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Jacco Gardner - Hypnophobia

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Hypnophobia

Release Date: May 4, 2015

Hypnophobia

Release Date: May 4, 2015

To call Jacco Gardner a daydreamer may not be as farfetched as he’d have you believe. Its meaning may refer to a fear of sleep, but with Hypnophobia, the brand new album from ‘baroque pop’ prince and Dutch producer/multi-instrumentalist Gardner, he’s all set to cast a majestic and vibrant psychedelic spell that will hypnotise listeners at the point dreams and reality meet.

“I came up with the title “Hypnophobia” while falling asleep and part of my brain just didn’t turn off,” explains Gardner. “I often have trouble letting go of reality, even though I prefer the world in my dreams... Hypnophobia comes from a place where fears, darkness and creativity collide, like a slightly scary lucid dream. Fearing a loss of control definitely plays a big part of it.”

If there’s one thing Hypnophobia hasn’t lost, it is control. Since unveiling his Cabinet of Curiosities in 2013 (released on the Trouble In Mind label), tastemakers and fans alike have been drawn deeper into Jacco Gardner’s fantastical fairytale kingdom. Between clocking up the miles all over the world, playing as member of band The Skywalkers, being enlisted by California’s Allah Las to moonlight on keyboards, and jamming with studio auteur Frank Maston, Gardner has honed and refreshed his intoxicating sound with meticulous precision; “Touring all over the world has completely changed me,” he says. “I’ve seen places I’d never seen before or didn’t even know existed. I think Hypnophobia has got some of its adventurous character from all those amazing experiences.”

Capturing a true sense of exploration, Hypnophobia combines Gardner’s newfound love of travel with his continued passion for collecting and playing vintage instruments. A stunning exhibit of lush instrumental tracks as well as songs that boast lyrics worthy of any great pop number, the record features a Wurlitzer electric piano that was purchased on tour, waltzing alongside mellotrons, harpsichords, an Optigan, and an antique Steinway upright piano sold to Gardner by a local church. Akin to the sonic boom of maverick contemporaries John Maus, and Tame Impala, his is a sound that holds fast next to fellow paisley performers Syd Barrett and Curt Boettcher, with the airy dynamics of Stereolab or Simon & Garfunkel. Yet what truly marks Gardner from his musical ancestors and accomplices is his forward-thinking, hi-tech approach; “Hypnophobia is the next step into an alternate reality influenced by the present. I’m so inspired by today’s technology that many things I do were not possible in the past.”

Fusing fantasy with sublime twisted reality, Hypnophobia was recorded in its entirety at Gardner’s ‘Shadow Shoppe Studio’ oddly juxtaposed in the heart of an industrial estate located midst the village of Zwaag, 30 miles north of Amsterdam. “In Zwaag, everyone leaves after office hours so it’s perfect for music recording... there's also lots of beautiful green meadows, water and trees close by so it’s not hard to find a quiet place to think.”

As drum beats throb whilst trucks come and go, and ethereal vocals ricochet between corrugated factory units, swirling instrumentals such as the cinematic ‘Grey Lanes’ (an earlier incarnation of which included lyrics about changes in Gardner’s hometown following months spent abroad) and the harpsichord sound of ‘All Over’ weave alongside ‘Before The Dawn’s cosmic eight-minute prog-out epic whilst ‘Face To Face’s airy drones only complement lyrics that resemble ‘80s film classic Tron.

Matching these new sonic explorations with the album art, Gardner only had one man on his mind - Julian House - who is best known for his art for Stereolab and Broadcast, co-owner of the Ghost Box label and as a musician with The Focus Group. “I’m a big fan of his stuff and really like the album he did together with Broadcast called “Broadcast And The Focus Group Investigate Witch Cults Of The Radio Age”. That record was a big inspiration for me and the direction of the new album so it was amazing when he agreed to do the artwork.”

For most tradition enthusiasts, it’d be all too easy to rehash the past. But that’s where Jacco Gardner’s differences lie. Playing all instruments except for drums (provided by live band member Jos van Tol and latest addition Nic Niggebrugge) Hypnophobia brilliantly captures a unique artist and future-vintage aficionado operating at a far higher state of consciousness.


Artwork & Packaging Design/Layout by Julian House ( Portfolio )

Tracklist

  • Another You
  • Grey Lanes
  • Brightly
  • Find Yourself
  • Face to Face
  • Outside Forever
  • Before The Dawn
  • Hypnophobia
  • Make Me See
  • All Over

Reviews

  • "a clear step forward for one of neo-psych's more promising new disciples."

    - Under The Radar
  • "entrancing psych-pop throwback that sounds neither overly reverential or overly self-aware."

    - SPIN
  • "the sort of lolloping basslines that used to furnish Serge Gainsbourg albums and lyrics that sometimes sound like they're taken from the pages of Grimm's Fairy Tales"

    - Q
  • "'‘Find Yourself’ is a meandering psychedelic odyssey. The track plays up Gardner’s lush tunes.”

    - The A.V. Club
  • "An engaging, yet still hip-swinging trip." ****

    - MOJO
  • ""Despite drawing on influences that are 45 years old, Jacco Gardner's music feels original."

    - NPR Music
  • “[‘Hypnophobia’] feels cool, and not in a way that’s easy. [It] does everything that a great psych track should do (basically, wrap you in sound) and with as much ease as the best psych tracks do it. There’s tuned percussion and drums and barely-there vocals swirled all throughout. It takes you on a trip, but it brings you back home, too.”

    - Flavorwire ("The 5 Best Songs We Heard This Week")
  • "understated guitar prowess"

    - Consequence of Sound
  • "Close, simple harmonies and earnest lyrics are fenced in by a rumbling bassline that nearly wanders off in search of its own truth toward the end. Gardner intones like a Zen master determined to extoll the virtues of psychedelia to his followers."

    - Stereogum
  • “It's hard to hear Jacco Gardner and not think of the crossroads of rock and psychedelia, when the Beatles got a little more trippy, Syd was still with Pink Floyd, and pop nuggets were still the focus, not the 7-20+ minute epics that would proliferate as the decade wore on. His newest effort Hypnophobia returns to those early explorations, dropping expansive and far-out pop gems”

    - Noisey
  • "Guitars wind like Tame Impala at half speed and whimsical, stoned-sounding vocals create a lazy, blissful atmosphere that’s hard to tear yourself away from."

    - NME
  • "His songs show so much observation and rehearsal - onstage, the vocal harmonies of his band members were impeccable..."

    - The New York Times

Videos

  • Find Yourself