|
 |
"It's Bexar's skill in treading the line between the evocative and the universal that makes Tropism seem more engaging than 37 minutes of apparent tranquility should: less a still life than a blank canvas for the mind."
|
|
 |
 |
|
"These ten songs are acoustic palms; prayers, unbelievable and quaint, that haunt the conscious; unreal and empty. Yet each one, every last enduring moment of each note, hope and reverie, simply has to be… Such frailty is indescribable. Listen. Just…listen."
|
|
 |
 |
|
“A a purely emotional world filled with hidden memories, lost hopes, and a faint sadness that pervades it all. It is easy to see how comparisons are constantly made to the ambient work of Brian Eno, as well as the strange and wonderful instrumentals of Mum and even Mogwai....It is a beat-less but constantly swirling collection of sounds and motions that ends up stirring the hearts and minds of its listeners a little more than the rump-shaking beats of similar artists like Prefuse 73 or Four Tet"
|
|
| |
|
 |
"...Equal parts Eno, Mum and Mogwai. His songs construct equally barren landscapes: "Aidos" burbles up from nothing and swells into a circle of warm, chiming guitars, evoking what it must be like to float on your back in the Gulf of Mexico without another soul for miles; the waterlogged, percolating synths of "Kt" approximate the best beatless moments of Boards Of Canada, or at least an instrumental B-side from Kid A. Bexar Bexar often contributes music to dress the scenes on NPR's "This American Life," and it's easy to see why. Haralambos makes perfect background music for quiet, reflective moments: reading a book, lying in the dark, imagining you're the last person on earth."
|
– CMJ |
 |
 |
 |
"Detached and beautifully detailed, Bexar Bexar’s ambient soundscapes are composed of hushed acoustic guitars, shimmering feedback, and tape manipulations, creating a gentle hum of magnetic pulses that transport the listener into the Texas county from which the group takes its name..” |
|
 |
 |
|
| Additional
Coverage Available here: Go Mag! and Cyclic
Defrost. |
 |
|