Bruno Pronsato

“The Make Up The Break Up”

SONG01 scanZoom inLabelThesongsays
Cat. No.SONG01
FormatEXCL12"C
Orders fromFri, 26 Jun 2009
PricePlease sign in to see price

Review

The Make Up The Break Up is the first release on Bruno Pronsato’s own Thesongsays label. It’s the longest track in his catalog (38 minutes), and an even deeper excursion into his stylized harmony. This track was originally a track uncompleted while making, ‘Why Can’t We Be Like Us.’ Revisiting it roughly a year ago, Bruno began to reword it. What began as simple attempt to create an EP track out of it became a monster. What monster you ask? In a few words, the monster that is Bruno’s love of musicality and sound design. Muscially speaking, we are on a ride somewhere between a slithery house track and a drugged out night out in Chelsea, New York in the 60’s - and that’s a good thing because we get the entirety of the ride: the ups, the downs, the clouded mentality, the broken heart and perhaps the mended one. It’s happy, it’s sad - it’s something that you can dance to, but most importantly, it’s music that we think you can revisit for many years, as it somehow reflects us, our lives. A playful and extended journey through love and disaster, or at least the soundtrack to it.

SONG01 in the media

Adultnapper (Audiomatique): “I love this record. as usual bruno is brilliant!!!”

Ali Schwarz (Souvenir,Tiefsch: “amazing! x ali”

Benoit Carretier Tsugi Mag Fr: “Really nice. good construction”

Efdemin (Dial): “interesting tunes - like all the music from mr. pronsato”

Giles Smith (secretsundaze): “Typical Bruno Pronsato afterparty gear. I like it very much with its warmth and so many twists and turns”

Little White Earbuds: “About this time back in 2007, Bruno Pronsato was finishing up his sophomore album, Why Can’t We Be Like Us, and struggling to fit in one final song: an epic, electronic ballad called “The Make Up The Break Up.” It was an especially compelling track, and Pronsato did everything he could to fit it onto the album, but in the end it was just too long and had to be left out. Why Can’t We Be Like Us dropped at the end of the year — promptly receiving a deluge of praise — and “The Make Up The Break Up” remained a work-in-progress, appearing only in scattered cameos throughout his live sets. Pronsato wanted to release it on its own, but ran into many logistical problems: at 38 minutes in length, with no reasonable flip-over point for vinyl, The Make Up The Break Up was even more of a square peg than his previous productions. After several false starts and many months of haggling, he finally decided to release it himself, as the first title on his own imprint, thesongsays. In the end, all this aggravation only attests to the song’s exceptional nature: “The Make Up The Break Up” could be Pronsato’s finest work to date, and is surely one of the best records of 2009. “The Make Up The Break Up” begins with some of Pronsato’s favorite tropes: sharp buzzes, wet hand-claps, and a medley of abstract but distinctly organic sounds. The first ten minutes are obviously cut from the same cloth as Why Can’t We Be Like Us, focusing heavily on vivid percussion: shakers, brush sticks, and sonorous toms, all of which reflect an audiophile’s attention to detail. Faint shimmers of melody appear after a while, and soon the drums subside, making way for a very deep and very familiar female voice, crooning weird incantations over a blur of violins. This moment forms “The Make Up The Break Up”’s glowing center; from here on the piece is illuminated, strewn with dim embers of melody. It all dwindles down slowly from there, and soon the bass drum checks out completely, leaving just a handful of loops to sputter out in the cool green haze of the track’s final stretch. Part of what I love about this record is how it defies categorization: much like “Take 1 / Take 2,” his collaboration with Daze Maxim, it doesn’t fit into any of the typical techno formats (single, album, EP, etc.), and is best seen as a “piece.” In a way, “The Make Up The Break Up” harks back to Manuel Göttsching’s E2-E4, but while that long-playing classic is content to bob in place for 45 minutes, “MUBU” stays on the move, leading the listener across vivid and abstract terrain in what feels like far less than 38 minutes. As with most of Pronsato’s work, it withstands countless listens, and continues to reveal subtle detail after dozens of plays. “The Make Up The Break Up” shows that, like so few of his contemporaries, Bruno Pronsato can follow his strangest impulses and come up with something truly remarkable. » Will Lynch http://www.littlewhiteearbuds.com/bruno-pronsato-the-make-up-the-break-up/”

Nick Curly (Cecille): “in my bag”

Wighnomy Brothers (Freude am T: “bruno is ja ne kleine instutition ... auf ihn is verlass ... solide durchgequetscht die basswommel rolle”

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