Tout Bleu's second record, Otium, recalls a route where the electronic crosses paths with the acoustic. This new milestone in Genevan multi-instrumentalist Simone Aubert's (Massicot, Hyperculte) musical field represents a kind of fruitful deceleration. Initially conceived as a solo project in 2018, the act is now an exploration ground for the musicians gathered on Otium : Naomi Mabanda on the cello (Orchestre Tout Puissant Marcel Duchamp, Chien Mon Ami) and Luciano Turella on the alto (Irtum Branda) encounter the sampling machines of POL, that could already be found on the first eponymous album Tout Bleu. In Tout Bleu's music, the part-melodic, part-abrasive riffs reminiscent of Massicot are present, and so are the socially engaged, energetic singing of Hyperculte. However, the band, by using acoustic instruments, vocals and electric guitar in an unconventional way, draws an orchestral landscape that sometimes flirts with pop, and where strings merge in polyrythm on low tempo beats.
In Latin, otium suggests free time, detached from any contingency, a form of pure leisure, in the non-economic sense of the term, which is opposed to neg-otium, commerce. All Bleu claims this time of withdrawal, this productive, fertile and assumed idleness, which allows the group to unfold without hindrance its hypnotic and pulsating web, between krautrock trance and atmospheric no-wave. A sort of pre-rock spleen, Otium distils in nine tracks a dark, tense but soft music, nourished by hope. The arrangements exhale the warm or sharp essences of the strings, which carry the sometimes fragile and sometimes fearless voice of Simone Aubert. The lyrics are as much invocations to the rallying of the collective conscience as exutory cries pushed far into the forest. On Otium, Tout Bleu elaborates its pieces like Circe the magician distils and mixes drugs and poisons. A piercing reflection of our decayed time, Otium appears as a pain and its remedy at the same time.
All songs composed by Simone Aubert with the beautiful help of the band.
Produced, arranged and mixed by POL at Black Bunker Studio, Geneva 2021.
Mastering by Lad Agabekov, Caduceus Studio, june 2021
Lyrics on "Ce Sera" by Marina Skalova
Dido's Lament (Purcell) on "Ce Sera" by Simone Felber
Atwork by Benjamin Tenko
« Deliciously weird vibes from Switzerland. Tout Bleu conjur haunting cello, stuttering beats and operatic vocals in washes
of pastoral darkwave; sounding something like Nico jamming with electro-acoustic shoegazers Disco Inferno.
Big discovery for fans of: Julia Holter, Scott Walker, Chelsea Wolfe, Jenny Hval / Lost Girls, Circuit des Yeux. » ...more
confusions is such an unconfused album. so confusingly clear and concise album that the real confusions lay within the frame work of such a great album....not that confusing ;) keep it coming guys. loving every album thus far. no matter how confusing
Joe
Married duo Emily Cross and Dan Duszynski make intense, dark, indie songs on their ranch in Texas. Those scorpions were in their tub. Bandcamp New & Notable Jan 5, 2016
La selección de tracks, la manera en la que congenian, es hipnoticamente agradable. La seducción al oído con sonidos del mundo latino y africano es vehemente. alexisdos