Press office - Communication - Music consultant & PR

FLeUR: the new single “Narcissus’ Scream (For Sarah K.)” is out today, from the upcoming album “Caring Abut Something Utterly Useless” (Bosco Rec)

Music is actually useless, especially when it has no human vocals to cling to; only raw auditory stimulus, and yet we care a lot about it because it helps us speaking the unspeakable”. So FLeUR introduce Caring About Something Utterly Useless, their second album to be released on February 12, 2021 via Bosco Rec.

The music of the Italian-based experimental duo, formed by Enrico Dutto and Francesco Lurgo, is all about the dialogue between electronic programming and the warmness of human hands playing guitars and keyboards, one merging with each other until the point where they became symbiotic and the boundaries blur, and so digital sounds mutate into breaths and walls of guitar chords become synthetic roars.

Some written for theatrical pieces, some for live performances in art galleries and others conceived in the forced reflections of the 2020 lockdown, the seven tracks of this record became a coherent journey thanks to the production of Emilio Pozzolini, from the never forgotten dreamy electronica heroes port-royal.

Pozzolini himself made the alt-mix of Narcissus’ Scream (For Sarah K.), the new second single inspired by playwright Sarah Kane available from today in its double version.

For the opening track and first single The Lowest Tide (For Matteo G.), a free-form abstraction that starts from maximum expansion and reaches maximum saturation through continuous micro-variations, Pozzolini was joined behind the studio desk by dark ambient enfant-prodige Domiziano Maselli.

Caring About Something Utterly Useless is a sonic magma from which the melodies emerge like rocks from the waves, which rise and fall in circular motion, from the opening single The Lowest Tide to the finalThe Highest Tide, the only track with vocals, which ends with the same theme with which The Lowest Tide begins. From minimalism we drift towards an organic sound, while the titles of the tracks are transformed into a further means of expression. There are For Pierre Brassau, to recall the alter ego of the chimpanzee passed off as a French artist in the Sixties, and My Battery Is Low And It’s Getting Dark, in reference to the last message of the NASA rover on Mars before going off.

Caring About Something Utterly Useless is dedicated to the memory of the Italian singer-songwriter Gwydion Destefanis, aka Nebbiolo, and arrives four years after FLeUR’s debut album The Space Between. In addition to the attitudinal belonging to a certain scene in their city of Turin, the influences of the duo range from musicians such as Tim Hecker and Ben Frost to the Warp school of Autechre and Boards Of Canada, up to the post-rock of Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Mogwai and Bark Psychosis, to the dark tones of Coil and Soap & Skin.

A journey where the road bends around maximalist ambient drones, shattered IDM beats and lullabies from guitar and piano, all of this here to speak the unspeakable. Take care of it.

ALTRE NEWS

“Nosedive Session” is the new live EP by submeet, available on all digital platforms from today December 4th, 2020 for Lady Sometimes Records with related videos

In times of lockdown we need to react and to reforge our live experience of music. submeet were not discouraged and immediately chose to record… Leggi Tutto

Yesterday Will Be Great release new single “Trees/Giant”, from the album “The Weather Is Fantastic” out on April 8th, 2022 via Blooms Recordings

The world is falling apart, so much so that the future would often seem to be behind us. The Italian band Yesterday Will be Great goes on… Leggi Tutto

a/lpaca: “Make It Better” is the psych-rock band’s debut album out today, March 19, 2021 via WWNBB Collective/Sulatron Records/Sour Grapes

The “beat”, the hypnotic and obsessive footstep that recalls primitive dances, is the fulcrum of Make It Better, the debut album by Italian band a/lpaca out today 19 March 2021 on… Leggi Tutto

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.