of muffled string pads. “Starwheel (Clockwise)”
evokes decaying piers and rusty ships in the harbor as foghorns drone
and seabirds wheel on the horizon, while the moans and echoes of “Klockstapeln”
summon up scenes of a deserted central European village, empty of any
sign of life but for the muffled clanging of church bells. Despite the
minimal nature of this kind of music, Boström employs his limited
palette of reverberations and endlessly sustained tones to paint soundscapes
that are wonderfully expressive, if dreary. A masterful album, The Starwheel
exemplifies the potential of the dark ambient scene.
From the Funprox webzine (Holland)
Two
years after “Asleep And Well Hidden”, Kammarheit from Sweden
is back with a new dark ambient cd on Cyclic Law. An album with a evocative
and melancholic style. It contains over three quarters of an hour of
accessible dark soundscapes, with not too heavy drones and melodic layers
of sound washing over you. Various subtle percussive details and field
samples are added to create a rich and mysterious framework. "The
Starwheel" is very serene and very atmospheric, It reminds me of
some work by Raison d'Etre, for instance on a track like 'Klockstapeln',
which has a solemn, almost religious atmosphere. One of the best Cyclic
Law releases so far. Comes in a suitable
black&white digipack with a small poster.
From the Virus Magazine (U.S.A.)
Kammarheit’s “The Starwheel”
is another in a series of great dark ambient releases from the Cyclic
Law label. This is Kammarheit’s first release in two years. First
off, I always find it incredible as to how some of the higher-echelon
ambient artists are able to approximate organic sound via electronic
means. Pär Boström is one such artist, and he accomplishes
this amalgamation of organics and electronics effortlessly on “The
Starwheel”, using a maelstrom of subtle textures, cavernous echo,
and low-end geo-rhythms. This music on this CD is both spiritually inclined
and physically strong, as both aspects are reinforced by the powerful
elements of earth and sky. My impression is that Boström sought
to capture moments in space/time where/when the subterranean and the
atmospheric collide, with neither element dominating the other. As to
be expected with ambient music, there is the usual repetitiveness. This
repetition is a necessary evil because with any successful design, there
must be a pervasive element that creates structure, reference, and law,
otherwise ambient would be just a string of abstract sounds. Consistency
is key here, and although there are no tracks that stand out from the
others, poetic titles such as the Lovecraftian “A Room Between
the Rooms”, “Sleep After Toyle, Port After Stormie Seas”,
and “All Quiet in the Land of Frozen Scenes” mark the end
of the CD in vivid fashion. But the CD lends itself to the concept that
life never really ends, as the stark landscape that remains will eventually
rejuvenate in time.
From the Maelstrom webzine (U.S.A.)
The Starwheel takes a refreshing approach to its
music: short and sweet. No twenty minute tracks that tremble on and
on – not even a song that crosses the seven minute mark. A quick
fix of ambience, just what the doctor ordered. Kammarheit ultimately
lets us see that dreams don’t need to last a full night. You need
to pay attention, but once you get into the groove, the slick and "10cc
– I’m not in love" sounding groove, you’re hooked.
Hold on, its none of the pop antics, but rather the lush synth intermezzo
of that slow dance disco hit track that closely resembles the sound
this record is going for. It is gently washed away in reverb and immense
sounding sonic landscapes. Perfect for late night meditation sessions.
No need for me to go on and on about something so simple: Kammarheit
delivers a short, rich and utterly beautiful album. If you are an ambient
fan in any way shape or form, this is a record that you need to buy.
(8.5/10)
From the Ventrilocution webzine (Portugal)
Cosmic-tinged ambient music is indeed the epithet
for the exquisite and outlandish. What it hinders in the pulsating and
vibrating drones is far more disquieting and disturbing than the blatantly
dark and obscure-tagged music, in view of the fact that this genre,
as I see it, is merely an interface for your mind to drift from, and
to consider it as an end in itself only restricts the power of its evocative
nature. For this reason, one can assume there's a certain intellectual
ritual commonly associated with this kind of music and, consequently,
only an adequate state of mind can provide all the latent inherent potential
to flourish. This is what somehow sets the deliverance of artists like
Kammarheit apart from ambient music in general, particularly that derived
from Eno's school.
'The Starwheel', Pär Boström's Kammarheit's second offering,
is a definite case of superior layer arrangement of the long, peaceful
yet somehow disquieting drones. Intertwining many sublime sonic elements
moulded into one immense and gargantuan aural gravitational slab, divided
in eight pieces, the slow and eerie progression of the tracks speaks
volumes for itself. 'The Starwheel' immediately prompts to a scenario
of vast unknown and apprehensive proportions - probably dubbed by some
as motionless and therefore uninteresting - requiring one's ability
to depict cinematic sequences while fuelled by the music itself. I believe
this album has the full potential to serve as a platform for a contemplative
and explanatory introspective mindset if the listener carefully allows
himself to it, meaning that this is, strangely enough, the kind of music
that demands an active approach, and yet that's the utmost quality I
can pinpoint in this release and others with the same class. Take the
Aural Hypnox artists for instance, and that's what I mean about eminent
odd ambient music.
There's a small amount of albums of this kind I can endure with pleasure,
and this is undeniably one of them. Recommended.
From the Chain DLK webzine (U.S.A.)
The first thing you notice on this album is the
visuals. Before yu even open it up, you know that what you are in for
is dark and bleak. It comes in a grayscale digipack with dreamlike imagery.
And the music does not disappoint. This is really good, solid dark ambient
drone music. The most fitting comparisons are Inade, older Lustmord,
and fellow Swede, Ovum. What more can I say? This is really good stuff.
It’s the kind of music that fades into the background, emerging
at times to make its presence known. This is a wonderful mix of drone
with other elements such as noises and barely perceptible voices bubbling
to the surface just long enough for you to notice before they submerge
again. This is perfect music to relax or read to. The only one problem
I see with this album is that at 46:10, it’s a bit short. This
is the kind of album that you sink into like a hot bath. I would like
it to last a it longer. Highly recommended. Review by: Brett "Eskaton"
From the Heathen Harvest webzine (U.S.A.)
Those familiar with Canada’s Cyclic Law
records have come to know that each release produced by Cyclic Law records
is given the utmost attention and scrutinized in its entirety in order
to deliver their audience only quality music. As Cyclic Law has grown
as a label, they have carefully chosen the artists they choose to produce
and this has resulted in confidence amongst those of us who rely upon
Cyclic Law to supply our musical needs. Following in this tradition
of music and quality comes the highly anticipated second full-length
album by Swedish dark ambient master Kammarheit. Cyclic Law follows
up the initial Kammarheit release of two years ago with the stunning
new release of Kammarheit – The Starwheel. Kammarheit’s
hibernation of the past two years has accumulated into a stunning dark
ambient album filled with delicate, absorbing compositions that delve
deeper than previous recordings. Most dark ambient music falls into
one of two categories either it delivers stunning insight and is completely
absorbing or else it is a jumbled mess of drones and eerie sounds thrown
together without much talent. Unfortunately, the market is flooded with
talent less musicians jamming rumbling noise together without a real
focus or clear intention. Fortunately, there are highly talented musicians
such as Kammarheit who selectively use sound, atmospheres, and drones
to communicate elusive feelings, thoughts, and impressions that often
remain beyond the captivity of art and expression.
“The Starwheel” is one of the rare accomplishments within
the dark ambient music genre that has successfully expanded beyond the
rattling sounds of metal objects emerging from dense layers of reverberating
sound. Kammarheit has achieved a very delicate and finely tuned balance
of dark ambient atmospheres created by layering sounds and exploring
the possibility of the subtleness of drones and ambient atmospherics.
Where many artist lay it on heavy Kammarheit has retreated allowing
his chosen sounds and atmospherics to expand and swell into long passages
of sound that gently carry the listener within the music with obtrusion
or force. Rather than overtly seeking an esoteric focus the music rather
invokes the listeners own sense of spirit as you drift outward from
your center gently guided upon the soft waves of sound. “The Starwheel”
is bathed in subtlety and nuance as the music opens like a crack of
light in smothering darkness. First small and almost undetectable, then
gradually growing to become engulfing, the music progresses like a slow
sunrise leaving little wake but supplying great illumination. Kammarheit
expertly constructs song after song capable of suspending the listener
between the world of consciousness and dreams. With eyes closed and
the music playing at a moderate volume you quickly feel yourself tugged
away from your moorings and set adrift in a soft void. The journeys
need not be defined by destination or intent but rather it is one of
openness and exploration for its own sake. Permeating every song is
a spiritual fragility that is hard to form words around. Like those
too brief moments in life when you feel you mind and heart nearly embracing
the infinite the music of “The Starwheel” skirts the edges
of the infinite threatening to loose the listener into the stars themselves.
This sense of spirituality or heightened awareness comes naturally through
the music as opposed to being promoted. With eyes closed and body relaxed,
you will find yourself reliving moments you had thought you lost.
Whether the music of Kammarheit transports you into the endless depths
of the starry universe, across mist-covered moors, or deep into your
own soul you can trust that the journey will be led with finesse. If
you are looking for music to relax into or seeking to embark on an inspirational
journey not driven by an overt narrative then “The Starwheel”
is waiting for you. Allow Kammarheit the opportunity to engage your
imagination and loose you from the confines of your rational mind as
you are given the opportunity to experience this shimmering voyage of
sound.
From the Music Extreme webzine (Argentina)
This is a dark ambient release where each sound
is delivered in order to create the darkest of atmospheres possible.
The melancholic "Hypnanoga" opens this album with a dark atmosphere
sound that is joined by some sort of breathing and wind noises and also
by other sounds that soon will transport you to the world of Pär
Boström the mind behind Kammarheit. The music here is deep and
slow with always evolving ideas that mutate on each composition in order
to transmit the listener a coherent idea that is behind each of the
tunes here. With no doubt this is an ideal album to listen with your
eyes wide shut because in tat way you can listen all the elements that
are appearing and disappearing on each composition creating multiple
ideas and environments. The keyboards and samples here construct all
the music and you will be soon surrounded by this multiplicity of ideas
that each compsoition here has. This is pure dark ambient with the ebst
elements of the style and with Pär Boström limitless imagination.
From the Les Acteurs De L'ombre webzine (France)
A l'instar de l'effet d'un Requiem For Abandoned
Souls de Raison d'Etre, le dark ambient profondément épuré
de Kammarheit mérite paradoxalement (eu égard à
cette fausse simplicité justement) de nombreuses écoutes
pour déverser sa subtantifique moelle à votre entendement.
Le nectar délivre des effluves très spacieuses, le suédois
investit un espace atonal dépassant les frontières terrestres.
Ici Pär Boström semble naviguer sur des vagues, des ondes
soniques. Je parle d'ondes et non de musique car justement le dark ambient
confine souvent à un hermétisme musical depuis l'avénement
de Lustmord, le maître. Une des principales motivations de ce
dernier était justement d'expérimenter via sa musique
des armes militaires non-léthales au départ plans de travail
de l'armée américaine. Le dark ambient peut se montrer
très épuré comme Zoat Aon ou Aeoga en contraste
avec une certaine cacophonie gorgée d'industriel d'autres artistes
finlandais comme Halo Manash et son superbe dernier opus de dark ambient
symphonique : Syoma. Mais ici Kammarheit pousse l'épuration vraiment
très loin, certains titres semblant prendre le pouls d'une quelconque
planète inconnue sur orbite d'une galaxie tout aussi inconnue
de l'homme. Car c'est en cela que les boucles sonores reliées
les unes aux autres par Boström sont subtilement oniriques : susciter
un voyage qui en étant radicalement audiophile (mieux vaut s'accomoder
d'une très bonne qualité de lecture audio) peut s'imaginer
comme intersidéral dans l'entendement de l'auditeur. Dans tout
cela, comment jauger une telle expérience avec un système
numérique ? Le dark ambient est une musique trop en marge finalement
pour susciter autre chose que des réactions (de détracteurs
ou de thuriféraires) très personnelles et purement émotionnelles.
The Starwheel est un espace sonique qui « souffle » (les
boucles soufflent et s'étalent délicatement dans l'oreille),
qui s'écoute droit et détendu dans un noir complet allongé
sur sa couche urbaine. Et de cette couche urbaine et quotidienne l'on
pourra peut être pour les plus imaginatifs se laisser bercer par
un voyage intersidéral. Farfelu pour certains, ce voyage dans
les méandres du cerveau, la maîtrise de l'épuration
présentée par Kammarheit le vaut bien. N'est-ce pas tout
ce que l'on demande d'une oeuvre d'art ?
From the Neo Form webzine (Germany)
Pär Boström scheint ein sehr ruhiger Mensch zu sein. Nicht
nur, das man 2 Jahre nichts von ihm hörte, kehrt er nun auch sehr
still zurück. Sein neustes Werk "The Starwheel" präsentiert
sich auch sehr ruhig, es scheint gar so, als wolle der Künstler
die Ruhe seiner Heimat Schwedens auf CD bannen. Nach mehrmaligem Genießen
einzelner Klangfragmente wird einem erst bewusst, dass es sich hier
um ein sehr persönliches Album handelt. "In der Ruhe liegt
die Kraft“ wäre wohl ein passender Titel, um dieses Werk
zu umschreiben. Fernab von jeder Hektik wird ein Teufelskreis durchbrochen.
Der Mensch verursacht Tag ein Tag aus Lärm durch Maschinen, Pär
zügelte diese Maschinen und macht sie wieder zu dem was sie sein
sollen, einen Diener des Menschen. Für Freunde extrem ruhiger und
tiefer sphärischer Klänge, deren Geschmack sich in Richtung
Tor Lundvall’s orientiert, dürfte dieses Album mit 8 Titeln
und einer Gesamtspielzeit von 46,06 Minuten eine Massage für die
Seele sein. Optisch ziert ein karger Baum das Cover, welcher zur musikalischen
Darbietung eine optisch passende Ergänzung darstellt. Das Werk
ist bei Cyclic Law erschienen und liegt in einer Limitierung von 1000
Stück vor.
From the Aural Pressure webzine (U.K.)
Following on…after a two year silence and
wait…from the dynamic Cyclic Law records debut "Asleep and
Well Hidden" comes Par Bostrom’s latest release "The
Starwheel". Building on the success of "Asleep and Well Hidden"
Par takes us on a journey of personal discovery. Utilising drones and
electronic atmospheres this is a musical trip spread over eight tracks
that is neither light / space / dark ambient but in a world of its own
making. Music to contemplate and give oneself over to completely. A
ritual and spiritual cleansing of the soul. To dream the dream and forget.
Forget about time. Forget about worries. Closing the eyes to reflect…
The universe created. Planets aligning. Stars formed. Twilight gleaming
. Atoms forming. Cells splitting. Rays from the sun giving warmth and
hope. The beginning of evolution. Of Gods and men. A celebration of
the seasons. Sacrifices made. Blood spilt on hallowed ground. Dreams
of a richer existence. Nightmares of a future to come. Lost. Lost in
the music. Pictures conjured in the brain of a perfect world which will
never exist. Floating. Higher and higher. Through rain. Through clouds.
Past the point of no return. Looking at a blue green planet called home.
A tear shed for our pathetic destructive ways. The fears of accountability
at our selfish stupidity. Thoughts. More damning thoughts…Brought
back to earth. The musical cycle completed. Reality bites. The beautiful
emotional trip over. For it is now. But is was great while it lasted.
Overblown? Over exaggerated? Been hitting the meths? I don’t think
so. "The Starwheel" has a finger firmly on the pulse. It’s
only restraint is the power of your own imagination. As ambient sound
sculptures go this has met the panicle of excellence. Striding forth
as a colossus. Swatting all before it. A monstrous creation unleashed.
Stunningly rendered vistas for the mind and an absolutely essential
purchase.
From the Dagaz-Music webzine (Portugal)
Kammarheit is one of the most precious projects held by the excellent
Canadian label Cyclic Law.
The first thing to be noticed in this 12th Cycle is the astonishing
artwork and CD presentation by Pär Boström himself and Frédéric
Arbour. A beautiful gatefold cd sleeve printed in dark grey in textured
cardboard with silver lettering is the correct approach for the forty-six
minutes of not less dark grey soundscapes. Also included is a small
poster with the image taken by Mr. Lönebrink used on the cd cover.
This is the second Kammarheit release in Cyclic Law [for me unfortunately
the first, as I missed the first one – Cyclic Law 3rd Cycle] and
I must say that it became one of my favourite CDs at the moment. It
caught all my senses. “The Starwheel” is composed of eight
tracks of the purest and most well done dark ambient I ever heard. The
first track [hypnagoga] is an excellent introduction to the whole edition;
four dense minutes, very melancholic and intense are, at the first listening,
more than enough to catch all our attention and enjoy the complete CD.
Aside the marvellous quality of the compositions, full of nuances, drones
and shading landscapes, this Kammerheit’s CD also stands out for
the quality of the recordings. The sound is always full and powerful
even on the emptiest moments. For those who do not like very much dark-ambient
sonorities this is definitely the right project to listen to; after
this one you will know that dark-ambient can be much more than boring
soundscapes. And those who are acquainted with these sonorities will
give to this Pär Boström’s second meditation the much
deserved special place on their collection.
From the Kronic webzine (Italy)
Stelle senza luce. La copertina è cupa,
di un grigio molto tetro e data la capacità della Cyclic Law
di dare immagine e corpo a suoni e musica, possiamo aspettarci un album
carico di torbidi sentimenti velati da un buio tenebroso ed angosciante.
In ogni caso non ci vuole molto ad etichettare „The Starwheel‰
negli archivi della dark ambient. Ipotesti confermata dalla provenienza
geografica di Kammarheit, la fredda e gelida Svezia. Pär Boström
(questo il nome della mente che si cela dietro Kammarheit) fa partire
la ruota stellare con „Hypnagoga‰, ambient di stampo tipicamente
Cold Meat Industry con nascoste doti melodiche, mentre in „Spatium‰
l‚atmosfera si fa più inquieta e meno rassicurante con
bordate di synth catacombali. La title track è lenta nel suo
drones che procede stancamente in una musica pesantemente derivativa,
come la successiva „Klockstalpen‰ ma che dispone di più
frecce dovute ad una serie più ricca di suoni e droni per un‚atmosfera
da film dell‚orrore. Una seconda versione di „The Starwheel‰
si rigenera in una traccia dove la tristezza raggiunge l‚apice
della sua mesta espressione, musica rarefatta e lentissima che ti attacca
un‚angoscia palpabile che non viene più via. Il lato più
cattivo e maligno risorge con „A Room Between the Rooms‰,
ambient non molto differente dal resto dell‚album, dilatato ed
evanescente con sottili tocchi di tastiere dal piglio infinito e leggero.
Decisamente meno minimale e più piena l‚esecuzione di „Sleep
After Toyle‰, la base è sempre caratterizzata da solida
e sfuggente dark ambient svedese ma una serie di loops, campane dilatate
ed inserti sonori riescono a dargli un‚aria più coinvolgente
con debolissimi sentori di musica industriale. La conclusiva „All
Quiet in the Land of Frozen Scenes‰ è musicalmente fedele
al suo gelido titolo, le fredde invenzioni di Kammarheit non abbandonano
l‚assetto minimale di „The Starwheel‰ e sono timidi
scrosci di vento ancor più agghiacciante a dare qualche sentore
di suono dinamico. Kammarheit è bravo, ci sa fare con il sentiero
intrapreso con il CD prodotto dalla canadese Cyclic Law, è capace
di infondere la giusta atmosfera con musica fredda, sottile, come un
corpo senza anima. Ma è una proposta che solo i più convinti
appassionati del genere sapranno apprezzare. Troppo minimale, pochi
stacchi ed una fine non molto differente dall‚inizio. Un Œciclo‚
per cui vale la sacrosanta legge: for fans only! Al solito ottimo digipack
cartonato con scritte in argento e suggestivo poster∑
From the Absolute Zero webzine (U.S.A.)
To begin with the packaging and presentation is
brilliant, lovely cardboard textured case with Silver leaf on it. Inside
comes with a poster of the cover art. Cyclic law puts much care into
what they do and this i respect as its no small feat. The Music is more
of the Drone/ Minimalist Neo Ambient work of composers like Raison D
Etre or like what artists like Robert Rich or Steve Roach create. Lush
dark drifts and swells. Small bursts of cymbals and chimes with distant
strings and neoclassical/soundtrack works that would fit well in movies
like The Sixth Sense or The Ring. Kammarheit will surely appeal to fans
of the following labels Cold spring, CMI and Memento Mori. Its the kind
of release for a cold dark winters night with the candles lit reading
your favorite book or relaxing in the tub. It takes you to places of
solitude and your oneness. Truly one of the new composers of the 21st
century you need to take notice and watch as they grow.
From the Necroweb webzine (Germany)
Kammarheits zweites offizielles Album "The Starwheel" ist
ein düster-melancholisches Dark-Ambient Album, das es versteht
immer wieder kleine Highlights und Akzente in die Songs zu weben, ohne
das diese aufdringlich oder deplaziert wirken. Die so aufgelockerten,
großflächigen Klangteppiche bekommen dadurch einen leicht
bedrohlich-mystischen Touch, der dem Charakter der Songs zusätzlich
den Rücken stützt. Die Tracks sind durchwegs klar strukturiert,
versteckte Details gibt es auf diesem Album nicht zu entdecken, dafür
aber sich soundmäßig klar voneinander abhebende Songs. Zeitweise
erinnern die Songs, was Struktur und Klangbild betrifft, entfernt an
ältere Sachen von Raison D'Être, ohne jedoch ein billiger
Abklatsch davon zu werden.
Zwei Jahre, inklusive einiger unvorhergesehener Verzögerungen,
sind seit dem Debut "Asleep And Well Hidden" des aus Schweden
stammenden Projekts Kammarheit vergangen. Vergleicht man diese nun,
so sind sie sich vom grundlegenden Aufbau her sehr ähnlich, doch
bei "The Starwheel" gibt es eben genau jene kleinen Passagen,
die etwas mehr in den Vordergrund treten und sich vom Drumherum besser
abheben, so daß die neuen Songs im Paket ausgereifter und abwechslungsreicher
erscheinen als noch das Debüt.
Mit "The Starwheel" hat Pär Boström ein Album kreiert
das man auch mal einfach nebenbei laufen lassen kann, ohne daß
es sofort eintönig oder langweilig klingt. Wer sich jedoch gerne
mit dem gehörten Material auf längere Dauer intensiv auseinandersetzen
will, wird durch den einfachen Aufbau der Titel etwas enttäuscht
sein. Nichts desto weniger ist "The Starwheel" ein schönes
Album geworden, und gerade durch seine klare Strukturierung auch bestens
für Dark-Ambient-Neulinge geeignet ist.
From the Heavy Music Portal webzine (Italy)
Pär Boström ritorna sulle scene con il suo progetto Kammarheit
dopo ben due anni di silenzio e lo fa con un album che segna un deciso
passo in avanti per lo stile del musicista. Il dark ambient proposto
dal nostro sembra, infatti, essersi qui arricchito di una più
maggiore profondità sia nei suoni che nell'approccio, donando
alle composizioni un impatto e una dimensione emotiva che troppo spesso
vengono a mancare in lavori similari. Lo stesso utilizzo dei droni risulta
meno stereotipato e si stacca dai cliché dei soliti illustri
maestri, mostrando una predisposizione alla ricerca di un suono personale
e di una propria strada. Nel complesso, dunque, questo lavoro si lascerà
apprezzare dagli appassionati del genere, pur non raggiungendo ancora
le vette di perfezione e maturità compositiva necessarie per
tentare la scalata al trono della scena dark ambient. La peculiarità
di questo album è un uso rarefatto dei suoni, evitando ogni appesantimento
delle trame e utilizzando il volume come vero e proprio elemento di
scrittura, anche nel momento in cui lo stesso si avvicina allo zero
e lascia una sensazione di vuoto nell'ascoltatore. Fruscii, dunque,
note accennate e brusii vanno a sostituire bombastici e roboanti colpi
ad effetto, aggiungendo ai brani un tocco di classe e di raffinatezza
sconosciuto a tanti teatranti e circensi dei droni. Un disco che pur
non facendo gridare al miracolo ribadisce l'abilità della Cyclic
Law nel produrre lavori interessanti e mai dozzinali. Promosso.
Dark ambient in punta di piedi
From the Gothtronic webzine
(Holland)
“Starwheel” is plainly perfect.Kammarheit is Par Bostroms
project. After “Asleep & Well Hidden” we had to wait
two years to get blown of our feet by his melancholic soundscapes and
dark ambient. The limited edition of 1000 copies comes in a gatefold
cd sleeve with a poster. This packaging is really beautiful and makes
this a recommendable album just because of this piece of artwork. Personally
I like the fact that Par also is responsible for the pictures. And there
is so much more. With opener ‘Hypnagoga’ the tone is set:
well thought through and slowly climbing to a perfect ending. The drones
presented by Par are, contrary to some of his fellow droners, not very
long, but perfectly arranged. Eight songs are put on this album of approximately
45 minutes. The song ‘Starwheel’ has two versions: ‘Clockwise’
and ‘Counterclockwise’. But this wasn’t my opinion
the first time I heard it. "Starwheel" is definitely an album
that slowly grows on you. At first I didn’t really hear the separate
songs: it seemed like one long drone to me. Now, every time I put this
album in my stereo, I hear new tunes, moments, tones and spheres.“Starwheel”
is also a perfect night album. The mood is very calm and serene and
gently rocks you to sleep. Yes, this second mediation - the words
with which this album is presented - works wonderfully.
From the Guts Of Darkness webzine (France)
Deux ans après le superbe 'Asleep and well hidden' le suédois
Pär Boström s'attaque à ce qui semble être un
concept sur le temps et l'infini. Les variations créées
par les 8 compositions de ce 'Starwheel' sont beaucoup plus évidentes
que sur l'album précédent, les nappes se font à
la fois tristes et intemporelles, se rapprochant par moments des sons
utilisés par les russes de Reutoff dans leurs incursions mystiques.
Toujours aussi onirique et mélancolique, la musique de Kammarheit
transporte au-delà de toutes frontières visibles, et se
plait à perdre l'auditeur dans des dimensions insoupçonnées,
inquiétantes bien sûr, mais également rassérénantes
pour peu que l'on soit sensible au moindre changement de tonalité
et d'atmopshère. Nappes douces et profondes, basses présentes
sans être prédominantes, bref un équilibre parfait
pour s'immerger pendant trois quart d'heure dans un univers ésotérique,
au sens premier du terme. 'The starwheel' propose une vision plus personnelle
de la musique de Kammarheit, plus inspirée, s'accrochant implacablement
aux tripes et au coeur. Une vision venue du froid et qui pourtant n'empêche
pas que l'on puisse y trouver un refuge inattendu. Génial et
inépuisable.
From the Morpheus Music webzine (U.K.)
STYLE: Beatless, cinematic, dark-ambient of an epic nature. Heavy swells
and oozings of tone suggest a crawling viscosity, whilst minimal throbbings
within the mass of the music hint at a living entity. Although ambient
beds form the bulk of the sound, surface details in the form of tappings,
wind sounds, muted chimes and echoing percussive structures add to the
complexity of The Starwheel - often these are at their most distinct
during the intros and outros. Pieces often seem to sway slowly or to
rise and fall like an enormous breathing thing. Rumbles and dense currents
of harmony create a powerful gravity throughout.
MOOD: Weighty, shadowy slabs of sound - thick with layer upon layer
of texture. Kammarheit's sound is a brooding, almost eerie one, yet
not disturbing, in fact there is a serenity, a comfortableness here
in this dimly lit world. The Starwheel is a suite of eight ponderous
pieces mixed seamlessly into one, portending an unseen vastness, a monumental
scale. Perhaps influenced by Kiktor Kvant's the inner cover art, associations
with immense machinery, colossal wheels come to mind.
ARTWORK: Lovely classy artwork in a gatefold sleeve made from quality
board. No plastic anywhere. On the front cover the moody ashen greys
of a monochrome sky backlight a sinewy dead tree that looks to have
been just left by a group of birds in flight. Silver embossed lettering
sits regally within the broad black hillside below. This very attractive
image is reproduced inside the package as a poster - again on quality
paper. Minimal text interferes with the photography outside - track
titles and credits being placed on the inner right panel. Here too all
is grey, dark and heavy. Viktor Kvant's montage inside creates an impression
that fits so well with the music ... you might well enjoy a visit to
his site Dreamhours.
OVERALL: Hailing from Sweden, this is Kammarheit's second album - released
on Cyclic Law. A consistent CD with a profound mass full of emotive
drones. Pär Boström produces aural environments that feel
like soundtrack material - track titles 'A Room Between The Rooms',
'All Quite In The Land Of Frozen Scenes', 'Spatium' carry the same sense
of the enigmatic that the music embodies so well. Whether the overall
effect is one of melancholy, foreboding or simply drama depends as with
much ambient) very much on the outlook of the listener.
WHO WILL LIKE THIS ALBUM: Ambient fans who prefer no beats and like
their landscapes bleak, impressive and moving. Kammarheit maintains
a similar mood throughout The Starwheel and so try this CD if you prefer
music with a strong focus rather than a ranging variety of sound. If
you fancy checking this CD out pay a visit to Cycliclaw.com.
From the kuolleen musiikin yhdistys webzine (Finland)
The Swedish Kammarheit's second album shows that a lot of progress has
happened since the rather boring debut. the style is still essentially
the same: large-scale, soundtrack-like melodic dark ambient dominates
the entire disc. It is massive and scenic, and while the material may
not be of the most original kind, Kammarheit is very good at what it
does. Throughout the album, the music is very theatrical, in both the
good and the bad sense of the word. On one hand it is closer to performance
than to mood-creating, but on the other hand its precisely that show-like
quality which makes it possible to create clear images for a listener.
This is an ambient record that is obviously listened to, not experienced.
When that point is accepted, Starwheel's good traits - its really, really
good traits - start to become clear. While there is nothing really new
on it, it is extremely enjoyable to listen to. The album is a singular
sonic whole, the pieces of which still differ from one another. And
this is its true strength: Starwheel is an extremely well-functioning
album despite not being special per se. It sounds intriguing every time
one listens to it, and is not easily forgotten into becoming just background
music. It is not a particularly wonderful work, yet is so pleasing that
those buying it will certainly not end up
disappointed. The critic in me would like to say that The Starwheel
is just a well-made, "nice" album, but for some reason I've
liked it very much from the moment I first started listening to it.
Therefore I'll call it the ambient equivalent of pop music in the most
positive sense possible - it's not necessarily very original, but has
been made with a lot of skill and is very easy to like. I highly recommend
it to those who can enjoy their ambient without too much criticism.
As long as you do not try to be too analytical, this record will be
a source of definite enjoyment. It may seem familiar at times, but has
been created with as much skill and care as possible.
-Jiituomas, Kuolleen Musiikin Yhdistys
KAMMARHEIT "Asleep And Well Hidden" CD
From The Sekuencias De Culto webzine ( Spain)
From deep within the realms of the superb Canadian label Cyclic Law
comes the new offering of this brilliant Swedish act called Kammarheit.
This is officially the first album by this very convincing one-man project,
though he has already released some material previously in CDr format;
to be precise, four discs. Also, Kammarheit took part on the essential
and never enough recognised compilation Nord Ambient Alliance,
also on this same label (see review on these same pages). This is a
first edition of 500 copies and comes in a six-panel sleeve with a textured
cardboard surface including a poster, and presenting nice black and
silver tonalities that help very attractive photographs convincingly
going hand in hand with the interpretation of sounds. Once more, Cyclic
Law, in this its third cycle, is demonstrating both in terms of luxury
presentations and high quality music that is an outstanding and first
class music label, with a growing reputation after each new issue.
I have been increasingly and constantly listening to this album since
I received it a couple of months ago, and from the very beginning I
perceived it as too short. This is highly positive, simply because I
think this is a consideration based on the fact that the intensity of
this music is surpassing and when you appreciate second after second
of a release it does not matter its duration, you always feel it short!
Six tracks and forty one minutes of music connected with the Dark Ambient
style but with more than enough subtleties and masterly treated melodic
layers to not simply link this album with restrictive labels. Of course,
this is Ambient at its bleakest and darkest definition, but I feel every
time I listen to this CD that it offers something more, it goes deepen
and adapts the style with a special and personal perspective. The composer
delves well enough into real sadness and attractive monotony, creating
beauty from pure ugliness, and digging equally inside emotional and
harrowing states of mind. This is an album to concentrate on, and that
serves the listener when recapitulating his/her dreams and nightmares,
visions of a grievous existence not lacking in alluring visions.
Hiding is the first gate that slowly opens as it subtlety
shows its varied sound tools, and droning ambience predominates. This
first track provides serenity and static atmospheres and soon dreamy
soundscapes appear. Extensive melodies flourish, meanwhile, a nice characteristic,
already practised in the compositions included on the aforementioned
compilation, is again employed here: sound layers are frequently adorned
by cunning minimalist noises here and there while, main melodies gain
or lose importance. Later on, and through nearly half of the track the
atmosphere intensifies for a moment, and fading weak harmonies return
cyclically, even we perceive a feeble impression of sacral loops nearly
unnoticeable. The Ruins And The Serene is an eloquent title,
that defines partly the Kammarheits style. Drones are here stronger
and the ambience tormenting and darker. Main layers intervene as large
and thick tides that come and go as an eternal process with little modifications,
except that of a shorter presence like passing fleeting shadows. This
second piece is more focused to create states of concentrations, perhaps,
like a pleasant mantra. We are now further from the gentler early atmospheres
of the album, now For The Innermost is a flow of stronger
black ambience with the sporadic presence of short interludes where
intensity decreases and metallic-like distorted instants emerge from
nowhere to provide even more restlessness.
Turn the volume up and you will perceive vibrating low frequencies,
which are the strong tools of the next, under the title of The
Poignant. It creates a void where spectral sounds have its place,
like falling eternally into a spiralling infinity. At least this is
how I perceive their interventions, like desperate voices of the unknown,
expressions of unnamed beings. The shorter track of the album, but with
no doubt one of my favourite compositions. From the active spaces of
the previous, towards the latent and dormant condition of Epitome,
a cold and nearly ethereal piece that seems to evolve lifeless, but
that contains an inherent force revealing tranquil layer-melodies almost
unappreciable, and a rather sinister evocation. Dreamhours
starts the last eight minutes of this great recording with a soothing
sound stratum over which the composer adds different drowsy atmospheres.
All is calmed down, some are nearly unappreciated due to their soft
presence, and others show real melodies, misty and blurred.
What I mostly like of this project is the capacity of offering desolated
landscapes through the power of beauty, portrayed in varied forms, and
by hypnotic ways represented in monotonous sound expressions. The wide
range of possibilities is only appreciated increasingly after a reiterative
listening, and I think one of the main virtues of Kammarheits
music is the possibility to evade reality, and to invent a new one that
obviously is built over the ruins of the previous. It is equally evident
the inducing power of this music, as the composer tries to offer it
as a medium of inner concentration and meditation.
Well, enough said, I just wanted to end commenting that this has been
mastered by Peter Pettersson (Sophia/Arcana) and that I hope to hear
more soon of Pär Boström and his creature in the near future.
F. Paco González
From the Twilight Zone webzine (Italy)
Kammarheit introduces its six inner dawns, darkambient slopes and sources
photographed with true tones and solemn diffusions. The music of Swedish
Pär Boström lingers on bewitched and magical details, like
the birth of an energy, the journey of a vocation, the flight of an
instinct, the reproduction of a spell, the passage of a tradition. Ruins
and the environment of Scandinavia once again prove themselves to be
a fertile soil for these refined atmospheres, as the origin of ancient
and sage cults, and always appreciated source of inspiration. We experience
from the first track the impact with this arboreal ambience, visited
by different effects and rustles, flown over by lunar omens, observed
by obscure presences. Powerful cyclic overlapping influences, "Asleep
and well hidden" is the mirror of rotating seasons and the witness
of invisible metamorphoses. All is quiet but all is changing in these
tracks, all is born again carrying eternal symbols and proof of immortality.
Precious material to muse upon and to elevate the spirit; another splendid
darkambient portrait by the shining Canadian label Cyclic Law. The solitude
of spirituality.
From the Heimdallr webzine (France)
KKammarheit is the Swedish project of Pär Boström. Already
known for his participation on the 'Nord Ambient Alliance' compilation,
this unipersonal formation renewed their confidence with the Canadian
label Cyclic Law for the release of a full length debut album 'Asleep
and Well Hidden'. This homogeneous dark ambient album is composed by
six pieces where abandoned, desolated and dark soundscapes combine with
minimalist waves of drones, organic sounds to create a dreamy, melancholic
and post apocalyptic ambiance...
The atmospheres are quite close to Raison d'Etre and Kammarheit's compositions
would perfectly suit images of lost, abandoned, ruined places... Mastered
by Peter Pettersson (Arcana, Sophia) this CD is limited to 500 copies
and comes in a luxuous six panel textured cardboard sleeve illustrated
with a few very suggestive black and white photos... and a 9" by
15" poster as well. Like the two previous Cyclic Law releases,
'Asleep and Well Hidden' benefits of a particular care relative to the
artwork and packaging. A pure captivating dark ambient album recommended
to those interested in a journey into their darkest dreams... Nathalie
F. Summer 2003
From the Funprox webzine (Holland)
Cyclic Law, the fast upcoming label from Montreal, delivers another
dark ambient gem. Cold Meat is really getting competition. Kammarheit,
a project of Pär Boström from Sweden, was already present
on the Nord Ambient Alliance compilation. This official debut album
was mastered by Peter Pettersson (Arcana, Sophia). "Asleep and
well hidden" is filled with desolate ambient soundscapes, full
of melancholy and solitude. The mood is comparable to Raison d'Etre
or Lustmord, with a more minimal sound, consisting of deep drones and
stretched out dark tones, taking you to a shadow world of ancient ruins,
barren lands and rumbling machines. The album is very coherent, if offers
serene brooding music for about 40 minutes, fine melancholic background
music. It is minimal and monotonous, but not boring. Nothing very innovative
here, but very pleasant to listen to if you appreciate melancholic dark
ambient.
From the Ortus Obscurum webzine (Sweden)
KAMMARHEIT is a project by a Swedish guy named Pär Boström.
The project was born in March 2000 as a way for Pär to express
his feelings for dark ruins and desolate places. The project eventually
evolved into for escaping the realities of the modern human world
and all of its burdens. "Melancholic harmony" is something
central to KAMMARHEIT's music and often the themes for the tracks derive
from stillness, darkness and melancholy.
Review:
Hiding and Dreamhours remind very much of the last two tracks on RAISON
D'ÊTRE's Enthralled by the Wind of Loneliness but even though
a parallel between the two projects exist, KAMMARHEIT's ambience is
deeper and more minimalistic with less serene elements. The basis of
the music are some really dark drones which gives it a very dense feel.
Recent albums I have heard which I find can be sorted into the same
folder as Kammarheit are DENSE VISION SHRINE's Magic and Mystery and
SLEEP RESEARCH FACILITY's Nostromo. Those of you who have heard the
Nord Ambient Alliance compilation CD will also know what to expect here.
KAMMARHEIT's music is excellent to just have in the background while
relaxing with closed eyes. It is homogenous and it almost completely
lacks noisier sections or elements of shock. No vocals emerge from the
music, nor is there any violent percussion, just a seeping flow of dreamy
ambience. Carefully as a spider's web, the music unfolds and soon the
listener finds himself trapped in the middle of it, halfway through
dream and reality. I think the strength of KAMMARHEIT lies in that they
have a certain golden formula in their music, it not being too minimal,
nor too extravagant. Small musical events are placed in the foreground,
yet there is always a very rich feel to the music and it is excellent
to just have in background while lying down visualising. Another parallel
which can be drawn to RAISON D'ÊTRE is the use of screeching metal
sounds. Much of Asleep and Well Hidden resemble the final tracks on
RAISON D'ÊTRE's The Empty Hollow Unfolds. KAMMARHIET may benefit
from some more originality, yet it must not in any way exploit their
sound since the atmosphere generating ability of their music is absolutely
brilliant. I presume their music will appeal to fans of very minimal,
obscure, yet not too noisy Dark Ambient. Ectonaut.
From the FluxEuropa webzine (U.K.)
KAMMARHEIT "Asleep And Well Hidden" CD Cyclic Law 3RD CYCLE
Kammarheit (the work of Pär Boström) delivers a dark ambient
soundscape conjuring a melancholic dreamland. The shadows and cold atmospherics
suggested - and achieved - by the drones and rumbles have a particularly
brooding and distinctly Nordic quality. Asleep And Well Hidden was mastered
by Peter Pettersson and is released on Frédéric Arbour's
Cyclic Law label.
RIK - 11 May 2003