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THE LIGHTHOUSE (JACK HERTZ & CHRISTIAN FIESEL)

Jack Hertz

Progressive Electronic


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Jack Hertz The Lighthouse (Jack Hertz & Christian Fiesel) album cover
4.00 | 1 ratings | 1 reviews | 0% 5 stars

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Studio Album, released in 2018

Songs / Tracks Listing

Disc One:
1. Birds Nest at the Coastline (13:37)
2. Forever Beach (14:25)
3. Frozen Coast (14:04)
4. Giant Lens (6:36)
5. Heaven's Slide (15:00)

Disc Two:
1. Inlet Bay (8:32)
2. Outer Banks (8:12)
3. Pier to Faraway Places (9:59)
4. Surf (6:36)
5. The Lighthouse (20:02)

Line-up / Musicians

- Jack Hertz / devices, instruments, electronics and production
- Christian Fiesel / devices, instruments, electronics and production

Releases information

Release date: December 3rd, 2018.
Available on download and double CD from:
https://auralfilms.bandcamp.com/album/the-lighthouse

Thanks to Aussie-Byrd-Brother for the addition
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JACK HERTZ The Lighthouse (Jack Hertz & Christian Fiesel) ratings distribution


4.00
(1 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(0%)
0%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(100%)
100%
Good, but non-essential (0%)
0%
Collectors/fans only (0%)
0%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

JACK HERTZ The Lighthouse (Jack Hertz & Christian Fiesel) reviews


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Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by Aussie-Byrd-Brother
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
4 stars Electronic artists Jack Hertz and Christian Fiesel have delivered numerous collaborative works together over the years, and their 2018 release proves to be one of their most special yet. `The Lighthouse' reveals itself to be an evocative title to be taken in both a literal sense and metaphorical interpretation, so while on the surface it's an exploration of beaches, mountains, ports and faraway places between land and sea, the various improvisations here also score a series of dark and unpredictable environments often punctuated with light and solace. Despite the release being a double CD, the duo stress that the album tracks are best played in a random order, with each piece being its own standalone soundtrack, and musically it blurs a range of vintage and modern electronic styles with experimental touches into unhurried arrangements.

Looking at some of the highlights, the ringing distorted rising/falling slivers, swirling effects and lulling drones of `Birds Nest at the Coastline' call to mind the early `Krautrock'-era Tangerine Dream albums, and the lightly psychedelic `Frozen Coast' is dreamy n' drowsy with no shortage of twitching electronic wisps. Soothing ambient caresses that pepper `Giant Lens' are flecked with jaggedly cavernous unease and pulsing loops, and the ethereal hums of `Heaven's Slide' weave between a backdrop of field recordings of steam powered vessels to craft an evocative soundworld.

The shimmering `Inlet Bay' is a frequently graceful space-music drift, `Outer Banks' a droning sound-collage of alien intrigue and stormy ambience, the gentle cooing synths alongside low-key Mellotron choirs of `Pier to Faraway Places' are delicate and reflective with an aching longing, and `Surf' is a restless Berlin School thriller of bubbling synths and shades of Tangerine Dream's classic `Phaedra'. Twenty-minute title track `The Lighthouse' is languidly hallucinogenic and completely enveloping, a fog of precious chimes, skittering fizzes and groaning Mellotron choirs that stretch on into infinity, and when it becomes fraught with little ghostly haunting touches and traces of a lethargic unease, it proves to be a masterclass in subtly increasing drama and growing unrest.

Challenging but not impenetrable, measured but never aimless, `Lighthouse' blurs multiple electronic styles into a kaleidoscope of aural delights that delivers endless moments of supreme beauty, deep contemplative immersion and even fascinating disquiet, and Hertz and Fiesel have delivered a stunning and unpredictably trippy ambient work of mind-bending prog-electronic beauty.

Four stars.

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