Raymond Richards

Sand Paintings

ESP Institute

ESP081

Raymond Richards

Sand Paintings

ESP Institute

ESP081

ESP081_packshot-front_large
ARTIST
Raymond Richards
TITLE
Sand Paintings
LABEL
ESP Institute
CAT NO.
ESP081
FORMAT
LP
RELEASE DATE
  • 10/05/2024 [INITIAL RELEASE]
TERRITORY
Worldwide
BARCODE
197190883169
GENRE
Ambient Downtempo Electronica Indie
FEATURING
Raymond Richards

TRACK LISTING

play all

  1. A1. Badwater Basin  ▾
  2. A2. Rattlesnake Pass  ▾
  3. A3. Monument Valley  ▾
  4. A4. 2 Cent Mambo  ▾
  5. A5. Saguaro  ▾
  6. B1. Zion Lodge  ▾
  7. B2. Farrington Dome  ▾
  8. B3. Deer On Hwy 80  ▾
  9. B4. Mescal Shakes  ▾
  10. B5. Sonora  ▾

SALES NOTES

There was a long time I considered Raymond Richards the ultimate secret weapon. There were sounds he could make that other people just couldn’t. Pure, whole, yet complex sounds. The pedal steel is an extremely niche instrument outside of its Country confines, but its sheer and transcendent depth has never failed to floor me. Raymond’s ear for implementing the steel into literally 'anything' has always been uncanny. After decades of being savvy to his work ethic, multi-faceted studio skills and overall sense of musical honesty, it became a priority for me to channel some of this into narratives through the ESP Institute and get his stories told. Without further recounting the history and trajectory of our musical relationship (see the press release for 2020’s critically-acclaimed album 'The Lost Art Of Wandering'), I can whole-heartedly confirm this sophomore release, 'Sand Paintings', opens an even wider door into Raymond’s visceral, contemplative world. The cast of players has elaborated to include Calexico’s John Convertino on drums and percussion, a bevy of eccentric stringed instruments and even a hint of brass to collectively stratify context for the pedal steel. Through diversifying the timbral palette, we invite an increased soundstage acuity but also reveal untapped wells of emotion for the listener, perhaps even testing cultural literacies. One foot remains in our established ambient realm, while the other steps toward grand cinematic gestures, and despite the dense, insurmountable emotion in these songs, there is a stoic singularity, like a lonesome cowboy pulling up his boot straps to endure another day. 'Badwater Basin' opens with courage, an enormous chord evoking Raymond’s image of “hard dawn”, but in navigating through the dramatic depictions of 'Monument Valley', 'Saguaro' and 'Deer On Hwy 80', we grapple with a cloaked vulnerability—weathered by the elements, beaten down and alone, yet still madly in love with the world. —Lovefingers

Published: 9th April 2024

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