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Tim Hecker
Haunt Me, Haunt Me Do It Again


4.5
superb

Review

by robertsona STAFF
July 9th, 2011 | 235 replies


Release Date: 2001 | Tracklist


The music of Tim Hecker and ambient music (a little categorical clarification: Tim Hecker is not “ambient” in a manner identical to the quintessential artists of the genre--e.g. Brian Eno, Stars of the Lid--but to exclude him from the genre because his laptop occasionally makes crunchy sounds would be nitpicky and is also the type of quibbling that ends in shit like “chillwave”) in general is hard to review almost by definition; to quote Wikipedia, it's “a musical genre that focuses largely on the timbral characteristics of sounds, often organized or performed to evoke an "atmospheric", "visual" or "unobtrusive" quality.” That is to say, ambient music makes its dwelling in the outer fringes of what most of us consider “music,” and, as a result, it defies criticism in most respects. To phrase this as a question: what makes one Stars of the Lid album better than another? I know for a fact that And Their Refinement of the Decline is an album I return to much more often than the (still-excellent) Tired Sounds Of, but it’s not like the strings are timbrally preferable or the chords fuller or the structures more pleasant. It’s just that, whenever I listen to Decline, I feel like a big ocean of exquisite strings is giving me the biggest, most warm hug for about two hours, and that feeling isn’t quite equaled by any other album.

If the above sounds stupid, that’s because it sort of is; it’s the immediate aesthetic reaction that most ambient music evokes rather than the more academic “positives/negatives” analysis which is probably what most of you are rightly expecting from a piece of writing like this. You probably know where I’m going with this: Haunt Me, Haunt Me Do It Again is a big, fifty-minute bundle of laptop-baked emotions; an album where the song titles tell more about the emotions evoked within than any piece of writing could. This raises the question: why am I reviewing this album if I’ve just pretty much disparaged the act of reviewing an album like this? It’s pretty much because I have faith in blurring in aesthetic/academic dichotomy--I think there’s something to be said for writing about albums that not only work on that “woah man I feel this” level, but primarily on said level.

To cut through the self-explanatory, apologetic trappings: opener “Music For Tundra, Part 1” works really well despite the fact that it’s basically a single chord for five minutes; Hecker adds just the right amount of auxiliary fuzz and weird popping noises (hard to explain on paper but really cool in execution--check out about 1:10) and fragmented, Fennesz-esque guitar chords to add an exciting delirium to the track’s barren landscape (to tie in with the earlier “song titles = emotions within” remark, the song sounds pretty tundra-esque to my ears, although maybe that’s an example of that sort of I-only-associate-this-song-with-this-because-the-author-titled-it-as-such-and-had-he-not-I-would-never-have-made-that-association type deal going on).

Despite the track’s excellence, it’s in the corresponding Pts. 2 and 3 of the opening track in which the real genius of Haunt Me lies. The tracks, which are maybe a little insubstantial on their own (1:57 and :39, respectively), gradually manipulate the environment created in their predecessor, masterfully adding and removing certain elements of Pt. 1’s dreamscape until the end result is something completely different. What’s really great about these tracks is the manner in which they go about this slow transformation process; Hecker is so meticulous that we barely notice the song changing at all.

In that sense, Haunt Me--at least when played in sequential order--is imbued with a sameness that irks many ambient-skeptics, but that sameness actually turns out to be one of the album’s biggest strengths. To use a hackneyed comparison, the album sort of feels like a patched quilt; each song is embedded with different colors and patterns and motifs, but all made from the same cloth (an image strengthened by the album’s heavy use of segueing--the whole thing works as a continuous piece of music). The sonic difference between “Music for Tundra, Part 1” and clattering album centerpiece “The Work of Art in the Age of Cultural Overproduction” is astounding, but each step Hecker takes to get there feels completely natural. Structurally, this is one of the best ambient albums ever.

It’s this structural mastery, combined with the sort of impressionistic shards of noise and melody that Hecker is so good at, that leads the album back to the “atmospheric” and “visual” quality described earlier. Primarily, Haunt Me uses as a mix of the prettiness often associated with ambient music and a unique industrial twist (more backwards association: in the most abstract of ways, the album sounds like its cover looks). This creates a unique visual experience, a sort of magical-carpet ride that belies some of the more ominous features of its surrounding landscape; a blue sky quickly dissolves into large chunks of noisy factory-grime clouds. I especially love it when Hecker combines these two elements in unexpected ways, such as in “Arctic Lover’s Rock, Part 2,” which uses a female vocal sample but distorts it and lets it deteriorate, after which the aforementioned “Work of Art” picks up the residue and swiftly cleaves it into its rattling call-and-response drones. Eighteen minutes later on “Ghost Writing, Part 2,” Hecker uses a Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (of all things!) sample, manipulating the volume and echo until it sounds like it’s coming from a room two floors below, riding atop the soundwaves of a buzzing microwave or of wind snaking through and out of an air conditioner.

If I’m losing you again: Haunt Me takes fragments of things that are recognizable on some level and buries them among layers and sheets of fuzzy, supernatural, Tim Hecker-y stuff and forms a sort of isomorphism between these two elements (i.e. the weird vs. the normal, the former of which dominates on this here album) and their critical equals--the super-aesthetic vs. that which can be written about easily. So while its structure (which belongs to the latter of the latter) is essential to its success, it’s only that way because of the way it self-constructs a gorgeous dream-quilt of noise and female vocal samples and plinks and plops and warm string chords. That right there is some righteous, unreviewable shit.



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user ratings (330)
4.1
excellent
other reviews of this album
jtswope (4)
Tim Hecker's first album illustrates a cold, deserted landscape as beauty and discordance collide....



Comments:Add a Comment 
robertsona
Staff Reviewer
July 9th 2011


27404 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

didnt edit this, wouldnt be me if i did. just all over the place. will read over later. okay im odne

conradtao
Emeritus
July 9th 2011


2090 Comments


Oh hey this is finally up

Don't have time to read it now but will later, for sure

robertsona
Staff Reviewer
July 9th 2011


27404 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

this album rocks you fuckers stop commenting on w/e else

Gyromania
July 9th 2011


37016 Comments


I've yet to hear this.

Psychopathologist
July 9th 2011


1922 Comments


tim hecker rules

rasputin
July 10th 2011


14967 Comments


good review

I haven't heard this one yet, but I will get to it as I Hecker myself through and through

Electric City
July 10th 2011


15756 Comments


The music of Tim Hecker and ambient music (a little categorical clarification: Tim Hecker is not “ambient” in a manner identical to the quintessential artists of the genre--e.g. Brian Eno, Stars of the Lid--but to exclude him from the genre because his laptop occasionally makes crunchy sounds would be nitpicky and is also the type of quibbling that ends in shit like “chillwave”) in general is hard to review almost by definition; to quote Wikipedia, it's “a musical genre that focuses largely on the timbral characteristics of sounds, often organized or performed to evoke an "atmospheric", "visual" or "unobtrusive" quality.”

one fucking sentence

robertsona
Staff Reviewer
July 10th 2011


27404 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

booya

Deviant.
Staff Reviewer
July 10th 2011


32289 Comments


Probably my second favourite release by Hecker. Prefer Harmony In Ultraviolet just a bit more

robertsona
Staff Reviewer
July 10th 2011


27404 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

same!

rasputin
July 10th 2011


14967 Comments


one fucking sentence


this is why I like robertsona, he's my kind of guy

robertsona
Staff Reviewer
July 10th 2011


27404 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

sadly i didn't get to continue my trend of parentheses within parentheses but what can you do

scissorlocked
September 11th 2011


3538 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

kills

Gyromania
November 30th 2011


37016 Comments


The music of Tim Hecker and ambient music (a little categorical clarification: Tim Hecker is not “ambient” in a manner identical to the quintessential artists of the genre--e.g. Brian Eno, Stars of the Lid--but to exclude him from the genre because his laptop occasionally makes crunchy sounds would be nitpicky and is also the type of quibbling that ends in shit like “chillwave”) in general is hard to review almost by definition; to quote Wikipedia, it's “a musical genre that focuses largely on the timbral characteristics of sounds, often organized or performed to evoke an "atmospheric", "visual" or "unobtrusive" quality.”

one fucking sentence


Looking back on this, I have to say that stuff like that is pretty tedious. Cramming all of that into parentheses and then continuing the sentence you started at the beginning is a pretty good way to lose your readers. But maybe that's just me.

Also, I finally got around to hearing all of this and I love it =]

mindleviticus
July 3rd 2012


10486 Comments


The only Tim Hecker album I haven't listened to yet. I feel like shit.

mindleviticus
July 3rd 2012


10486 Comments


I'll get it tomorrow

ThunderNeutral21
July 3rd 2012


3863 Comments


modern classical!

ThunderNeutral21
July 3rd 2012


3863 Comments


you know who is smart fade

u

mindleviticus
July 6th 2012


10486 Comments


Got this today. I have a 2 hour drive ahead of me might as well chill and listen to it.

Motiv3
June 28th 2013


9109 Comments


Okay so this was pretty much fucking amazing on first listen.



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