All Music Guide - Review by
Matt Borghi
TALES FROM THE INCANTINA
Richard Bone
This is quite
possibly some of the best work that Richard Bone
has ever done. Tales From the Incantina seems to
take up where Spectral Ships and Etherdome left
off, and then pushed it even a little further.
Bone's sound has always had a profound effect.
Bone's use of layering and multi-tracking is
second to none, and melodically his work is quite
possibly the best in the genre. Bone's one of the
few ambient/space artists that really knows how to
develop melodies subtly and carefully, blending
them into the sonic fabric of a piece without the
melodic motif commanding the piece. Tales From the
Incantina, like Bone's Hypnos Recordings work, is
totally original and in a league of its own.
Interestingly enough you hear a bit of a Brian Eno
à la Apollo sound on Tales From the Incantina, or
perhaps it's Bone's chording which is quite
reminiscent of the textures that Eno has used in
the past; whatever it is, make no mistake about it
- Bone has crafted a profoundly approachable
ambient/space work while at the same time managing
to outdo himself once again. This follow-up to
Spectral Ships and Etherdome is a fantastically
rich recording that caps off the trilogy
nicely.
- Matt Borghi
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