Hania Rani
Ghosts


3.0
good

Review

by Gene Gol-Jonsson CONTRIBUTOR (34 Reviews)
October 12th, 2023 | 16 replies


Release Date: 10/06/2023 | Tracklist

Review Summary: rapture obscured by clouds

Considering the general tedium of your average run-of-the-mill ambient and adjacent record, it is ever pleasant to encounter an effort still at least mildly interested in pushing boundaries, fusing styles and compositional techniques, redefining what it is to be a m b i e n t, or simply playing around with tricks and cogs of their musical machines. Hania Rani certainly enjoys pulling the pallid chameleon, ever shifting colours and switching gears. Her reluctance to fully commit to a style or shape has so far served her well, having authored both sparse ambient-front wind breeze records like Home and patient deliberating un-pop efforts like Esja. At her disposal are primarily her keys and synths, brothered with an exhaustive list of production trickery. From what the promotional material has indicated, such is the case for Ghosts, bar the few explicit artist features. Heavyweights of chamber and fever-dream pop like Patrick Watson or Olafur Arnalds make their appearance, as well as Portico Quartet’s Duncan Bellamy. Most of the album’s palette is comprised of just that, simple keys tuned hither and thither to distantly emulate a variety of instruments, from strings to brass.

If atmosphere alone could carry albums, I would have been a mighty wanderer. Hania is a sailor of such waters, a seasoned captain even. If nothing else, Ghosts reaffirms her push towards purely atmospheric over generally emotional. Not that emotion is disembodied from the record, but rather its input is circumstantial. The album is often running on thin steam of technique, rather than song-writing. Albeit the grand singles like “Hello” or the Patrick Watson-endorsed “Dancing with Ghosts” are a proof to the otherwise. Hania’s overwhelming infatuation with all things meandering and distancing takes over her judgement over the flow and the pace. The album therefore suffers from unnecessarily long runtime, with songs often serving to lead into other songs, which in turn lead into other songs, none having a statement of their own to contribute.

The three aforementioned features are mostly surface-level. Only Patrick Watson intently stands out, as his unmistakable breathy falsetto hovers over “Dancing with Ghosts” like a spectre. However, the ambient wizard Olafur Arnalds’ input is darn near invisible. The piano-led meditation on “Whispering House” shows no sign of significance in contrast to the rest of the album’s already subtle, wavering vibe. Meanwhile, Portico Quartet’s Duncan Bellamy contributes scant percussion to “Thin Line”, unfortunately buried by the dreamy production. His presence is again mainly serving a name, rather than substance. Such are the disappointments of Ghosts. Although all somewhat intentional. The album shines the best where Hania herself takes the centre stage and asserts her presence. The aforementioned infectious ballad “Hello” is about as beautiful an ambient pop lead-in, as one could hope for. “Don’t Break My Heart”, also featuring Duncan Bellamy s o m e w h e r e, is a beautifully haunting pop track. The long-winded frosty “Komeda” is also a testament to patience and ambient perseverance. And finally the penultimate “Utrata” sees Rani engage in engrossing progression at its possibly most physically subtle extents.

Hania most definitely engages in all her ambitions to be the mother regent of caressing subtlety and fluffy nocturnalism. Despite that, and despite the relative star-power of her features, the album seems to have issues of decision-making. It is hellbent on its atmosphere and direction it is taking, as all tracks largely follow a similar sound and atmospheric scheme, but its extraneous effort (the features most notably) come off as afterthoughts, slapped on to an already existing and functioning frame. Its tedious runtime also shows more ambition than care, as at least 10-20 minutes could have been easily relegated to a deluxe extended reissue or B-sides EP. But for what it is worth, Hania’s ambition also shows her growth. For once, ambient pop is a thing worth looking out for even for the uninvolved. It is a force of its subtle own and Hania is more than happy to be at its forefront. And honestly, more power to her.



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user ratings (11)
3.1
good


Comments:Add a Comment 
someone
Contributing Reviewer
October 12th 2023


6589 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

despite my criticisms, i think it is worth checking out, at least for its peacefulness



to check: https://haniarani.bandcamp.com/album/ghosts

Hawks
October 12th 2023


87256 Comments

Album Rating: 2.0

Nice review bro. Album is fucking garbage. m///

someone
Contributing Reviewer
October 12th 2023


6589 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

how so?



feels more a misguided attempt than active garbage tbh



3.2 more like, if i had the power

Hawks
October 12th 2023


87256 Comments

Album Rating: 2.0

Garbage to me in the sense that it just drags on and on and on wth no direction in mind. I get the atmosphere she's going for but it just comes out boring and makes me wanna go to sleep.

someone
Contributing Reviewer
October 12th 2023


6589 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

well, ambient pop generally is trying to bring out the most nocturnal, dream-like essences. so technically what you find awful about it is exactly what it is going for.



in that sense, you are most correct.



although the direction to me seems more than clear and defined. it just has several unnecessary speed bumps along the way

Hawks
October 12th 2023


87256 Comments

Album Rating: 2.0

I just feel like someone such as Julia Holter pulls off this sound way way better. Might give it another shot though. m///

someone
Contributing Reviewer
October 12th 2023


6589 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

i'd say those two are going for a rather different sound. Holter mostly has an engrossing chamber-cum-dream pop aesthetic to her stuff, whereas Rani is an ambient haze all around, as minimal and subtle as it gets

JohnnyoftheWell
Staff Reviewer
October 12th 2023


60326 Comments


Nice rev on the whole, but I'm not convinced that your extremely generalised broadsides against ambient [pop] in the opening or closing sentences are either particular substantiated re. the perceived genre-wide drawbacks in question, or actually that relevant to this album specifically?

for me, this drags its feet because it invests way too much in flimsy Agnes Obel-adjactent chamber pop songwriting and continually teases that it *isn't* going to be an ambient record only for the song ideas in question to fall flat - would probably fare slightly better as a pure ambient experience if anything, that side of the album is its natural strength but is saddled with carrying more weight than likely intended because the pop end is weak. Even 'ambient pop' for that end is a bit of a stretch and feels more like an inadvertent consequence for the chamber elements being a snooze than of particular active engagement with ambient as a form

and with that in mind, the framing thesis basically boils down to "this record is half-baked, quiet, atmospheric and ultimately underwhelming, which means it is ambient because this is also how I feel about a lot of ambient music", which imo does a disservice to the depth of your engagement in the central paragraphs and to the way the album is actually constructed

pleasant enough record though ig

someone
Contributing Reviewer
October 12th 2023


6589 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

see, having followed Hania's stuff for some time now, it feels as though setting the 'pop' at the 'ambient' was the intent, and not going indecisively towards the 'chamber' and falling flat. i do not see that many Obel-isms on the whole, but one could easily make the connection.



the record is half-baked, quiet, atmospheric and ultimately underwhelming. but it seems to me an intentional decision. the 'ambient' of it all is not a consequence of it being quiet and half-baked, but rather it is ambient WHILE ALSO being quiet and hald-baked.

JohnnyoftheWell
Staff Reviewer
October 12th 2023


60326 Comments


...all of which is fair, cogent, and (rightly) points towards her specific engagement with that cluster of genres much more than it provides the kind of general insight on any given genre that I feel those bookend sentences are aspiring for

someone
Contributing Reviewer
October 12th 2023


6589 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

fair enough

AsleepInTheBack
Staff Reviewer
October 12th 2023


10114 Comments


someone give someone the power of 3.2 for crying out loud #selfempowerment

someone
Contributing Reviewer
October 12th 2023


6589 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

That would be a Staff position.

We'll see with the coming years.

Purpl3Spartan
October 12th 2023


8544 Comments


Looks like I did right skipping this one - nice rev

someone
Contributing Reviewer
October 13th 2023


6589 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

you can still cherry-pick tracks



some are pretty good

MiloRuggles
Staff Reviewer
October 17th 2023


3025 Comments


i should have known when i stumbled across this that OF COURSE the shiny new productive edition of someone would have written a lovely lil review
only heard half of the live version of this while i was working, but it was indeed very lovely, if a bit of a rounded off obelisk to the Obelesque



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