In Mollusk, Gooooose takes us through 44 minutes and 50 seconds of elegantly morphing textures and sounds that are at once hopeful, yet full of apprehension. Recorded live in one take in the vein of Göttsching’s E2-E4, the improvisational piece acts as a score to an ‘80s body horror film, marrying the real and the synthesised, invoking past and present, and a state of unresolved being.
“I consider Mollusk to be a mix of hard shell and soft tissues, a mix of dead bones and flesh” says Han Han, aka Gooooose.
Using Ableton and a hardware synth manipulated by a patch he made in Max MSP, Han Han creates tension from the beginning, with a brooding drone acting as the grounding force for an otherwise dreamlike soundscape. At its lightest, arpeggios flitting over layers of undulating pads inspire a sense of youthful optimism. But as the tapestry is stripped back and tabla patterns punctuate the space remaining, a more meditative, melancholic state sets in.
“I’m obsessed with the feeling of some live tissue slowly moving underneath and causing everything else to vibrate in a way, like a hidden groove,” Gooooose says. “I’ve always been into diving myself into a set with basic tools and truly playing with it, rather than preparing clips and doing a recombination work ... Mollusk was the first thing that came into my mind when thinking about the album name, and I think somehow it made sense afterward.”
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GOOOOOSE is a Shanghai-based music producer, composer, visual artist and software developer.
Since 2012, Han Han began performing in various venues across the continents, including Haus der Kulturen der Welt and CTM festival in Berlin, Cite De La Musique in Paris, SXSW festival in Austin, Nyege Nyege in Uganda, Soft Centre in Sydney, Unsound in Krakow and Recombinant in San Francisco.
Some of his current main releases on SVBKVLT include “RUSTED SILICON”(2019), and “JAC”(with DJ Scotch Egg, 2020).
Han Han has also participated in several art projects since 2017. In his latest, he collaborated with 33EMYBW to score Aphex Twin-collaborator Weirdcore’s audiovisual exhibition Orient Flux in Beijing. The exhibit draws on ’70s and ’80s sci-fi references to explore themes of surveillance, surrealism, travel, and time.
credits
released October 8, 2021
Composed, produced and mixed by Han Han
Mastered by Lawrence English at Negative Space
Cover art by Andrew Sunderland
Layout and design by Odeh Amarin and DBL
It was a bit too much and samey by the end for me, but if you like dark atmospheres, if you are really interested in sound design or you enjoy the challenge of music that tries to wear you down, you should definitely check this record out.
I loved the echo-drenched drums and percussion and synths and hard to describe sounds on this, but it stays with the same sonic ideas for too long for me to enjoy to try to withstand the harsh wall of sounds minisculebarber
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An excellent collaboration yielding melancholic and unsettling looping noise with ethereal vocals, tinged with a bit of 80s horror synth. Highly recommend! cedarshims