Bing and Ruth
Species


3.0
good

Review

by hel9000 USER (23 Reviews)
July 18th, 2020 | 10 replies


Release Date: 2020 | Tracklist

Review Summary: On his latest album of moody minimalism, David Moore switches out his piano for a Farsifa organ. For ambient music, it can sometimes feel overwhelming

You will probably know whether you like the entirety of Bing & Ruth’s new album Species within its first few minutes. Composer David Moore continues the precedent set from his previous releases, which felt like he sat at his piano and knocked out the entire record in one take, the edges coloured in with subtly magnetic details from whoever else was around at the time. Albums like City Lake and No Home of the Mind swept you into a headspace similar to resting your eyes but fighting sleep; a pleasant if unsettled state where you aren’t sure if thirty seconds just went by, or ten minutes.

For Species, he’s done something that amounts to a seismic change in his unwavering minimalist music: he’s traded the piano for a Farsifa organ. His compositions largely seem uninformed by the change in instrument, but the timbre of the organ gives them a newly impressionistic rendering. The bleary chords and arrhythmic loops, when paired with the reedy Farsifa, produce a voluminous sound that can feel overwhelming, stretching the definition of ambient music. When Moore falls back into dense freeform repetition, as on the crystalline “I Had No Dream” and the numbed-out “The Pressure of This Water”, the woozy layers of organ can feel kaleidoscopic, or in a less generous take, perhaps a bit nauseating.

The threadbare arrangements and production means the album lives and dies by the strength of Moore’s compositions, and in that regard Species mostly delivers. The album starts strong with “Body in a Room” and “Bedwater Psalm”, two songs that feature hypnotically shimmering organs slathered over contemplative drones. The far too brief “Blood Harmony” and closing track “Nearer” are airy comedowns that provide a break from the busier pieces; chords swell in heavy emptiness, breaking through just enough to invoke a tinge of sadness. Moore drops the Farsifa in favor of a Combo organ for the glacial “Live Forever”, a teary-eyed epic that feels poignantly drawn out like a hard goodbye.

It can all occasionally become dizzyingly transcendent, but the wandering spirit of the music can leave the listener feeling detached. Formal structures seem just out of grasp, the transient melodies uninterested in revealing their beginnings and ends. Even more than the albums before it, Species is a fairly atonal listen. It’s hard to definitively say whether that’s a result of the instrument itself, but it appears likely. The Farsifa simply seems like a less expressive instrument than piano (Moore himself has said he considers it limiting), and paired with Moore’s reserved compositions, it adds up to an album that’s easy to admire but harder to love.



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user ratings (16)
3.1
good


Comments:Add a Comment 
hel9000
July 18th 2020


1526 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

don't think anyone was hyped for this one but me. but here's a review for it anyway! nice album. a bit annoying.

Observer
Emeritus
July 18th 2020


9393 Comments


I don't dig organs in general so I'll probably not check this. That said I do enjoy this guy's Tomorrow album. Gotta love ambient with swirling pianos.

hel9000
July 18th 2020


1526 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

yeah the organ gets to be too much at points.

JesperL
Staff Reviewer
July 19th 2020


5441 Comments


same re organs but neat write up!

luci
July 19th 2020


12844 Comments


i always thought bing and ruth were two guys. good review

Gnocchi
Staff Reviewer
July 19th 2020


18256 Comments


Quickly turning into a 'favourite user' reviewer. Keep it up. Pos'd.

hel9000
July 19th 2020


1526 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

thanks all!

tombits
July 20th 2020


3582 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

nice review! i really enjoyed this, actually, it's an interesting shift from neo-classical to modular minimalism. glad you rec'd steve reich, as it definitely has a music for eighteen musicians vibe. doesn't quite reach the lofty heights of tomorrow was the golden age, but not many albums do.

hel9000
July 20th 2020


1526 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

yeah reich was my first comparison point i thought of when listening to this for sure. it also reminds me of the koyaanisqatsi soundtrack at points. and indeed, Golden Age is a wonderful album.

BlushfulHippocrene
Staff Reviewer
July 23rd 2021


4052 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

I think I prefer the sound of this to No Home of the Mind on first listen/s. Excited to go for a walk or late-night drive to this.



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