Charity Empressa

Charity Empressa

Track Listings
1 Are We There Yet?
2 Carew
3 Future King of England
4 May the Good Lord Find You
5 Give 'Em Hell
6 Crush of the Mountains
7 Shake Your Money Maker
8 Stay Gold
9 Cool as Cranes
10 Breathing Is Good
11 Kool Kids and Rok and Roll

Discography
The Skin of Whippets
(2002)
Charity Empressa
(2001)





 

 


December  Hotel 
Overall Rating:  
+++-

(Carew)

 

Album Reviews

It is a project that was years in the making. Eric Campuzano, credited with The Prayer Chain, Starflyer 59, The Lassie Foundation, and Cush has provided yet another piece of gorgeous ear candy. With help from the Frank Lenz Foundation, Campuzano gives the listener a disc of drone filled ballads.

With swirlling guitars, phantomed drums, and melodic keyboards, Charity Empressa is a relative of yesterday's Dark Side of the Moon. Mixing his spacey music with guest vocals from Wayne Everett (The Prayer Chain), Matt Kelly (The Autumns), Jason Martin (Starflyer 59), and Troy Daughtery (Duraluxe), as well as guest musician Herb Grimaud Jr. (The Violet Burning), Campuzano gives a rare treat of true artists in brilliant form.

The album circles around in music patterns. It teases a Radiohead feel with Matt Kelly's Future King of England, it envokes memories of Moby's Play on Shake Your Money Maker (which borrows from the 1930's Albert Francis Trio), and it ends with the poppy reminiscent The Kool Kids and Rock and Roll.

Campuzano and Frank Lenz (Fold Zandura, Cush) have put together a true musical masterpiece that any music lover should consider on his next purchase. It may take a listen through to understand the direction of the album, but Charity Empressa is sure to please.

~Ryan

 

Let's play with some mental imagery, shall we? Eric Campuzano, the man behind Charity Empressa, is probably best known for his work with The Lassie Foundation, whose airy, post-shoegazer pop albums are the musical equivalent of standing high upon a sunlit mountain ledge, giddy from the height and lack of oxygen, and looking down at the vastness of creation. Charity Empressa's music, while intricate in its own way, is based upon the cathartic, enveloping drone of a single note, slowing time to a crawl. It's rather like pushing yourself away from the ledge and diving, arms wide open, into the yawning, open expanse of the sky. It's unlikely that Campuzano wants you to jump off a mountain, or even take the stairs two at a time, but he clearly created Charity Empressa with the intention of describing and filling vast spaces. Recorded over three years, this self-titled album is a series of grand constructions -- flowing, ambient soundscapes (an overused term, perhaps, but thoroughly apt here) that slip liquidly through the constraints of pop-song structure. There are no journeys from Point A to Point B on this agenda; instead, Campuzano's compositions begin at Point A, work their way around it, above it and beneath it, view it from all possible angles, then turn it inside-out and back -- giving you the impression that you've traveled a great distance without ever moving, and permanently altering your concept of Point A in the bargain. Of course, this sort of music is inherently instrumental, right? Wrong. Campuzano works vocals into several tracks, and in the process turns his works of glittering, celestial grandeur into defocused hymns. "Future King of England" revels in its pristine, church-like atmosphere, while "May the Good Lord Find You" and "Shake Your Money Maker" (which utilizes a sampled vocal, almost Moby-style) hint at a closer allegiance to rock and roll style. "The Kool Kids and Rok (sic) and Roll", which closes the album, is more or less a Lassie Foundation song with the effects pedals turned up a little higher; startlingly catchy after the deconstructed rhythms of the previous ten songs, it'll appeal to fans of Spiritualized and the Beta Band. While the disc and its associated materials hint that Campuzano has approached this project with a decidedly Christian bent, listeners who typically run screaming from the slightest hint of Christian rock can hold their ground. While it's decidedly meditative, and may well be Campuzano's ex post facto "teenage symphonies to God", there are no heavy-handed, faith-flogging undertones here. It's a thinking person's album, but works equally well whether you're thinking about God, Gaia or a particularly intractable physics formula. Its majestic scope implies an allegiance with "big" ideas...but lighting won't strike if you listen while thinking about goats or bendy toys or shoelaces, if that's your bag. The question, then, is "Can you listen to this?" For some of you, the answer will be a resounding "No". Charity Empressa isn't active music. It's probably not a good idea to put it in the car stereo, or play it at any time when your senses need to be firmly rooted in the here and now. And as traditional meditation music, it's equally flawed; between the vocals, the beats and a few particularly harrowing moments (see the epic but disturbing "Give 'em Hell"), you might find yourself abruptly torn from your "special place" and thrust into Campuzano's psychedelic imaginings. No...this is an album you lie around to. Slap it on the stereo at 7:00 a.m. on a lazy Sunday morning when an annoying ray of sunlight has somehow found its way into your eyes. Listen to it after moving furniture all afternoon, or after a ten mile bike ride. Think of it as a mild aural intoxicant with an "off" switch, and none of those annoying dead brain cell side effects.

~tonevendor

 

 

A project that was three years in the making, Charity Empressa is the work of Eric Campuzano (The Lassie Foundation) and numerous guest artists, and as an exercise in droning work, could probably be nicely summed up as an aural narcotic. With parts of the disc that remind one of Spiritualized, other parts that take you back in the days of old 4AD artists and others that remind one of some different artists on the Kranky label, it's an interesting mixture. It's 11 tracks and almost an hours worth of music, but it actually ends up feeling like longer than that when it's all over (which will be a good thing to some people and a definite detractor to others).

The opening track of "Are We There Yet?" injects a touch of humor into things early (via the title), and the track features three different layers of droning keyboards, as well as some gently strumming guitars and some chiminy keyboards as well. Things slowly build over the course of the almost eight minute, and by the very end, it almost feels like a rhythm might start up and take the track into new directions, but it instead echoes out with one last breath of chimes and that's it. The second track "Carew" takes on a droning jazz feel with lonely horns that mix in alongside the repeating guitars and keyboards, but the short track doesn't really offer up much different than the first.

Vocals make their way into the third track "Future King Of England" (courtesy of The Autumns' Matthew Kelly) and his falsetto floating over the minimal background sounds eerily like Jeff Buckley doing drone style. One of the best track son the album is the fourth one entitled "May The Good Lord Find You." With some tabla-style rhythms and layered guitar feedback, the female vocals give the track sort a beautiful, lifting edge. One track that sticks out due to it's almost adherence to structure is the bluegrass/world/drone bend of "Shake Your Money Maker." The twangy sounding vocals would sound seriously out-of-place on the disc if it weren't for the layers of guitar textures and another nice middle-eastern sounding rhythm.

The rest of the album is pretty much devoted to different explorations on the drone/noise theme. While tracks never quite reach a fever pitch of simply hazed-out noise, there are parts where Campuzano creates a lovely dose. "Give Em Hell" comes right in the middle of the release and shifts back and forth for 10 minutes while the short one-two of "Cool As Cranes" and "Breathing Is Good" have some of the most nicely-haunting sound textures I've heard in awhile (the latter recalling something you'd hear on the excellent This Mortal Coil project from almost a decade ago ). You probably wouldn't want to listen to this while operating heavy machinery or any other time that you need to actually get things done and focus, but the slowly drifting album does work nicely at times when you'd just rather not have something that's a pounding distraction. As the second full-length release on the relatively new Absalom Recordings, it's another solid step.

~almostcool

 

 

 

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