SUUNS
FICTION EP (LTD. WHITE VINYL) (JOYFUL NOISE)
SUUNS are future-oriented. New sounds, new techniques, new ways of thinking; above all, new environments are the lifeblood of the band.
Whether in a sweltering studio in Dallas with John Congelton, self-recording in Montreal's storied Breakglass Studio, or playing acoustic instruments at Hotel 2 Tango, the group's environment has always had an indelible impact on the sound of whatever future SUUNS are imagining at the time.
And true to form, here on FICTION EP, SUUNS are exploring fresh processes as a result of their current surroundings and global circumstances.
On FICTION, new sounds and sonic directions are fashioned out of old. A year-long period of limited resources and contact inspired the band to reflect on the various environments in which they've created music over the years: to comb through their previous sounds and creative approaches, and fuse them together with new ideas, ultimately producing a sort of future/past alchemy.
FICTION EP is as much a project of curation as it is one of creation: sifting, re-imagining, and re-framing, sometimes completely disassembling and then building from the ground up.
Each song is a live-off-the-floor recording that was then taken into isolation and re-worked.
But as much as FICTION EP is a project born of introspection and reflection, it's equally one for which SUUNS sought inspiration from outside.
Longtime friend of the band Radwan Ghazi Moumneh (Jerusalem In My Heart), bringing relentless claps and buzuks, leads SUUNS through BREATHE, while Amber Webber (Lightning Dust) sings a mournful siren song on the penultimate track, DEATH.
Finally, the ghost of Frank Zappa lends the band his fervent societal diagnosis, as relevant today as it ever was, on TROUBLE EVERY DAY, the EP's black North Star.
Zappa's darkly prophetic message, repurposed from 1966 to meet our moment, is an apt referent.
These dualities -- confluences of past and future, of introspection and influence -- are what defines FICTION EP.
Produced from old remnants, it is entirely new; done in relative isolation, and is also something of a live album.
The songs have been meticulously reworked, and yet the entire collection feels deployed with hardly any reflection, done in one breath.
It's the sound of SUUNS regrouping, and then poised, and then driving towards the future.