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What An Enormous Room
What an enormous room is not only the title of the new album by TORRES, it is an incantation, a phrase Mackenzie Scott has had in her head now for several years, for as long as some of the songs found here.
What an enormous room is an entirely new look at TORRES. Scottâs undeniable skill as a guitar player is still the engine driving her songs, but in âCollect,â itâs pushed through a polyphonic octave generator, creating a sound that is sexy and alien and peak TORRES, a provocative statement of purpose thatâs both a call to arms and a call to the dance foor.
âWake to fowersâ is a celebration of the unexpected joy of things turning out much better than one could have hoped. Itâs on the slinkier side of What an enormous room, exploring new territory for TORRES that Scott attributes to recording with her friend Sarah Jaffe, the Texan singer-songwriter whose inclination to break genre boundaries has led her to collaborate with Eminem and producer Symbolyc One.
Jaffe provides What an enormous roomâs rhythm section, playing bass and drums, and the easiness of her collaboration with Scott made it possible for songs like âJerk into joyâ to emergeâlike the incantation central to it, and the album itselfâafter years in Scottâs head in a way that is simultaneously more direct and more sonically ambitious than any TORRES record to date.
When she sings âlook at all the dancing I can do,â itâs an invitation to awe, and there is much here to be awed by. What an enormous room contains wry, Laurie Andersonâesque art rock, Nirvanaâs rage, and ABBAâs strut. Rather than fear the unknown space she occupies, Mackenzie Scott has chosen to fll it with as much of herself as possible, an artist unwilling to be stifed.
Weâre hardly alone in our admiration for TORRES. As Julien Baker attests: What I can say about TORRES is I think the music comes from a convicted place.
Not convicted meaning a person is narrowly and foolishly committed to an ideal, or unshakably convinced
of themselves, or a zealot, or stubborn.
I mean dedicated, I mean: If TORRESâ music gets weird, gets brainy, gets funny, gets defant, provokes, deliberately scandalizes, employs the crass to undermine the austere, courts lofty philosophical truthâitâs all done with the conviction of an artist with the (essential) belief in the worth of their task. I think you can hear it in the songs, someone reaching, leaning over the boundary between known and not, probing the almighty.
After a decade and six studio albums and however many one-offs and tours and articles read and conversations had, the parts of this pursuit Iâve been able to observe are all marked by a dedication to creation that treats the actâongoingâwith as much preciousness as the evidence of the act that is left in a record.
The modes of being are different: heartbroken, broke, furious (right- and unrighteously), awestruck by love, compelled by desire. sometimes resigned to death, sometimes fascinated by and reverent of the future.
Sometimes viscerally present, other times suspended in heady awareness, poised on a fulcrum of observation
and participation in the phenomenon that aliveness is.
The tools are the same: instruments that growl and shriek and moan, a lyrical voice shouting, swooning,
chuckling, snarling as the moment commands. TORRESâ music-making is conducted in a melodic vocabulary unique to itselfâmethods, equipment, circumstances shifting around the impulse to affrm the self within the world, to make art that bears all these little artifacts of the divine and of the real and show it to people and know it is valuable. I think thatâs what Mackenzieâs music does. And I think itâs just incredibly good music to listen to.
What an enormous room is an entirely new look at TORRES. Scottâs undeniable skill as a guitar player is still the engine driving her songs, but in âCollect,â itâs pushed through a polyphonic octave generator, creating a sound that is sexy and alien and peak TORRES, a provocative statement of purpose thatâs both a call to arms and a call to the dance foor.
âWake to fowersâ is a celebration of the unexpected joy of things turning out much better than one could have hoped. Itâs on the slinkier side of What an enormous room, exploring new territory for TORRES that Scott attributes to recording with her friend Sarah Jaffe, the Texan singer-songwriter whose inclination to break genre boundaries has led her to collaborate with Eminem and producer Symbolyc One.
Jaffe provides What an enormous roomâs rhythm section, playing bass and drums, and the easiness of her collaboration with Scott made it possible for songs like âJerk into joyâ to emergeâlike the incantation central to it, and the album itselfâafter years in Scottâs head in a way that is simultaneously more direct and more sonically ambitious than any TORRES record to date.
When she sings âlook at all the dancing I can do,â itâs an invitation to awe, and there is much here to be awed by. What an enormous room contains wry, Laurie Andersonâesque art rock, Nirvanaâs rage, and ABBAâs strut. Rather than fear the unknown space she occupies, Mackenzie Scott has chosen to fll it with as much of herself as possible, an artist unwilling to be stifed.
Weâre hardly alone in our admiration for TORRES. As Julien Baker attests: What I can say about TORRES is I think the music comes from a convicted place.
Not convicted meaning a person is narrowly and foolishly committed to an ideal, or unshakably convinced
of themselves, or a zealot, or stubborn.
I mean dedicated, I mean: If TORRESâ music gets weird, gets brainy, gets funny, gets defant, provokes, deliberately scandalizes, employs the crass to undermine the austere, courts lofty philosophical truthâitâs all done with the conviction of an artist with the (essential) belief in the worth of their task. I think you can hear it in the songs, someone reaching, leaning over the boundary between known and not, probing the almighty.
After a decade and six studio albums and however many one-offs and tours and articles read and conversations had, the parts of this pursuit Iâve been able to observe are all marked by a dedication to creation that treats the actâongoingâwith as much preciousness as the evidence of the act that is left in a record.
The modes of being are different: heartbroken, broke, furious (right- and unrighteously), awestruck by love, compelled by desire. sometimes resigned to death, sometimes fascinated by and reverent of the future.
Sometimes viscerally present, other times suspended in heady awareness, poised on a fulcrum of observation
and participation in the phenomenon that aliveness is.
The tools are the same: instruments that growl and shriek and moan, a lyrical voice shouting, swooning,
chuckling, snarling as the moment commands. TORRESâ music-making is conducted in a melodic vocabulary unique to itselfâmethods, equipment, circumstances shifting around the impulse to affrm the self within the world, to make art that bears all these little artifacts of the divine and of the real and show it to people and know it is valuable. I think thatâs what Mackenzieâs music does. And I think itâs just incredibly good music to listen to.
What an enormous room is not only the title of the new album by TORRES, it is an incantation, a phrase Mackenzie Scott has had in her head now for several years, for as long as some of the songs found here.
What an enormous room is an entirely new look at TORRES. Scottâs undeniable skill as a guitar player is still the engine driving her songs, but in âCollect,â itâs pushed through a polyphonic octave generator, creating a sound that is sexy and alien and peak TORRES, a provocative statement of purpose thatâs both a call to arms and a call to the dance foor.
âWake to fowersâ is a celebration of the unexpected joy of things turning out much better than one could have hoped. Itâs on the slinkier side of What an enormous room, exploring new territory for TORRES that Scott attributes to recording with her friend Sarah Jaffe, the Texan singer-songwriter whose inclination to break genre boundaries has led her to collaborate with Eminem and producer Symbolyc One.
Jaffe provides What an enormous roomâs rhythm section, playing bass and drums, and the easiness of her collaboration with Scott made it possible for songs like âJerk into joyâ to emergeâlike the incantation central to it, and the album itselfâafter years in Scottâs head in a way that is simultaneously more direct and more sonically ambitious than any TORRES record to date.
When she sings âlook at all the dancing I can do,â itâs an invitation to awe, and there is much here to be awed by. What an enormous room contains wry, Laurie Andersonâesque art rock, Nirvanaâs rage, and ABBAâs strut. Rather than fear the unknown space she occupies, Mackenzie Scott has chosen to fll it with as much of herself as possible, an artist unwilling to be stifed.
Weâre hardly alone in our admiration for TORRES. As Julien Baker attests: What I can say about TORRES is I think the music comes from a convicted place.
Not convicted meaning a person is narrowly and foolishly committed to an ideal, or unshakably convinced
of themselves, or a zealot, or stubborn.
I mean dedicated, I mean: If TORRESâ music gets weird, gets brainy, gets funny, gets defant, provokes, deliberately scandalizes, employs the crass to undermine the austere, courts lofty philosophical truthâitâs all done with the conviction of an artist with the (essential) belief in the worth of their task. I think you can hear it in the songs, someone reaching, leaning over the boundary between known and not, probing the almighty.
After a decade and six studio albums and however many one-offs and tours and articles read and conversations had, the parts of this pursuit Iâve been able to observe are all marked by a dedication to creation that treats the actâongoingâwith as much preciousness as the evidence of the act that is left in a record.
The modes of being are different: heartbroken, broke, furious (right- and unrighteously), awestruck by love, compelled by desire. sometimes resigned to death, sometimes fascinated by and reverent of the future.
Sometimes viscerally present, other times suspended in heady awareness, poised on a fulcrum of observation
and participation in the phenomenon that aliveness is.
The tools are the same: instruments that growl and shriek and moan, a lyrical voice shouting, swooning,
chuckling, snarling as the moment commands. TORRESâ music-making is conducted in a melodic vocabulary unique to itselfâmethods, equipment, circumstances shifting around the impulse to affrm the self within the world, to make art that bears all these little artifacts of the divine and of the real and show it to people and know it is valuable. I think thatâs what Mackenzieâs music does. And I think itâs just incredibly good music to listen to.
What an enormous room is an entirely new look at TORRES. Scottâs undeniable skill as a guitar player is still the engine driving her songs, but in âCollect,â itâs pushed through a polyphonic octave generator, creating a sound that is sexy and alien and peak TORRES, a provocative statement of purpose thatâs both a call to arms and a call to the dance foor.
âWake to fowersâ is a celebration of the unexpected joy of things turning out much better than one could have hoped. Itâs on the slinkier side of What an enormous room, exploring new territory for TORRES that Scott attributes to recording with her friend Sarah Jaffe, the Texan singer-songwriter whose inclination to break genre boundaries has led her to collaborate with Eminem and producer Symbolyc One.
Jaffe provides What an enormous roomâs rhythm section, playing bass and drums, and the easiness of her collaboration with Scott made it possible for songs like âJerk into joyâ to emergeâlike the incantation central to it, and the album itselfâafter years in Scottâs head in a way that is simultaneously more direct and more sonically ambitious than any TORRES record to date.
When she sings âlook at all the dancing I can do,â itâs an invitation to awe, and there is much here to be awed by. What an enormous room contains wry, Laurie Andersonâesque art rock, Nirvanaâs rage, and ABBAâs strut. Rather than fear the unknown space she occupies, Mackenzie Scott has chosen to fll it with as much of herself as possible, an artist unwilling to be stifed.
Weâre hardly alone in our admiration for TORRES. As Julien Baker attests: What I can say about TORRES is I think the music comes from a convicted place.
Not convicted meaning a person is narrowly and foolishly committed to an ideal, or unshakably convinced
of themselves, or a zealot, or stubborn.
I mean dedicated, I mean: If TORRESâ music gets weird, gets brainy, gets funny, gets defant, provokes, deliberately scandalizes, employs the crass to undermine the austere, courts lofty philosophical truthâitâs all done with the conviction of an artist with the (essential) belief in the worth of their task. I think you can hear it in the songs, someone reaching, leaning over the boundary between known and not, probing the almighty.
After a decade and six studio albums and however many one-offs and tours and articles read and conversations had, the parts of this pursuit Iâve been able to observe are all marked by a dedication to creation that treats the actâongoingâwith as much preciousness as the evidence of the act that is left in a record.
The modes of being are different: heartbroken, broke, furious (right- and unrighteously), awestruck by love, compelled by desire. sometimes resigned to death, sometimes fascinated by and reverent of the future.
Sometimes viscerally present, other times suspended in heady awareness, poised on a fulcrum of observation
and participation in the phenomenon that aliveness is.
The tools are the same: instruments that growl and shriek and moan, a lyrical voice shouting, swooning,
chuckling, snarling as the moment commands. TORRESâ music-making is conducted in a melodic vocabulary unique to itselfâmethods, equipment, circumstances shifting around the impulse to affrm the self within the world, to make art that bears all these little artifacts of the divine and of the real and show it to people and know it is valuable. I think thatâs what Mackenzieâs music does. And I think itâs just incredibly good music to listen to.
$14.87
What An Enormous Roomâ
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Description
What an enormous room is not only the title of the new album by TORRES, it is an incantation, a phrase Mackenzie Scott has had in her head now for several years, for as long as some of the songs found here.
What an enormous room is an entirely new look at TORRES. Scottâs undeniable skill as a guitar player is still the engine driving her songs, but in âCollect,â itâs pushed through a polyphonic octave generator, creating a sound that is sexy and alien and peak TORRES, a provocative statement of purpose thatâs both a call to arms and a call to the dance foor.
âWake to fowersâ is a celebration of the unexpected joy of things turning out much better than one could have hoped. Itâs on the slinkier side of What an enormous room, exploring new territory for TORRES that Scott attributes to recording with her friend Sarah Jaffe, the Texan singer-songwriter whose inclination to break genre boundaries has led her to collaborate with Eminem and producer Symbolyc One.
Jaffe provides What an enormous roomâs rhythm section, playing bass and drums, and the easiness of her collaboration with Scott made it possible for songs like âJerk into joyâ to emergeâlike the incantation central to it, and the album itselfâafter years in Scottâs head in a way that is simultaneously more direct and more sonically ambitious than any TORRES record to date.
When she sings âlook at all the dancing I can do,â itâs an invitation to awe, and there is much here to be awed by. What an enormous room contains wry, Laurie Andersonâesque art rock, Nirvanaâs rage, and ABBAâs strut. Rather than fear the unknown space she occupies, Mackenzie Scott has chosen to fll it with as much of herself as possible, an artist unwilling to be stifed.
Weâre hardly alone in our admiration for TORRES. As Julien Baker attests: What I can say about TORRES is I think the music comes from a convicted place.
Not convicted meaning a person is narrowly and foolishly committed to an ideal, or unshakably convinced
of themselves, or a zealot, or stubborn.
I mean dedicated, I mean: If TORRESâ music gets weird, gets brainy, gets funny, gets defant, provokes, deliberately scandalizes, employs the crass to undermine the austere, courts lofty philosophical truthâitâs all done with the conviction of an artist with the (essential) belief in the worth of their task. I think you can hear it in the songs, someone reaching, leaning over the boundary between known and not, probing the almighty.
After a decade and six studio albums and however many one-offs and tours and articles read and conversations had, the parts of this pursuit Iâve been able to observe are all marked by a dedication to creation that treats the actâongoingâwith as much preciousness as the evidence of the act that is left in a record.
The modes of being are different: heartbroken, broke, furious (right- and unrighteously), awestruck by love, compelled by desire. sometimes resigned to death, sometimes fascinated by and reverent of the future.
Sometimes viscerally present, other times suspended in heady awareness, poised on a fulcrum of observation
and participation in the phenomenon that aliveness is.
The tools are the same: instruments that growl and shriek and moan, a lyrical voice shouting, swooning,
chuckling, snarling as the moment commands. TORRESâ music-making is conducted in a melodic vocabulary unique to itselfâmethods, equipment, circumstances shifting around the impulse to affrm the self within the world, to make art that bears all these little artifacts of the divine and of the real and show it to people and know it is valuable. I think thatâs what Mackenzieâs music does. And I think itâs just incredibly good music to listen to.
What an enormous room is an entirely new look at TORRES. Scottâs undeniable skill as a guitar player is still the engine driving her songs, but in âCollect,â itâs pushed through a polyphonic octave generator, creating a sound that is sexy and alien and peak TORRES, a provocative statement of purpose thatâs both a call to arms and a call to the dance foor.
âWake to fowersâ is a celebration of the unexpected joy of things turning out much better than one could have hoped. Itâs on the slinkier side of What an enormous room, exploring new territory for TORRES that Scott attributes to recording with her friend Sarah Jaffe, the Texan singer-songwriter whose inclination to break genre boundaries has led her to collaborate with Eminem and producer Symbolyc One.
Jaffe provides What an enormous roomâs rhythm section, playing bass and drums, and the easiness of her collaboration with Scott made it possible for songs like âJerk into joyâ to emergeâlike the incantation central to it, and the album itselfâafter years in Scottâs head in a way that is simultaneously more direct and more sonically ambitious than any TORRES record to date.
When she sings âlook at all the dancing I can do,â itâs an invitation to awe, and there is much here to be awed by. What an enormous room contains wry, Laurie Andersonâesque art rock, Nirvanaâs rage, and ABBAâs strut. Rather than fear the unknown space she occupies, Mackenzie Scott has chosen to fll it with as much of herself as possible, an artist unwilling to be stifed.
Weâre hardly alone in our admiration for TORRES. As Julien Baker attests: What I can say about TORRES is I think the music comes from a convicted place.
Not convicted meaning a person is narrowly and foolishly committed to an ideal, or unshakably convinced
of themselves, or a zealot, or stubborn.
I mean dedicated, I mean: If TORRESâ music gets weird, gets brainy, gets funny, gets defant, provokes, deliberately scandalizes, employs the crass to undermine the austere, courts lofty philosophical truthâitâs all done with the conviction of an artist with the (essential) belief in the worth of their task. I think you can hear it in the songs, someone reaching, leaning over the boundary between known and not, probing the almighty.
After a decade and six studio albums and however many one-offs and tours and articles read and conversations had, the parts of this pursuit Iâve been able to observe are all marked by a dedication to creation that treats the actâongoingâwith as much preciousness as the evidence of the act that is left in a record.
The modes of being are different: heartbroken, broke, furious (right- and unrighteously), awestruck by love, compelled by desire. sometimes resigned to death, sometimes fascinated by and reverent of the future.
Sometimes viscerally present, other times suspended in heady awareness, poised on a fulcrum of observation
and participation in the phenomenon that aliveness is.
The tools are the same: instruments that growl and shriek and moan, a lyrical voice shouting, swooning,
chuckling, snarling as the moment commands. TORRESâ music-making is conducted in a melodic vocabulary unique to itselfâmethods, equipment, circumstances shifting around the impulse to affrm the self within the world, to make art that bears all these little artifacts of the divine and of the real and show it to people and know it is valuable. I think thatâs what Mackenzieâs music does. And I think itâs just incredibly good music to listen to.
















