Landing continue their dreamy atmospherics with
Sphere, released by
K Records. The one aspect that seems to be a tad different on
Sphere is the prevalence of steady drumming on most of the tracks, making
Landing less similar to
Windy & Carl and a closer kin to
Mojave 3,
Low,
American Analog Set, or even
Fontanelle.
Landing still definitely lay down their
prog-ish and
psychedelic space-gaze tendencies on
Sphere, but also enter into a
post-rock/experimental area, as on
"Fluency of Colors" and
"Sphere," with their wandering processed guitars against keyboard drones and steady beats, which hold the album together at the moments when one could otherwise get lost in the dream.
Sphere seems to be an fitting title for the album, in that the edges of all these songs are rounded off in the cross-faded atmospherics that bleed from track to track. Echoing from the group's consistent past,
Sphere is another solid release from
Landing, and possibly a small step forward. You will feel content that they left you with your head in the clouds. ~ David Serra