6/26/2023

Kramer Shares "Ladder to the Moon" Video via StereoEmbers | 'Music for Films Edited by Moths' LP Out Now via Shimmy-Disc/Joyful Noise

Kramer Shares "Ladder to the Moon" Video via StereoEmbers

Music for Films Edited by Moths LP Out Now
via Shimmy-Disc/Joyful Noise
LISTEN/PURCHASE & SHARE: Kramer - Music For Films Edited by Moths LP
Spotify / Apple Music / Purchase

WATCH & SHARE: Kramer - "Ladder to the Moon"
YouTube

WATCH & SHARE: Kramer - "Requiem for Max"
YouTube

WATCH & SHARE: Kramer - "Bukowski On The Beach"
YouTube

LISTEN/WATCH & SHARE: Kramer - "Burial at Sea"
Spotify / Apple Music / YouTube

LISTEN/WATCH & SHARE: Kramer - "Stars Will Die Tonight"
Spotify / Apple Music / YouTube

LISTEN/WATCH & SHARE: Kramer - "Like the Planets Love the Sun"
Spotify / Apple Music / YouTube

"Dedicated to the work and memory of the translucently brilliant writer WG Sebald – who preferred to be referred to as Max – the track and video (shot with a quiet, visionary grace by Tinca Veerman) both plumb those privately excavated wells of loss and recollection where each of us store our past in all its tremors of pain and joy."
StereoEmbers

"The question must ultimately arise: Is there a modern musical niche in which the shape of Kramer’s talent – not to mention his psyche – doesn’t find a way to adapt, and in fact thrive? [...] It’s beautiful, it’s beguiling, it’s a dreamscape made of reality or the other way around, living and breathing on the edge of mortality, itself a beach on the existential breach. Who else is capable of this? No one, as usual."
StereoEmbers

"Kramer's layers of sound - sitting somewhere in the middle of the 'poignant / sinister' Venn diagram - are readymade for celluloid. The tense twanging of 'Ladder To The Moon' is prime audio for the moment a devastating revelation hits the protagonist, whilst 'Requiem For Max' is itching to be dragged into a Final Cut timeline, right at the part when a craggy-faced old soul digs out a projector from his loft, plonks himself down on the floor and watches the dusty Super 8 films of his youth."
The Quietus 

"It’s a beautiful, fully lived-in piece that’s almost too easy to fall in love with and at the very least ranks with anything Kramer has produced. If you’ve ever wondered if it’s possible to be in thrall to reductionism, you have your answer"
StereoEmbers

"'Stars Will Die Tonight' is a gorgeous, serene piece of minimalist-tinged progression as it builds through an ostinato pulse and slow motion electronic swells. A pulse emerges as a piano augments the frail melody, followed by strings that appear out of nowhere building to a crescendo across its nearly five minutes, ascending into swirling contrapuntal spirals before disappearing into the ether."
ECHOES

"Kramer’s work in music covers a vast spectrum of sound, unified only by an unwavering commitment to experimentation and collaboration."
The Big Takeover

"The atmospheric track underpinned by echoey vocals and soft, layered instrumentals feels like a lullaby before the heart-wrenching lyrics catch up to you."
EARMILK

"This is a visual representation like no other, impressionistic and technologically advanced, an exercise for the eye that incorporates depth-of-field perception techniques that force the eye to zero in on what’s central to the core of the sound-image events. It draws the listener, and viewer, into the light, making this so much more than just an audio-focused experience."
V13

"Like a reluctant seer refracting what he sees through the prism of his own experience, Kramer’s voice here, both the authorial and literal, has a dream-like, allusive quality that somehow manages to both put your nerves slightly on edge while soothing them in the same instant."
StereoEmbers

"A blackened composition that makes like a Nick Cave song turned highly confessional [...] the sort of track that will stick with you long after it’s finished playing."
Glide Magazine

"Beyond announcing Kramer’s first truly solo album in some 23 years, 'The Crying,' both in sound and visual representation, brings us a portrait of an artist that refuses, as ever, to hide behind artifice, to front with any show of false bravado (a phrase that is redundant to point of absurdity), instead proceeding as straight ahead and hellbent as possible through the sheer wonderment of pain and loss and age, damn life’s shitty torpedoes."
StereoEmbers

Not too long ago, iconic musician and producer Kramer shared a brand new LP of ambient, atmospheric works entitled Music for Films Edited by Moths (out now via Shimmy-Disc/Joyful Noise Recordings). Now, Kramer shares a new video for a track from the record, "Ladder to the Moon," created by Dutch visual artist Tinca Veerman. This is final video created by Veerman with regard to this project.

Wrote Kramer of the track and its brand new visual: "The stars were a bit too far to wish for, so we aimed for the moon instead and landed intact. The chrysalis of 'Music For Film Edited By Moths' has become ten 'Films for Music'... the finalization of a year-long music and video collaboration with Tinca Veerman. This is the final ladder, from which we now beg your permission to wave goodbye."

Speaking on the holistic LP, Kramer continued:

"What I have come to embrace is the working notion that there is no Past, and no Future. There is only a constantly evolving series of microscopic moments that constitute the miraculous Present. As fertile as it is and always has been, for me, Memory is a chimera. So if you asked me what it is exactly that I am trying to do now, with Music, be it through song, or through ambience, I would confess that what i'm doing couldn't be more simple; I am just trying to explain myself. I'm trying to show you who I am."    

Music for Films Edited by Moths
 is out now on all DSPs via Shimmy-Disc/Joyful Noise Recordings. It's available for purchase HERE.

Kramer - "Ladder to the Moon" [OFFICIAL VIDEO]
Video by Tinca Veerman

Music for Films Edited by Moths Bio:

In the ten compositions that comprise this new LP, mournful at times yet mysteriously life-affirming and generous in their scope, Kramer sees films where there are none, and composes his accompanying ambient soundtracks in a state of interrupted grace. Words, text, complete screenplays, character arcs, shooting scripts and storyboards swirl through his head as he puts his imagery to sound, and the results evoke a world in which moths, drawn to the bright flickering lights of Cinema and the low humming lights of Dreams, in Kramer's own words, "...might never die." 

Though often evocative of dreams, there is nothing even remotely somnambulant about this new work. It bears witness to a frenetic intelligence that asks for the listener's full and waking participation. Intensely passive yet electrically charged, the music comes before the film, as the film becomes the music.

The LP's nature reveals an interior dialogue between musician and choice. Each piece represents Kramer's encounter with the blank canvas of silence that greets him as a composer. Embracing sounds as objects and instruments of Truth, the end result of his process is as much about what is absent and what has been removed or edited away than what is left in its wake as artifacts of emotion. These pieces are the Spring frost of lost imaginings, vanitas to broken connections, visions nearly unrecordable by the human eye. Kramer envisions a music that functions to stop time, as an event that always plays in the present and never needs a past to give it a reference point. It is music that communicates in the most intimate way possible, as intricately and as deeply as the way it blossoms and shifts and evades categorization when exposed to thin air. 

Drawn toward the light of a multitude of influences, we hear echoes of the feverishly frozen dreams of composers Morton Feldman, Terry Riley, Brian Eno and Arvo Part, melting alongside the surreal cinemas of David Lynch and The Brothers Quay, all parts converging to evoke a time and place that does not exist outside of the mind's eye of the listener. These ten works are fluid adventures in fathomless landscapes, emotions distilled and offered as a painter-less canvas without a physical home. Each individual composition is an offering to a future memory, a chalice to be filled with the listener's own reactions to them. As a whole, the ten pieces form an image of ten circling planets in an expanding galaxy that colors itself anew with each subsequent listen. Movement, grace, and Peace. 

After making much of his career within the practically anonymous labors of an independent record producer — one that embroiders the labors of others to be seen in their finest light, without shedding originality for a brand or to be enhanced with jarring, trend-setting effects recycled for commerce and profits — Kramer's collaborations strive to give a purer vision to Art and a confidence in wandering without boundaries through each artist's ever-evolving intuitive processes. He regards the undiscovered oceans of creative possibilities without judgements or fears. For him, the act of making Art is the act of fearing nothing.

Composing these works for films that do not exist, Kramer collaborates on the video art for this project with Dutch Multi-Media artist Tinca Veerman, who crafts a uniquely idiosyncratic and profoundly sensual visual world for Kramer's visceral imagination. Veerman's stunning creations for the human eye are a perfect compliment for Kramer's audio love letters for the human soul.

As a solo artist, Kramer has always worked with his own unique vocabulary. He is a sound-poet; a restless interpreter of his own imagination and emotions using the experience of his works to invite stillness, openness, Truth, and a selfless surrender to the infinite possibilities that manifest themselves by the simple yet sometimes radical act of Listening.

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