Peder Mannerfelt - Daily Routine

  • The experimental techno producer's latest LP brings the everyday to life.
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  • The release of Fever Ray's Plunge last year confirmed what a fair few people had been thinking: that Peder Mannerfelt is one of the most inspired producers in electronic music today. Earlier this year, I saw Fever Ray close a huge stage at the London festival Field Day, and some of the six tracks Mannerfelt co-produced on the album electrified the set. As Karin Dreijer and her collaborators performed "Wanna Sip" and "To The Moon And Back," his signature bold synths, angular beats and warped arrangements bounced powerfully around the tent. At that point in time, Mannerfelt had been on a roll for a while. He'd released standout EPs on Hinge Finger, Stockholm LTD and his own eponymous label, a run that began around the release of Controlling Body, his 2016 album that was cleverly tied together by the voice of the synth pop artist Glasser. But Mannerfelt apparently struggled with a concept this time out. "When I've done albums in the past, they've had quite focused themes to them, and ideas before I started making them," he told Ransom Note. "This one, I was a bit stressed out that I didn't really have a plan of what to do. To bring it all together, I realised all these feelings I've been having over the past couple of years, and having that daily life." It would be near-impossible to guess this is an album about the contrast between life as a touring artist and life at home. But I'm not sure it matters. Even if it simply guided him in the studio, the idea has helped Mannerfelt release yet more great music. Fans of his will recognise the basic shapes here. To use a few reductive tags, Daily Routine features ambient, club and experimental, the blend that has recently served Mannerfelt so well. The album's midsection captures this. We encounter calming ambient ("Belgian Blues (Black MIDI Mix)"), a scratchy post-Aphex soundscape ("How Was Your Day? (Numb)") and a bone-rattling club track that brought to mind SØS Gunver Ryberg and Demdike Stare. The mood ramps up from reflective to deranged, but the sense of strange coherency is maintained. Humour is often the garnish on all of this. "Now, this is my extravagant entrance for my show, which I'm touring right now," says a sassy narrator over the ravey yet ambient "Introductions & Aspirations," the opening track. A sly cultural reference or taking the piss? Mannerfelt has a habit of leaving us guessing. This is true on the banging "Temporary Psychosis (VIP Mix)" and "Sissel & Bass," where he loops titular phrases that could equally be a rave culture tribute or parody. (The latter is the only full vocal track—Sissel Wincent, sounding like Peaches, gives an insouciant commentary on artistic and personal freedoms.) It's worth paying particular attention to the final track, as it condenses what Mannerfelt is currently achieving into four-and-a-half minutes. It begins with a hectic, effects-heavy drum solo. A synth-driven ambient section follows. There's a sudden blast of a carnival horn. The chaos of the drums returns. A robotised voice materialises and, finally, fades into feedback. It's all very Mannerfelt.
  • Tracklist
      01. Introductions & Aspirations 02. Hibernation Hyper Nation 03. Cigarettes (Eurofierceness Mix) 04. Sissel & Bass 05. Belgian Blues (Black MIDI Mix) 06. How Was Your Day? (Numb) 07. This Machine Shares Memes 08. Weighing My Brain 09. Temporary Psychosis (VIP Mix) 10. Tried It (Blue on Blue)
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