Pleasurekraft - Nostalgic for the Future

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  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
  • STREAM FULL ALBUM: fanlink.to/LitAoM
    #CosmicTechno
    Picking up where 2018's debut album left off, Pleasurekraft continue their foray into the Cosmic Techno sub-genre they ushered into the dance music lexicon, with their new LP Love in the Age of Machines.
    Arriving exclusively on Spotify initially on April 10, with other streaming platforms to follow a week later, Pleasurekraft had one of the biggest tracks last year on Drumcode with their remix for Adam Beyer's “Space Date,' always bring forward thinking grooves embellished with astral melodies and spaced out synths that make for emotional as well as physical experiences.
    Love in the Age of Machines is in no short supply of the sonic signatures the production duo have become known for, and there is a clear maturation at work here. The album's non-techno tracks showcase an artistry rarely seen in conventional dance music and techno in particular. From the gritty dystopian future that establishes the album's themes at the onset in Last Sapien, to the dark, rainy, urban-lit textures that form the spine of Nostalgic for the Future, there is a sense of impending self-wrought catastrophe, tempered with a sense of wonder of all that is, and all that could be if humanity somehow overcomes its hubris.
    Things get more intense and turbulent on Panopticon (The Patron Saint of Global Surveillance) [ft. Thomas Gandey] before the voyage to the edges of our galaxy continues on I Sing the Body Electric & Main Sequence which keep up the enthralling techno atmospheres with increasing pressure, before the tension is released with the cinematic grandeur of Novacene. Two more hard hitting bangers in At The Mountains of Madness and Primordial then rebuild the all consuming techno mood before you're left adrift in the cosmos with the album's swan song Requiem For the American Dream.
    As Kaveh Soroush of Pleasurekraft puts it, "Without sounding too reductionist, humans are simply a bundle of biochemical algorithms with a few holes at either end, who mistake their sensory experiences as objective, and their sense of self as something concrete, when in fact science reveals to us with each new finding that our basic intuitions about reality and the world around us have not evolved much from our first ancestors, who just wanted to make sure not to get eaten for long enough to feed and procreate on the African savannah. While there are certainly wonders about the Cosmos we have discovered given our enlarged frontal lobes, and technologies that we've invented dating back to when the first tool was built thanks to an opposable thumb, we haven't been the best custodians of the only planet that can sustain us, and history makes it abundantly clear that our wisdom lags far behind the technological advancements we develop with each new day."
    Despite the overtly pessimistic tone, ultimately there is a sense of potential change on the horizon. That perhaps a species which has come up with abstract ideas of love, justice, liberty, and created works of immense artistic and scientific beauty, might just find a way to correct course before it's too late. This sense of wonder is on full display on The Occupant, and the potential seed for our enlightenment is planted in Corpse Reviver Number 3, a track brimming with homages to the love of philosophy and its place in navigating a more examined life.
    Ultimately Love in the Age of Machines feels like a dystopian sci-fi soundtrack written for optimists who want to change humanity's looming fate. While still firmly rooted in the techno genre, the album evokes themes and ideas that are universal to the human experience and our place in the Cosmos, and it is this aspect of the album that makes Love in the Age of Machines such a rewarding musical experience. It's techno that is at once accessible and intelligent, a combination rarely heard in today's endless sea of dance music.
    Reading list for those interested:
    Like War - PW Singer & Emerson T Brooking
    Life 3.0 - Max Tegmark
    Weapons of Math Destruction - Cathy O'Neil
    Superintelligence - Nick Bostrom
    The Case Against Reality - Daniel Hoffman
    Homo Deus - Yuval Harari
    Future Politics - Jamie Susskind
    The Age of Surveillance Capitalism - Shoshana Zuboff
    Our Final Invention - James Barrat
    A World Without Work - Daniel Susskind
    Human Compatible - Stuart Russel
    The Precipice - Toby Ord
    / pleasurekraft
    / pleasurekraftofficial
    pleasurekraft.com
    / pleasurekraft
    / pkmusic

Комментарии • 11

  • @peterfeter2199
    @peterfeter2199 4 года назад +5

    UI UI UI UI UI! WHAT A PIECE OF ART! LOVE THE MESSAGE, THE SOUNDDESIGN AND THE FEELING! NEXT LEVEL. PLEASUREKRAFT, I HIGHLY APPRECIATE YOUR TRAJECTORY AS AN ARTIST. AFTER YOU HAD A RUSH OF SUCCESS WITH TARANTULA AND THE PAIN OF HARD TIMES NOT REACHING AGAIN THAT NO 1 HIT FEELING, YOU MADE A GREAT TRANSITION TO REAL ARTIST! LOVE THE GREAT INSPIRATION YOU GIVE ME!

  • @Frxxdxm
    @Frxxdxm 3 года назад +2

    Wow... thank you!

  • @danielvigor7298
    @danielvigor7298 3 месяца назад

    ❤ crazy track

  • @liamhuish123
    @liamhuish123 5 месяцев назад

    Been looking for this for so long

  • @kin2xyou335
    @kin2xyou335 4 года назад +1

    the song won't stop giving me chill holy crap

  • @aymenbmiled1572
    @aymenbmiled1572 3 года назад +1

    Jesus what a banger !!!

  • @giovannysalas3746
    @giovannysalas3746 2 года назад

    Me eleva a otra dimensión

  • @maggieru27
    @maggieru27 4 года назад

    Love this blue color 💙 painting + music + meaning =💎

  • @liamhuish123
    @liamhuish123 5 месяцев назад

    What's that Arabic sounding wind instrument @pleasurekraft

  • @foodstampz
    @foodstampz 4 года назад

    the instrument sounds like you have a roli comntroller fo some sort.. great expeiremt

  • @nosoyandry
    @nosoyandry 4 года назад +1

    can I record my voice on this track?