Where do you start talking about a suite of recordings so concerned with the commonalities between beginnings and ends? You could start by saying that 'Living Fields' is an album of catharsis and redefinition, born of a desire to create newness out of loss and change. You could also say that the band Portico themselves have undergone a process of ending and re-beginning, but none of this quite captures what you will hear.
The best thing you can do is listen. Portico make music which moves forward towards distant places while offering rare intimacy as well, arriving somewhere between structured pop songs and a disintegrating ambience, a unique blend of the sublunary and the celestial. Reverb drenched piano meshes with swathes of studio noise while vocals float high above a world of textural atmosphere.
Drum machines crisply puncture the air around shimmering arpeggios of synth and electric bass. You can be untethered, detached in space only for a moment of detail to rush into focus. Melancholia and euphoria sunk into each other. The effect is profoundly emotional without ever needing to emote.
Portico are Duncan Bellamy, Milo Fitzpatrick and Jack Wyllie. Previously they were three-quarters of the highly successful and critically-acclaimed Portico Quartet. But 'Living Fields' is no continuation under a shortened name. As far as the band are concerned this is a debut.
Title: Living Fields
Format: CD
Release Date: 27 Mar 2015
Artist: Portico
Sku: 2294964
Catalogue No: ZENCD221
Category: Jazz
Disc Count: 1
Transfer Format: Compact Disc
Video Format: Dance & Electronic
Primary Audio: ZENCD221
Language: 5054429001006
Subtitles: Warner Music
DISC 1
Living Fields (feat. Jono Mccleery)
101 (feat. Joe Newman)
Where You Are (feat. Jono Mccleery)
Atacama (feat. Joe Newman)
Colour Fading (feat. Jono Mccleery)
Dissolution
Bright Luck (feat. Jono Mccleery)
Brittle (feat. Joe Newman)
Memory Of Newness (feat. Jamie Woon)