Review: Andre Bratten – Pax Americana

“I’ve always been fascinated with how a sound can make you feel without being something you can touch,” Oslo-based DJ and producer Andre Bratten writes in the press release I received for his newest album – Pax Americana.  Recorded in a studio he built in his garden after stepping away from late night DJ sessions at clubs around the world, the new record is indeed an evocative piece that changes your perspective and makes you move.

Lead single, “HS” (one of my favorites of the year so far), is a great example of this.  It’s bubbly yet laced with a little darkness to keep you grounded as you let it sink into your feet to get them tapping.  The title track, comparing the current state of the U.S. to the Roman Empire, has an underlying nervous tick that bumps against soothing synths.  I’m not sure if Bratten is trying to tell us Americans that everything will be all right, despite what some may fear, or the reverse of that message.  It works either way.

“426” continues the dark themes, with bass lines that slow to a creepy crawl while up-tempo electro high-hats move like a rattlesnake around you.  The gothic “Commonwealth” is like an Art of Noise track if Art of Noise decided to make synthwave music for horror films that take place in the year 2999.  “Ranx” goes further down the darkwave rabbit hole to the point where you’re not sure it’s fading out or lulling you into a trap.  The closer, “Recreation 26B,” starts with a simple beat and then builds like a rising morning tide with bright synths.  It’s the kind of track that tends to take you by surprise.  You’re enjoying the opening riffs and then find yourself in another mental place by the end of it and wondering how you got there.  It’s a worm hole in space and time.

Pax Americana is a soundscape more than a dance record.  It’s a soundscape for your garden studio, your garden party, or your mental garden (which, let’s face it, all of ours need cultivating).

Keep your mind open.

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Published by

Nik Havert

I've been a music fan since my parents gave me a record player for Christmas when I was still in grade school. The first record I remember owning was "Sesame Street Disco." I've been a professional writer since 2004, but writing long before that. My first published work was in a middle school literary magazine and was a story about a zoo in which the animals could talk.

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