Duval Timothy
Help


3.5
great

Review

by hel9000 USER (23 Reviews)
August 21st, 2020 | 13 replies


Release Date: 2020 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Grounded by Timothy's gorgeous piano compositions, "Help" is expansive, soulful ambient music that goes off in unexpected directions.

Befitting of a man who also weaves, sculpts and makes films, Duval Timothy creates music with a whimsical spirit. Grounded by his gorgeous piano compositions—a blend of minimalist classical, avant-garde and smooth jazz—Timothy explores many different styles with an unbothered attitude, not feeling restless as much as casually exploratory. His new album Help boasts a wide array of instrumentation and genre influence, splitting the 18 tracks between (mostly) solo piano pieces and more elaborate excursions.

Kicking off with the deep synths and slinky keys of “Next Tomorrow”, Help establishes a groovy and beat-oriented current on the album that weaves through more typically stoic ambient work. His malleable composition style gives itself easily to these excitingly rhythmic and broadly sweeping interpretations: see the smeary, seductive funk of “Groundnut”, or “Fall Again”, where double-tracked guitar licks, pulsating drum loops, and swooning vocals from Lil Silva pile on to Timothy’s rollicking piano, the song venturing into quasi neo-soul territory without breaking a sweat. “Still Happened” is a perfect marriage of this melodic, borderline-pop mode with his more angular side, beginning with tense synthesizers and dissonant, choppy voices that are soon thrown over romantically swaying chords and clacking percussion. And the album ends on a high note with “Pink”, where fuzzy oscillating synths and glitch noise dance atop dark piano.

Timothy shows an able hand when it comes to venturing away from his more pared-down solo keyboard pieces, interspersing these alternately soulful, funky, and gritty songs at a perfect frequency throughout the album’s 55 minutes; it flows like a shoreline, retreating to calmer domain after occasional rushes of excitement. When the arrangement is reduced to his solo piano/electric piano, Timothy achieves sublime beauty in pensive and jagged ways—as on the ruminative “9”, or the overcast “C”, which snags into a coyly non-resolving melody at the end. “Same” and “Ice”, paired towards the back of the album, are both buoyant pieces that are uncannily quaint, like they could’ve been written a century ago if it weren’t for Timothy’s knack for acutely folding his songs in on themselves. Solo piano is a hard avenue to claim a unique voice in, but it’s exciting to hear him develop his own in real time over his records.

Actual voices pop up over the course of the album, and for the most part are impeccably chosen (the irritating pitch-shifted sample on the post-chillwave “Like” is the only obvious weak point). Timothy sprinkled his last release, 2 Sim, with phone messages from friends and family in Sierra Leone, where his father was born and where Timothy spends much of his time. Help follows a similar path, and though voice is much less frequent, it often has huge impact: the mournful “Slave” features vocalist Ibiye Camp repeating the title over and over, pouring over the piano like a descending synth line, and a sampled Pharell speech about the racial politics of major labels owning artists' masters bitterly driving the point home; immediately after, Timothy's sister offers sobering wisdom on “TDAGB” (“things don’t always get better”), her voice ironically ascending like a helium balloon. And perhaps most affecting is “Look”, where a stumbling piano coils softly around extraneous noise—digital whooshes, car horns honking—that provide a meditative backdrop to the words of late painter Ellsworth Kelly, who begins:

“I don’t like decoration. It’s like bad painting. Because, to me, a painting really has to really mean something. It’s hard to say what it means except what you feel and what you can do with it by looking and investigating.”

Listening to this album, which rarely feels directionless or purposeless over its 18 tracks, it’s clear why Kelly’s words resonate with Timothy so much. It’s avoids feeling static even as it returns to similar themes—emotive solo piano, soulful ambient, guest heavy electro-jams. Timothy darts into many different directions on Help with vigor, the genre-hopping a catalyst for wrenching new sounds and themes from his already immensely evocative piano compositions, with almost-always exquisite results.

3.6



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user ratings (8)
3.1
good


Comments:Add a Comment 
hel9000
August 21st 2020


1526 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

been listening to this a lot, kind of hard to write about for some reason but wanted to review it so here we are.

neekafat
Staff Reviewer
August 21st 2020


26055 Comments


ooooooh this sounds neat!

anat
Contributing Reviewer
August 21st 2020


5743 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

I trust our taste overlap so will earmark this for a listen

hel9000
August 21st 2020


1526 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

nice guys let me know what you think if you check this out!

Slex
August 22nd 2020


16508 Comments


This sounds wonderful and I loved that Gia Margaret album, adding this to my list

JesperL
Staff Reviewer
August 22nd 2020


5441 Comments


this is sounding really pleasant so far (a few tracks in)! great review as well, pos'd

hel9000
August 22nd 2020


1526 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

thanks Cole hope you enjoy this. it’s a little bit different than Gia but it definitely has a similarly chill Sunday afternoon vibe that brought that album to mind

MarsKid
Emeritus
August 22nd 2020


21030 Comments


Pos-ing for a nice write-up. This tends to not be my style but sounds like a cool blend of different sorts of avenues. A hard tightrope to balance on, indeed.

anat
Contributing Reviewer
August 22nd 2020


5743 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

I'm finding this a little undercooked and a little overlong, but then it's not really in my wheelhouse

Lord(e)Po)))ts
August 23rd 2020


70239 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

wow did not expect this to wind up on here



a couple cool tracks, some exciting feature artists, but mostly mediocre for me in the end unfortunately

zakalwe
August 23rd 2020


38787 Comments


Fuck my life this is shit

hel9000
August 23rd 2020


1526 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

fair enough, i can see how this wouldn't really resonate with a lot of people, it's almost aggressively easygoing, if that makes sense. i think a lot of the songs are quite strong taken on their own, particularly the solo piano pieces.

hel9000
August 23rd 2020


1526 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

edit: nvm



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