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                        | Runtime: 26'15'' 
 «And eighty releases later, Out Level (a.k.a. Luís Antero for field recording fans) returns with the second part of the sx guitar series (first part here).
 Again, the only source of audio material here is his guitar, with plenty of effects, feedback and loops to make it almost unrecognizable as a musical instrument.
 Enjoy 
                          the trip.»
 - test tube
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                        | «(...) It isn’t only Antero’s fully realised field recordings which capture   attention, as he also creates highly experimental guitar pieces, where   the instrument’s voice becomes enwrapped in a shimmering, deep   mysticism, and one where her identity is fully cloaked and never seen   without a mask. Similar in experimentation lies Antero’s SX Guitar series; as seen in his field recordings, the music here is too created   openly, naturally played out in their own rhythms and intricate   harmonies. Antero’s second volume in the series focuses on one, wide and   spacious aquatic piece, opposing his first release, which comprised of   eleven seperate, experimental portraits – their own unique postcards.   Antero continues to explore the same areas of experimentalism as seen in   his earlier work, but here he displays a far greater maturity and   patience to slowly rotate and allow the music a personal space, in loops   of hypnosis. 
 It could be said that Portugal’s presence is found in his latest   addition to the series, focusing on the guitar as an instrument, without   the natural sound of the instrument. The first installment was released   four years ago, and this entrance shimmers and wavers with a deeply   aquatic feel close to the heart of the music. Along with this, there is a   personality and vibrancy that recalls his field recording work.   Antero’s field recordings were always active, busy without a chaotic   streak, meditative and meandering recordings which evoked a lazy siesta   in the afternoon heat. It may be easier to record using laptops and   computers in the modern age, but it is still an enviable ability to   craft something which sounds organic and free-flowing. Antero’s use of a   Buddha machine, a laptop and a blue electric guitar are almost non   existent to one’s ears; one could be forgiven for thinking a stringed   instrument was not involved at any time during the project. Yet, inside   the sharp, crystalline tones there runs a hidden fretboard, ringing out   in an endless stream of sustain. A multitude of sounds echoes ever   outwards, and from one source many are born. Like postcards, Antero is   highly adept at capturing the spirit of a place at any one moment in   time.
 
 Antero’s work under the alias Out Level allows him   to dive deeply into areas of highly experimental music. As an   instrument, Antero’s guitar remains forever hidden in a sea of   tranquility teeming with electronic glitches and momentary drones. They   fade and turn into new, dazzling sonical waters, and it makes for a   fluid listen. Looped sections enter and fall back, spiralling in   turbulent seas. His music seems to be allwoed the freedom to develop   into something all of its own, and this improvisation really allows this   addition to breathe underwater.
 
 Like the aquamarine artwork, the music displays richly warm,   evocative tones, and an occasional, rotating drone of the deepest kind   acts as an effective, soothing undercurrent. Alongside this lay notes   which trail off with an icy purpose, perhaps eerily so, communicating   the sonarsignals and cries of the deep. Notes flow in and out, blurring   with rhythms, shimmering with a beautiful crystal clarity in their cycle   of loops.
 
 It may not immediately captivate in the same manner as his field   recording work, but as ever, a deep listening experience will be   discovered with just hints of patience. Antero is more interested in a   developmental piece this time around, rather than a snapshot of   differing rhythms and frequencies of his first excursion. I have to say   that I find a strong rhythm to the music, a rhythm with no form of   percussion, yet one which exists as sure as a heartbeat. And because of   this, there is a definite motion; the music can never sink into boredom,   and turns into the lightest of voyages, as sparkling, transluscent   timbres smoothly pass over the clear, aquatic airwaves.
 
 A cascading waterfall of electronic cycles endlessly, and it is   completely immersive in its ambience over all twenty five minutes. In   this regard, it is similar to Shinji Masuko’s solo work, most noticeably   the relationships between delay and electric guitar. The long-flowing   nature of the music allows ample space to breathe and stretch, and while   the first set of guitar recordings produced more variety, Antero   displays here his greater confidence and mastery and because of this,   there is where his increased maturity lies, leading to excitement. Of   course, the advantages of focusing purely on one mood inside one piece   of music lends it a certain freedom. It’s spacious and unrestricted, and   this is what effectively seduces the listener.
 
 Antero’s aquatic ambience, currents of glitches, the presence of a   drone, and a delay drenched reverb is like discovering a bursting   ecosystem full of life as we descend underwater. The drones sink deeper,   into sub aquatic levels of the oceans. The instrument takes on a   remarkable transformation, cutting and ever changing. It may lack the   warped, distorted melodies of Antero’s first SX Guitar LP, but   it seems this was never an intention to repeat what was already achieved   to such an interesting effect. Instead, the aim is a largely   unstructured piece, and the music can then transcend into a deeper   listening experience.
 
 Deep echoes of drones add a heavy substance, entering slowly as we   descend the depths, while also creating a smooth and soothing contrast   to the shrill pitches under the influence of an endless delay. These   deep reverberations may reflect the deep fathoms of both his sound, and   the ocean off the Portuguese coastline. SX Guitar #2 propels   the listener into the deep, and Antero’s sound remains focused, yet   deep. The possibilities for Antero to continue in this vein are   seemingly endless, and it will be with a great interest to see what   experimental discoveries lay in front. As his notes speak a new   language, Antero has created an immersive listen which acts as an   effective hypnosis, until we awake from the depths and surface.
 - James Catchpole [A closer listen] / June 18, 2012
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 cover:
 ©2009 Luís Antero
 ©2012 aeriola::behaviour
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 ©2011 Out Level
 ©2012 test tube
 
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