Amsterdam-based artist Jorge Natalin enthralls throughout moments of each haunting people and atmospheric rock intrigue on his new album, Coming Down From Heaven. “I made these recordings in a really turbulent 12 months,” he explains of the album, spanning fourteen recordings from 2011 and 4 new songs (together with the gripping title monitor). “I discovered myself in lonely exile with a damaged coronary heart a number of instances.” Coming Down From Heaven proves riveting all through its 18 tracks, comprising a fair break up between sung and instrumental recordings.
The title monitor is a radical showcase of Natalin’s charming songwriting. Sporadic guitar strums and a title-touting beckoning opens the monitor with a compelling immersion. “Guess I’ll take the good distance dwelling,” Natalin’s vocals proceed, accompanied by twangy guitar comforts because the “we needs to be collectively,” craving comes into full focus. The central chorus alternates with solemn people and dreamy rock guitar tones for a blissfully hypnotic affect, attaining a spine-chilling end result because the “coming down,” vocal strikes with extra vibrant guitars and delicate percussive adornments to conclude this gem.
Different album highlights are quite a few. “Keep Away” intrigues with its mix of brisk acoustics and phase-friendly results, setting up a psych-friendly attraction with its manufacturing, whereas “Sew Me Up” is one other vocal-led success with palpable vocal emotion coming via through haunting layers and moments of simmering spaciousness. The tender, twangy “Solitude” additionally excels, as does becoming nearer “Ending Track,” ending with a dynamic shifting between lush people and spacey rock splendor.
Stream the album in full, under:
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“Coming Down From Heaven” and different tracks featured this month may be streamed on the updating Obscure Sound’s ‘Rising Singles’ Spotify playlist.
We found this launch through MusoSoup, as a part of the artist’s promotional marketing campaign.