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Katie Gately - Loom '2020

24bit
Loom
ArtistKatie Gately Related artists
Album name Loom
Country
Date 2020
Genre
Play time 41:31
Format / Bitrate 24 BIT Stereo 1720 Kbps / 48 kHz
Media WEB
Size 503 MB
PriceDownload $4.95
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Tracks list

Katie Gately’s second album wasn’t supposed to sound like this.
The Los Angeles artist had nearly finished an entirely different record, with a
different working title, but after receiving the devastating news that her
mother had been diagnosed with a rare form of terminal cancer, Gately left that
album behind.

For a while, she left her life in L.A. behind too, moving back to her family
home in Brooklyn to help care for her mother. Wracked with grief and suffering
from insomnia as she watched her mom slowly slip away, Gately began work on a
new album, one centered around “Bracer,” a song that her mother had
identified as a favorite.

Gately’s mother passed away in 2018, and Loom was finished in the months
that followed. It’s an album about death, loss, and saying goodbye;
it’s also the finest thing that Gately has ever done. The new LP takes a
dramatic turn away from Color, her impressive 2016 full-length debut for Tri
Angle. That record was a ball of kinetic energy, a collection of brightly
shaded, hyperactive pop flirtations that reflected her background as a sound
designer. Rapidly cycling through various moods, samples, effects, and sound
palettes, Color at times sounded like Gately doing her best to express 10
different ideas simultaneously, but there was something inviting about its
mania.

Loom is noticeably more focused, although it’s not without its twists and
turns. Sound design still plays a major role; the LP features
samples—many of them heavily manipulated—of earthquakes, screaming
peacocks, howling wolves, a car crash, shaking pill bottles, a coffin closing, a
shovel digging, and more. There’s even audio from her parents’
wedding. Gately’s compositional approach is just as idiosyncratic.
“Bracer,” the album’s centerpiece, clocks in at more than 10
minutes and is something of a rollercoaster, opening with little more than her
solemn voice and ending with a towering, grief-stricken crescendo of soaring
synths and hammering percussion. Along the way, it also winds through a passage
of what sounds like haunted carnival music and another movement that evokes the
brooding piano lounge of bands like Black Heart Procession.

This could make for a disjointed listen, but “Bracer” (like Loom in
general) has the advantage of following a very specific vision. Where Color was
fueled by a playfully experimental spirit—listening to the album,
it’s easy to imagine her repeatedly asking, “What would happen if I
tried this?—Loom puts her personal narrative front and center. Her
production chops and intense attention to detail are still there, but
they’re no longer ends in themselves; instead, they act in service of
both the music’s heavy emotional core and Gately’s vocals, which
have become more prominent in the mix.

It’s easy to draw comparisons between Gately and contemporaries like Zola
Jesus and Holly Herndon, but on Loom her voice sounds a lot more like Kate Bush
or PJ Harvey. She’s not a trained singer, but there’s a dark,
bedazzling quality to her vocals; during the closing passage of
“Waltz,” Gately almost seems to be channeling the famous “Song
of the Witches” from Shakespeare’s Macbeth. A similar sort of
necromancer vibe emanates from the swirling chorus of “Tower,” a
pomp-filled song written from the perspective of her mother’s cancer
medicine. Elsewhere, Gately’s voice takes on a reverent, almost religious
timbre, most prominently on “Allay” and “Flow,” both of
which weave her vocals into rich, soaring choirs.

Sacred music was a familiar part of Gately’s upbringing. Her mother was a
former nun, and though she’d left her calling (and religion in general)
after meeting Gately’s father and growing disillusioned with the Catholic
church, she nonetheless filled their household with Gregorian chants and other
spiritual sounds. Some of that aesthetic has clearly seeped into Loom, which
contains numerous nods to religion (and her mother’s former life).
Interludes “Ritual,” “Rite,” and “Rest” form
a sort of devotional triptych, while “Bracer” gets a bit more
literal with refrains like, “Sin sin sin sin sin for the win” and
“Take my sin and shove it into yours.

Gately has often commented on her struggles with depression and anxiety, but on
Loom she sounds confident and self-assured. Her mother is all over the album,
but Gately herself is the main character here, and the journey she takes is
riveting. It’s her pain, her sorrow, and her memories—both good
and bad—that fuel the record, and though the experience of her
mother’s passing must have been harrowing, death does have a way of
underlining what’s really important. Loom feels like the first time that
Gateley’s technical prowess and songwriting are fully on the same page.
The album may be rooted in loss, but Loom’s success lies in the clarity
of vision that she has found.

Tracklist:
01. Katie Gately - Ritual (2:58)
02. Katie Gately - Allay (4:56)
03. Katie Gately - Waltz (5:18)
04. Katie Gately - Bracer (10:32)
05. Katie Gately - Rite (2:30)
06. Katie Gately - Tower (6:05)
07. Katie Gately - Flow (6:14)
08. Katie Gately - Rest (2:59)

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