Maillist
Manual
- Azure Vista
- Format: CD Album
- Catalogue Number: DRL159
- Number of Discs: 1
- Label: Darla
- Release Date: 18 April 2005
- PRICE: £12.99
Azure Vista
Fans of The Cure, Cocteau Twins, My Bloody Valentine, Simple Minds and Japan will love this.
"With Azure Vista, Jonas Munk (known as Manual) delivers one of the most compelling electronic records of the past few years. From breathtaking post-Eno ambient pieces that shimmer with personality and dynamism, to thrilling explorations that are equal parts Tortoise-jazz and Schnaus-shoe gazing, Munk's Berlinesque sensibilities shine across six excellent tracks." --Junkmedia.org
"The Best shoegaze/electronic record ever." -Jesus Llorente, Acuarela
It has been three years since Jonas Munk's last solo album, 2002's classic Ascend (Morr). Jonas has been quite busy during though; not only has he been occupied with perfecting the sound he gave birth to in his late teens - he has also released a number of collaborative efforts: the celestial Into Forever (Morr) in 2003 with New York's Icebreaker International, the almost completely overlooked old school ambient masterpiece The North Shore (Darla) with longtime friend and Limp bandmate Jess Kahr, and most recently the sublime psych-hip-hop-dream-pop epic Golden Sun (Darla) with Syntaks aka Jakob Skøtt, also a friend and bandmate. While these collaborations can be considered explorations of the outer aspects of the Manual sound, Jonas now returns with an album that, in his own words "constitute the core of the Manual sound".
In some way Azure Vista emerges from the same place as Ascend, where layers of cascading guitars, swirling synths and old school drum machine sounds rose adventurous compositions to dizzying heights. But with Azure Vista Jonas' music reaches new, almost religious, heights. As if it has come to it's logical conclusion - reaching it's full bloom. Azure Vista's foundation is built on Jonas' trademark songwriting that, while being highly complex and always moving in surprising and unpredictable ways, still maintains a refreshing pop feel and an undeniable flow that makes it seem like the most natural thing in the world. But whereas Jonas' music has always been epic this new album is epic in a way that almost completely redefines the word. Jonas' songwriting has been taken to the extreme - but so has every other aspect of his music. The sound on Azure Vista is BIG. Not just big like Cocteau Twins or Slowdive, but BIG like Van Halen, in scale, not sound, or Simple Minds, very much in both scale and sound. Numerous layers of dreamy guitars blaze back and forth in the mix like shimmering waves rolling in on Californian shores, and countless other sounds, both deriving from electronic and organic sources, saturates the enormous sonic picture: bells, female vocals, old school drum machine sounds, field
recordings and majestic synths all play a part in the sonic palette Jonas used in constructing these six sonic tales of summer ambrosia.
In Jonas' world there's no line between dream pop and stadium rock, between new romantic and ambient, between shoegazer and modern electronica. This is music that neither fits with any of the current trends, nor falls into category with the many retro-fetishist pranksters out there. These glorious pieces display a true love for the music Jonas grew up with while, most importantly, using those
influences to create something distinctly new and timeless. Music this compositional, narrative, and explosive is unheard of in the world of electronic music where Manual resides. But there really are no clear reference points for music this unique. Essential summer listening.

