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Time Travel

Time Travel in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $15.99
Get it at Barnes and Noble
Time Travel

Time Travel in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $15.99
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Size: CD

Get it at Barnes and Noble
Following a decade spent exploring pop's more cerebral corners as
Miracle Fortress
, Canadian musician
Graham Van Pelt
slims down to electronic minimalism on
Time Travel
, his first release under his own name. Where his previous projects (
,
Inside Touch
Think About Life
) dabbled in a wide array of indie styles from textural psych-pop to dance-rock and club music, the Montreal native's first proper solo outing uses a deliberately limited palette to achieve what essentially feels like an intimate singer/songwriter album. In the same way that
Arthur Russell
(a noted influence) often paired low-key midtempo dance music with deeply reflective songwriting,
Van Pelt
uses little more than the sequencer of his vintage Roland SH-101 synth to build a warm little house around his musings on aging, friendships, matters of the heart, and his relocation from Montreal to Toronto. That latter concept forms the basis of the lovely "Mountainside," a wistful highlight in which
gazes fondly backward at his previous home and the roads that led him to this more tranquil space in life. The ghost of
drifts in and out of cuts like "New Friends" and "Saving Grace," as
's pleasing voice incants nuggets of his philosophy over pulsing beats while echoes of bands like
the Blue Nile
can be heard in other tracks like the excellent "One Thing." Like a fleeting half-hour of December sunset pouring through a window,
invokes similar feelings of contemplative warmth and well-being. ~ Timothy Monger
Following a decade spent exploring pop's more cerebral corners as
Miracle Fortress
, Canadian musician
Graham Van Pelt
slims down to electronic minimalism on
Time Travel
, his first release under his own name. Where his previous projects (
,
Inside Touch
Think About Life
) dabbled in a wide array of indie styles from textural psych-pop to dance-rock and club music, the Montreal native's first proper solo outing uses a deliberately limited palette to achieve what essentially feels like an intimate singer/songwriter album. In the same way that
Arthur Russell
(a noted influence) often paired low-key midtempo dance music with deeply reflective songwriting,
Van Pelt
uses little more than the sequencer of his vintage Roland SH-101 synth to build a warm little house around his musings on aging, friendships, matters of the heart, and his relocation from Montreal to Toronto. That latter concept forms the basis of the lovely "Mountainside," a wistful highlight in which
gazes fondly backward at his previous home and the roads that led him to this more tranquil space in life. The ghost of
drifts in and out of cuts like "New Friends" and "Saving Grace," as
's pleasing voice incants nuggets of his philosophy over pulsing beats while echoes of bands like
the Blue Nile
can be heard in other tracks like the excellent "One Thing." Like a fleeting half-hour of December sunset pouring through a window,
invokes similar feelings of contemplative warmth and well-being. ~ Timothy Monger

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