Deradoorian

REVIEW: Deradoorian - Eternal Recurrence

Phillipe Roberts

As a guest on the Song Exploder podcast in 2015, Angel Deradoorian unpacked “A Beautiful Woman,” the first single from second album The Expanding Flower Planet. She prefaced it with a bit of wisdom on her guiding impulses to songwriting at the time. “The two things that I think are important for accessible music ... are a really strong melodic line for the vocals and a strong beat for the drums,” she said, pausing with a laugh to note that “accessible” was in air quotes.

By those standards, her new EP Eternal Recurrence is as inaccessible as they come. Unless those drums are buried in the mix to the point of invisibility, their polyrhythmic chatter is entirely absent, and while Deradoorian’s voice has lost none of its magnetism, her approach to melody now veers sharply towards the impressionistic. Syllables escape at a glacial pace, stretching and smearing across the canvas with infinite patience. Gone are the disorienting, hocket-style zig-zags bouncing like lightning between your headphones; this is a record of stillness, of meditation, of slow-burn revelation. On Eternal Recurrence, yesterday’s air quotes become a telling piece of foresight. Leaving rigid ideas of accessibility behind, Angel Deradoorian cracks open a new window into her mind. The result is an album that breathes with uninhibited intimacy.

Stirred awake by gentle streams of synthesizer sunlight on “Love Arise,” Deradoorian neatly divides Eternal Recurrence into distinct sonic halves. The first half is a steady ascent. “Love Arise” tumbles out of bed, yawning clipped mantras that build in complexity and awareness. “Return-Transcend” pounds the pavement at a firm pace, basking in the vast expanses of looped vocals pooling around heavy blasts of detuned bass. The trio reaches cruising altitude on “Ausar Temple,” where the irregular chimes of a gong and bowed cymbal play against each other. The addition of field recordings of steadily dripping water gives the track a spacious, haunting serenity.

From here, the trajectory of the album dips towards the ground, trading the luminous textures of the first side for a descent into dusk on “Nia in the Dark.” Written for a friend who struggles with feeling invisible to others, the track is a warm embrace. The arrangement of spare bass guitar and ominous synth chords keeps Deradoorian’s reassurances contained; for all of their open-hearted splendor, lines like “In your soul, in your shadow / Grows the finest of the light,” feels like a flickering candle in the creeping darkness. Despite the increased focused on texture here, Eternal Recurrence never feels cold or detached.

Indeed, these mysterious new surroundings seem closer to the heart than ever. The way her voice breaks ever so slightly only to come roaring back on the lyric “True love is the product of the destruction of oneself” on “Mirrorman,” is a stunning bit of humanity for an album that meanders with ambient patience. Contrast this with “Love Arise,” where “Love is the only thing keeping me alive” and it makes perfect sense that Angel Deradoorian would need to unravel these mysteries with such measured care. Despite a short runtime, Eternal Recurrence is a generous, open-hearted spiritual journey, a confessional lullaby for those weary souls caught between love’s cruel duality.

FIELD REPORT: Terrible Records X Cymbal X Pigeons & Planes CMJ Showcase

All Photos: Brandon Bakus

All Photos: Brandon Bakus

Gerard Marcus

Ever since I moved to New York, CMJ has seemed pretty overwhelming. Mostly, it's because I get a little paralyzed by having to choose between so many great options. I spend hours trying to decide who I should go see, mapping out routes from one venue to another, desperately trying to figure out if there's some way I can make it to every act. By the end of the festival I've almost certainly had a great time, but there are usually a few regrettable missed opportunities that slipped through the cracks.

Adding to the frustration is the fact that I usually try to do some sort of coverage of all the shows I see, which gets increasingly difficult after I've made it through my first round or seven of beer.

This year I decided to change it up. One show for the blog. That's it. And if there was one show at CMJ that had more acts I wanted to see than any other, it was the Terrible Records X Cymbal X Pigeons & Planes showcase at Cameo Gallery in Brooklyn. I gave our wonderful photographer Brandon Bakus one simple task: take beautiful pictures. I'd say he did a good job.

Stolen Jars

Kaya

Jimmy Whispers

Okay Kaya

Deradoorian

Porches.

Kirin J. Callinan

Empress Of

LE1F

Shopping

REVIEW: Deradoorian - The Expanding Flower Planet

Will Shenton

I love when I can snarkily point out manufactured music industry hype, and I was ready to do just that for Deradoorian's highly-anticipated debut The Expanding Flower Planet. It's the perfect setup: Angel Deradoorian was the bassist and vocalist for Dirty Projectors (you'll probably recognize her voice if you're a fan), and has since played with every indie darling from Avey Tare to Vampire Weekend. But unfortunately for my smug ass, she deserves every bit of the frenzy that's surrounded her solo debut.

It may be obvious for an album as overtly psychedelic as this (I mean, it's named after a tapestry on her wall, for Christ's sake), but The Expanding Flower Planet is a trip. Unfortunately for a lot of other psych bands, the genre often lends itself to tropes that—while they might make for good company when you're actively under the influence—get a little tired in the light of day. Deradoorian's work, on the other hand, is legitimately transportive.

There are world music influences, sure, which at any given moment can take you to the Middle East, Japan, or East India. But it goes beyond that. Her personal style is so wildly inventive and unpredictable that making your way through the album genuinely feels like exploring something unknown. Each track is a new rock to turn over, and it certainly keeps you on your toes.

While it's too early to say how The Expanding Flower Planet will hold up in posterity, I think it's safe to rank it among the most impressive releases of this year. Deradoorian isn't exactly a newcomer to the scene, but it's great to get a better sense of what she contributed to her past projects, and I'm sure her solo career (if she continues to pursue it) will be a fruitful one. But for now, I'd suggest kicking back with this record and basking in all the fantastical places it takes you.