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The Album Leaf

@ Lodge Room

Friday June 9, 2023

08:00 PM - 11:59 pm

Over the past two decades, The Album Leaf’s Jimmy LaValle has known music as a daily pursuit. Each morning he enters his studio with a disciplined work ethic, balancing concrete objectives with the openended intention of simply writing something. On top of six solo albums and myriad other releases, the routine has amassed a vast library of experiments; he gravitates back to some, tinkering, building, refining, and putting aside again in a cycle of constant production. He last released a fulllength album in 2016; NPR praised Between Waves, noting the “cinematic sprawl… an evocation of drama, loss and fraught emotional atmosphere,” and it’s no surprise in the time since LaValle has become prolific in the film scoring space. The techniques of soundtracking now influence how he writes, and the deadlineoriented nature of these projects was a welcome counterbalance to the more nebulous “next record.” As timelines stretched, ideas for LP7 surpassed two hundred demos, signaling styles, patterns, and pathways that could go in a dozen directions. FUTURE FALLING outlines one such sequence from the puzzle that stood out, ten striking arrangements coiling out of his hard drives and into the ether as a fluid,
cohesive, and definitive set. FUTURE FALLING exhibits LaValle as emblematically inquisitive and renewed by outside perspectives. LaValle works with an array of other musicians, shaping melodic and meditative electroorganic music with contributions from Bat For Lashes, Kimbra, and many others. The music registers a shade darker and more synthdriven than most moments in his acclaimed catalog, a bridge between shadowy, cerebral terrain and dreamy precision pop, where softly percussive frameworks meet shimmering sound design and emotive instrumentation. LaValle sees The Album Leaf itself in cycles  spinning from solo outlet to full band and back in its nearly 25 years — and with FUTURE FALLING, he flourishes at a pivotal stage in the story, revealing an expanded sense of space.

The idea of the album has taken many shapes; at one point, between label contracts at the time, LaValle considered releasing volumes or small batches of tracks against the grain of industry expectations or bypassing The Album Leaf altogether with a new alias. Another notion that was ultimately abandoned was a record comprised entirely of collaborations; that process did yield several tracks that now serve as highlights on FUTURE FALLING, his first album of new material with Vancouver’s Nettwerk Records. The sequence LaValle settled on, mixed by Joshua Eustis (Telefon Tel Aviv), is a masterful exercise in pacing; the music meanders, pulses, and arcs in a way that arrests attention.
LaValle sees the construction of FUTURE FALLING as less conventional than past work. Contributions were done remotely with a “throw everything at it” mindset, making LaValle the arranger of layers from all over: drums, synths, horns, violins, voice, and more.
LaValle created a pastiche of these layers and elements; in some cases even moving vocal takes to new tracks entirely. Without the intheroom dynamics, he had more time to experiment, adding and subtracting ad infinitum. The desire to innovate and keep moving forward also produces one notable absence, LaValle’s signature Rhodes takes a back seat to the synths, effects pedals, and other analogsourced electronics. A choice arrived at “not consciously,” he says, “it’s just where I’ve been living, more in a synthesized space.” With various machines, including the Novation Peak and Moog DFAM, as his engine, LaValle routes the sounds in and out, resampling and manipulating drums and tones to achieve the shapes his mind’s eye was seeing. “There’s a lot more
exploration, out of the box; I’ve found a really good balance in creating music organically and analog, utilizing digital tools to tweak the source further.”

The album opens on “PROLOGUE,” an evocative, slowbuilding instrumental that rides a pattern into a symphonic sea of static. Keys and horns glide atop the rhythmic pulse of “DUST COLLECTS,” setting the contemplative scene for “AFTERGLOW,” the record’s most popminded performance. Here Kimbra, the Grammywinning New Zealand singer– songwriter, renders a striking recollection of past love as percussive elements shimmer and swirl.

A plaintive piano line moves throughout “Cycles 19.9” encircled by light ambient washes, both a valley between two peaks and a powerful composition in its own right. “Future Falling” follows; with origins tracing back to 2015, the track embodies the full sonic journey LaValle has taken. All the hallmarks of The Album Leaf  melodic builds, vivid sprawl, tonal shapeshifting  assemble to a blissful finish. For the next stretch, “Cycles” begins with a uneasy Rhodes loop that builds and erupts into a wall of texture paving its way into “Give In,” where LaValle models a movement that begins subtle and measured before curving up with skyward, percussive bursts (“Stride”) and settling back down to the album’s backhalf centerpiece, “Near” featuring the acclaimed English artist Natasha Khan aka Bat For Lashes. “Do you feel me near?” she sings into a mist of widescreen synths and soothing, distant drum beats as if searching
through the dark.

FUTURE FALLING ends under the ruminative swell of “Epilogue” which could easily loop back to the start. There is a fullcircle sense to the collection, both in its sequencing and in the larger picture, with LaValle pushing his craft forward through relentless experimentation, just as curious as he was at the beginning of his influential 25year run. A perpetual student, or perhaps more apt, a devoted craftsman. “I’m grateful to make music for a living,” he says. “I drop my kids at school at 8, and I just get to work.” FUTURE FALLING is the sum of that patient, consistent, intuitive flow; a potent outcome from a processdriven artist.

Friday June 09, 2023

8:00 pm - 11:59 pm

All Ages

Cover: TBD




Los Angeles, The Album Leaf


Fusicology