‘Out of Time is elegiac – heartbreakingly sad, even – but behind the melancholy themes lies a powerful affirmation of life, warmth, and the human spirit.’
Fluid Radio
‘A beautiful new compositional voice...A pocket soundtrack…perfectly formed.’
Backseat Mafia
'Lazarev demonstrates a preference for sparse notes that fall like flakes. The space between notes is as important as the notes themselves, begging for reflection and perhaps rumination.'
A Closer Listen
A longingly beautiful mini-album Out of Time by London-based composer Mike Lazarev...Constructed as a soundtrack to an imaginary film, it is his first for the label and a standout work in his own high grade canon.
Opening with swells of strings and plaintive piano chords, lead single “Out of Time” sets a profoundly expressive tone. Each reverberating note is carefully, gently placed on a canvas awash with purity and stillness, finally building into a rushing river of breathtaking prettiness that culminates in a hanging, dead-stop ending. Later on the record, “Time Becomes” progresses like a Harold Budd piece or a Ryuichi Sakamoto soundtrack work, melting away the ice with dulcet chord changes as single string notes float on a rarefied air. “Outerlude” changes the mood again, its subtly Eastern European melodies and natural piano noises - the chatter of keys and shuffle of pedals - transport us to a haunted, deserted ballroom where a lone ghost pianist laments the weight of a tremendous grief.
“The protagonists of this imaginary film are constantly fighting against the fleeting moments on this plane. But it is less about death than it is about living. And most of all, it is all about time,” Lazarev writes. He is right: Out of Time is elegiac - heartbreakingly sad, even - but behind the melancholy themes lies a powerful affirmation of life, warmth, and the human spirit.
Mike Lazarev was born in Kyiv, Ukraine in 1977. At the age of six, his parents sent him to a conservatory while his friends played football in the parking lot. His childhood passed by in the study of classical music and performing in the state choir. As a teenager, with his family, he left the USSR for the USA to escape persecution, freeing him from the strict academic discipline he spent his childhood resisting. However, a year later, music drew him back in: with his family’s first computer (“a Dell 386 with 4 MB of memory!”) he began using a sample-based tracker to make what was known as 'techno'. By the mid-90s, he had produced a few records. Later still, now in London, he finally brought his own piano, and found a teacher to re-immerse himself in classical music. But, lacking the patience to practice, he turned to reductionist minimalism. Soft, simple, sad piano melodies that somehow leaked from a lost soul.
credits
released February 26, 2021
All music composed, arranged and produced by Mike Lazarev.
Mastered by Taylor Deupree at 12k Mastering.
Artwork by Marijah Bac Cam.
Another masterwork from Stefano Guzzetti. This man deserves all the accolades he receives. The package with the 4 panel cd is very nice indeed. You even get the piano sheet music. I am huge fan of Stefano Guzzettis music. Buy this. You will love it. The whole album is brilliant. I cannot pick just one track. Steve Mahoney
Putting a disquieting spin on baroque pop, the UK experimentalist pairs immaculate neoclassical strings with dark, billowing synths. Bandcamp New & Notable Feb 29, 2024
it takes a while, but the cover art finally starts to make sense: the entire album has been a sort of slow-motion takeoff. that feeling in your gut, where your stomach starts floating as if it’s weightless; that’s what anthéne does best. the last few tracks explode in turbulent walls of sound, with the titular track and light shade edging on the cinematic. as if by leaving the ground your memories are already fraying miso