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Sebastien Shuller

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  1. #1
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    Sebastien Shuller



    Artist: Sebastien Shuller
    Album: Happiness
    Year: 2005
    Genre: Ambient/Pop/Indie/Electronic
    Format: FLAC
    No. Of Tracks: 11
    Size: 360 MB

    REVIEW OF ''HAPPINESS'' by Dan R./PopMatters.com

    There are so many sensitive singer-songwriter types putting records out these days that you have to do something really different to stand out. I feel hardened saying it, but gorgeousness just isn’t enough any more.

    If you want to mix electronica with your acoustic ballads, there are bands who’ve taken it all the way in their own ways (Psapp, some Kinobe) and those who’ve almost perfected the melding of the two (Syd Matters, for one). Thom Yorke is the godfather of this whole scene—you get the sense of there being hordes of musicians who can’t quite find it in themselves to be as alienated and as absolute as Yorke, but are desperately wishing that they could.

    Catch you in the right mood, and the opening “1978”, a gentle synth arpeggio-driven instrumental, can totally sweep you away. So simple, its electric piano melody repeats, building the soundtrack to a desolate field over a shuffling beat recalling the Au Revoir Simone song “Through the Backyards”. The same percussive effect is used on a number of songs throughout the album, most successfully on “Sleeping Song”, and the drum machine sound doesn’t satisfy the same way live drums could. Still, it captures the mood well enough.

    The best song on the album is the first single, “Weeping Willow”. The video shows Schuller walking around with a white paper mask over his face, a single tear drawn on in black marker. The image finds its way onto the CD’s cover, too. Well, it’s an accurate encapsulation of the artist’s emotional resonance: sorrow, loneliness, desolation under a cloudy sky. Lost in an unforgiving city. Fun stuff like that. “Weeping Willow”, though, is genuinely great: Schuller’s lisping, thin tenor voice is incomparably fragile, and precious—you can’t help caring it seems so easily hurt.

    Though he’s got an easy gift of melody, Schuller’s low-key approach to songwriting sometimes lacks the strong hooks that create immediate interest. For every “Sleeping Song” (gorgeous, linked phrases, intoxicating atmosphere) there’s a “Ride Along the Cliff” (turned-down Air impression, passable). Radiohead is obviously a key influence, as closer “Le Dernier Jour” illustrates, being basically a low-key “No Surprises” impression, making you reflect how easily compelling music can slip into irrelevance. The excursions into purer electronica sounds (“Where We Had Never Gone”, e.g.) also seem a little half-hearted. The artist’s voice is his biggest asset, and the most compelling element of Schuller’s sound, so twisting it out of recognition with echoes doesn’t really work.

    On the whole, though, Schuller’s music achieves a simple sort of emotional resonance. He’s firmly within-genre, and there’s really only so much melancholy electro-tinged singer-songwriter we can take. But if you’re in the market, well, Sebastien Schuller gets the job done as well as anyone. If you’re really not careful, you could let the Play-era Moby-esque looping acoustic fairytale sounds whip you up into texting an ex-girlfriend, say, asking them out for a drink. That’s a terrible idea; listening to Happiness, not such a bad idea at all.

    Track listing:

    1 1978 3:57
    2 Weeping Willow 5:30
    3 Sleeping Song 4:17
    4 Wolf 3:14
    5 Ride Along The Cliff 5:04
    6 Where We Had Never Gone 6:35
    7 Tears Coming Home 5:07
    8 Edward's Hand 5:23
    9 Donkey Boy 5:49
    10 Alone You Walk 4:17
    11 Le Dernier Jour 6:37

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  2. #2
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    Sebastien Schuller - Harmony EP



    Artist: Sebastien Schuller
    Album: Harmony EP
    Year: 2005
    Genre: Ambient/Pop/Indie/Electronic
    Format: FLAC
    No. Of Tracks: 3
    Size: 70 MB

    Track listing:

    01. Funeral Harmony
    02. Young
    03. Electroshead

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    Artist: Sebastien Schuller
    Album: Evenfall
    Year: 2009
    Genre: Ambient/Pop/Indie/Electronic
    Format: FLAC
    No. Of Tracks: 10
    Size: 275 MB

    REVIEW OF ''EVENFALL'' by Ludovic Basque/Rfimusique.com

    If you're one of those melancholy souls who find that grey days are never grey enough and Radiohead are too upbeat, Sébastien Schuller's second album is just for you. The ten dark, brooding masterpieces on Evenfall make the ideal soundtrack for our 'doom and gloom' times.
    Rarely has an album cover been so evocative of its content! How best to sum up the weird and wonderful soundscape of Evenfall than this surreal juxtaposition of misty dawn, sulky-faced child with random bird on head and a couple of tutu-clad ballerinas dancing through water?
    Sébastien Schuller, who emerged on the French indie scene in 2002 with a four-track electro-pop EP, has carved out a unique place for himself exploring the links between music and melancholy. Evenfall is less markedly electro than Schuller's first full-length album, Happiness, but continues to mine a rich vein of ethereal vocals and luminous keyboards. On this second offering, the classically-trained musician proves himself to be a master of finely-honed melody and adroit pacing, alternating haunting drawn-out tracks such as Awakening with more up-tempo songs such as Balançoire.
    Schuller, who has written the occasional film soundtrack (for Franck Guérin's Un jour d'été, for instance), is brilliant at conjuring up atmosphere and you can feel the hours he spent in the studio honing his sound to absolute perfection. The Parisian may have come to singing relatively late in the day, but his plaintive vocals come into their own on Evenfall, adding to the album's seductive 'noir' tones.
    The Border, one of the stand-out tracks on Evenfall, is a lesson in mournful ballad-writing with subtle hints of grandiloquence behind its minor-key chords. And herein lies the essential miracle of Evenfall: Schuller's melancholy turns out to be strangely compelling, even soothing at times.

    Track listing:

    1 Morning Mist 4:45
    2 Open Organ 5:15
    3 Balancoire 4:28
    4 Awakening 4:50
    5 The Border 3:47
    6 New York 2:24
    7 Battle 4:44
    8 Last Time 4:35
    9 Midnight 6:34
    10 High Green Grass 6:12

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