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The Second Continent

by Frond

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    Includes high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more. Paying supporters also get unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app.
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  • Full Digital Discography

    Get all 119 Esc.rec. releases available on Bandcamp and save 60%.

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality downloads of the dragon is still alive, The Hope Realm, PICK & MIX 02, Nieuwe Electronische Waar 18, Movements for Listening, The Dirt, Flying Ginsu VII, Paesaggi integrati, and 111 more. , and , .

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  • Limited Edition Cassette
    Cassette + Digital Album

    Chrome cassette tape in cardboard cover with artwork by Holger Lippmann

    Includes unlimited streaming of The Second Continent via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.

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1.
Apharia 04:03
2.
3.
4.
Crushed 04:02
5.
No Fate 03:55
6.
7.
Ornaments 04:15
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9.
Subspace 03:47
10.
Urban Glow 05:08
11.
Population 2 06:00

about

The Second Continent is the debut album from producer and phonographer Frond. Blending gentle acoustics, intense electronics and field recordings, this is a personal journey through a landscape of forgotten melodies and vivid textures. A haunting beauty lingers inside these tracks, which draws you in deeper every time you listen to them.

Richard Bultitude has produced music since he was a teenager and in his mid-twenties launched his first project Point B, the back catalogue of which features numerous atmospheric beatless tracks which were the precursor to Frond.

The Second Continent is the first album in the Esc.rec. catalogue to be released on a (limited) audio cassette. Not just because releasing audio cassettes is 'hot' right now, but because the tape sound aesthetic compliments Frond's album. Just like the selected artwork by Holger Lippmann does.

German artist Holger Lippmann began his career with traditional materials but moved into computational design and generative art in the early 90s. The piece 'perlin scape 24', which features on this record, was completed in 2012 and comprised of 12 plates of laser engraved wood.

www.frondmusic.com
www.holgerlippmann.de

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Review by os in Gonzo Circus Magazine:
De vijfenveertigste uitgave van Esc.rec. uit Deventer is tevens hun eerste cassette. Achter de naam Frond gaat de muzikant Richard Bultitude schuil die ook muziek maakt onder de naam Point B. Op deze C45 presenteert hij ons elf instrumentale tracks waarbij het draait om synthesizers, field recordings en samples. Dat resulteert in dromerige ambient of magisch realistische elektronica met geluiden van vallende regen of kwetterende vogels er doorheen. Muziek die je doet wegdromen naar verre oorden met regenwouden en woeste natuur. Het klinkt cliché, maar de muziek is dat beslist niet. Het zijn krachtige tracks die je diep meezuigen. Kortom deep listening in optima forma, gestoken in een kunstzinnig bruin kartonnen doosje.

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Review by Tristan Bath in The Quietus:
Blissful synthetic textures blend with lush field recordings on The Second Continent, from British producer/phonographer Frond, on the first cassette tape by Dutch label, esc.rec. Eleven relatively brief and shimmering drones populate The Second Continent; it is a hazy landscape, occasionally punctuated with nostalgic instrumental visions (such as the wistful piano of 'No Fate', or 'Still Burning's organ). The integration of field recordings is what makes this tape stand out as an ambient work though. 'No Fate' duets music with the tinkling metallic clink of yacht rigging recorded in a port on the south coast of Cyprus. 'Purple Overcast' makes use of a hissing campfire recorded near Dartmoor, and 'Apharia' opens with whistling wind from an old cottage in Shropshire, ending with the epic crack of a gunshot and fleeing birds from Kent's Oare marshes.

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Review in Ambientblog:
Esc.Rec is a dutch label that specialises in experimental music that is  not only unpredictable but also always surprising, because it’s hard to pinpoint their style. But whatever it may be called it is always music ‘with a twist’, available in beautifully designed packaging.

Frond‘s “The Second Continent” is the labels 45th release: a limited (50) edition cassette tape, with beautiful artwork by Holger Lippmann. The cassette (first cassette tape on the label, by the way) will probably be on the verge of being sold out by now, but besides the cassette, there’s also the digital release from Bandcamp and iTunes, as well as the streaming versions onSpotify, Deezer, Google Play.

Frond is Richard Bultitude, who has been producing music ever since he was a teenager and has previously released over 3 albums and 14 EP’s as Point B. “The Second Continent” is an album full of magical realism. The eleven tracks on this album are quite different from each other, yet they all share a strange dreamlike atmosphere, “blending gentle acoustics, intense electronics and field recordings… a personal journey through a landscape of forgotten melodies and vivid textures”.

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Review by FdW in Vital Weekly:
Behind Frond we find one Richard Bultitude, who has been producing music since being a teenager and in his mid-twenties he had a project called Point B, of which I never heard. Frond is his latest outing and 'The Second Continent' is the first cassette on Esc.rec. (known so far mostly for their downloads and CDRs). The cover doesn't mention any instruments, but me thinks there is surely a guitar around here, maybe a synthesizer and electronics for sure. Also part of the game might be the use of field recordings but if they are, they might be heavily processed, down there somewhere, although in 'Urban Glow' we sensor the call or birds. The music is all very ambient but of the variety with a darker undercurrent. There is a lot of darker tension brooding underneath the waves here; nothing seems carefree really. That of course is a great thing. There is a certain darker side to the music, an angular side if you will that is a bit nasty, without being noisy. Now of course it might be the fact that this is released on a cassette, but it's also in the music itself. It's all quite nice, but at the same time, it's also something that I heard before. That is perhaps the downside to this. It sounds great but also a bit unsurprising. Think Fennesz, Hecker, Mathieu and all the other likes who melt their guitar and/or field recordings through the use of the computer into icy, atmospheric blocks of sound, even when Frond uses an electric piano here and there on top of things. On a rainy Sunday afternoon however such contemplations may not matter, and it's just the beauty that counts.

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Review by Jan Willem Broek in Caleidoscoop:
Ik word er soms bijna net zo moe van als die hele Zwarte Pieten-discussie, dat gediscussieer over het medium waarop je muziek wilt beluisteren. Soms krijg ik het gevoel dat ik mijn muzikale beleving moet verdedigen omdat ik deze ophang aan de door mij geliefde cd. Maar ja, iets dat je uit de kast kunt pakken, waar je in een boekje kunt bladeren en ongestoord zonder onderbrekingen kunt luisteren is maar op één format mogelijk. Het zegt uiteraard niets over de kwaliteit van de muziek. Digitale releases heb ik het meeste moeite mee. Niet alleen ontbreekt er veelal een hoop info, maar ook de beleving mis ik. De nummers verdwalen uiteindelijk ergens op de computer. Daarnaast wordt er mijns inziens digitaal teveel pulp uitgebracht, waarbij de artiesten geen rem hebben op hetgeen ze uit kunnen brengen. Het is vaak gratis of goedkoop en dus is elke eventuele kritiek erop daarmee in de kiem gesmoord. Eén van de labels die hierop een uitzondering vormt is Esc.rec. uit Deventer, dat altijd kwaliteit wil leveren en levert. Of het nu om een cassette (zoek maar op wikipedia), een usb-stick in een zeep, een cd(r) of een digitale release betreft, ze brengen hoogwaardige producten. Dat maakt op voorhand ook elke release interessant. De rest vechten we wel uit op andere vlakken, hetzij persoonlijk dan wel via de sociale media. Ik wilde het maar even gezegd hebben. Maar als Esc.rec. iets uitbrengt is het iets waarbij je de oren moet spitsen. Ter zake Broek!

Welnu, de Britse artiest Richard Jonathan Bultitude brengt sinds 2006 muziek uit als Point B. Hij houdt hiermee het midden tussen IDM en electro. Nu brengt hij met zijn nieuwe alias Frond zijn debuut The Second Continent uit op cassette en tevens als digitale release. De cassette verschijnt in een gelimiteerde oplage van 50 en is voorzien van de prachtige artwork van de Duitse artiest Holger Lippmann. Frond presenteert 11 composities die bestaan uit een mengelmoes van subtiele akoestische instrumenten, diepgravende elektronica en veldopnames. Hiermee schept hij intieme en bovenal tot de verbeelding sprekende klanklandschappen, die als duistere ambient, musique concrète en drones worden geserveerd. Je waant jezelf in een parallel universum, waar bevreemdendheid, duisternis, bezinning en ongrijpbare schoonheid heerst. Het voelt als een persoonlijk document dat op abstracte, warme en cryptische wijze aan het publiek prijs gegeven wordt. De muziek roept daarbij associaties op met David Kristian, Tim Hecker, Thomas Köner, Kangding Ray, The Caretaker, subtractiveLAD en Rafael Anton Irisarri. Frond levert een overweldigend debuut af!

credits

released November 11, 2014

Music by Richard Bultitude
Artwork by Holger Lippmann
Design by Harco Rutgers

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Esc.rec. Deventer

Esc.rec. is a small, critically acclaimed record label for adventurous music, founded in 2004 by Harco Rutgers in Deventer, NL.

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