Joko Sinä Tulet Tänne Alas Tai Minä Nousen Sinne

by 
AlbumFeb 07 / 201412 songs, 37m 46s
Experimental Hip Hop Psychedelic Folk
Noteable

Psychedelic music born of cabin fever. Weird pastel electronica. Bizarre cut and paste loops. Hazy, mist-clad experimentalism. Eternal drone theatrics. The music of Finland's Paavoharju, now preparing for the release of their 3rd album, is difficult to pin down. The Wire dubbed the music as "home-taped experimentation married to pop ecstasy", and the albums "Yhä hämärää" (2006) and "Laulu laakson kukista" (2008) found the band worldwide cult fame in the indie scene. October 2013 sees the release of the band's third album, titled "Joko sinä tulet tänne alas tai minä nousen sinne" on Svart Records. Main composer Lauri Ainala's penchant for progress and experimentation found him at a point where it was necessary for Paavoharju to renew itself. The major stylistic change on the new album is the inclusion of hip hop elements, with rap vocals performed by Paperi T (also of the Helsinki hip hop group Ruger Hauer), but the handling of these influences is unconventional. Paavoharju's brand of hip hop is far removed from its roots, taken off the streets and thrown into the nocturnal forests of Finland. Familiar building blocks from the group's previous work, such as the array of female voices and troubadour Joose Keskitalo, are still there, but they are distant, often drowned in swathes of electronic haze, sometimes just barely audible as if a faded memory of something that once was. The major theme on "Joko sinä tulet tänne alas tai minä nousen sinne" is alienation - how things familiar turn into things distant and strange. Speaking of the album, Ainala compares it to an old family homestead to which one returns after decades and in whose decayed state there is both horror and beauty.

7.1 / 10

The Finnish group Paavoharju's first album since 2008 was conceived and recorded in a variety of abandoned buildings, including a self-built sauna deep in a swamp. The music's a dense weave of submerged tape loops, crackly field recordings, and disembodied snippets of voice and shadowy instruments.