- Digital
Amanda Whiting
Lost in Abstraction
Jazzman
- Cat No: JMANLP132
- Release: 2022-05-27
- updated:
Track List
-
1. Amanda Whiting - Abstraction
03:48 -
2. Amanda Whiting - Lost
03:34 -
3. Amanda Whiting - Venus Fly Trap
03:36 -
4. Amanda Whiting - Temptation
03:54 -
5. Amanda Whiting - Too Much
04:22 -
6. Amanda Whiting - Where Would We Be
04:57 -
7. Amanda Whiting - Up There
03:32 -
8. Amanda Whiting - Discarded
02:59 -
9. Amanda Whiting - Suspended
04:14 -
10. Amanda Whiting - Got It?
04:07
24bit/96khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]
Amanda Whiting - harp
Chip Wickham - flute
Aidan Thorne - bass
Jon Reynolds - drums
Baldo Verdú - percussion
Following her successful debut album After Dark, new ideas have led Whiting to create Lost in Abstraction. More than the expected ethereal washes of sound, the album playfully embraces her many influences into a soundscape of modernity. With rhythmical energies and the indulgent richness of an instrument so often associated with Ashby and Coltrane, the album resonates, leaving the listener lost in abstraction.
“This album explores so many elements of life. From my influences in music, to my own personal struggles. After 2 years of a pandemic, many of us feel lost and confused with our lines blurred. Life is now different. By removing our own applied restrictions of preconceptions and habits, which often choke us, we feel lost. But it is only at this point that we find ourselves.”
Amanda Whiting, 2022
Chip Wickham - flute
Aidan Thorne - bass
Jon Reynolds - drums
Baldo Verdú - percussion
Following her successful debut album After Dark, new ideas have led Whiting to create Lost in Abstraction. More than the expected ethereal washes of sound, the album playfully embraces her many influences into a soundscape of modernity. With rhythmical energies and the indulgent richness of an instrument so often associated with Ashby and Coltrane, the album resonates, leaving the listener lost in abstraction.
“This album explores so many elements of life. From my influences in music, to my own personal struggles. After 2 years of a pandemic, many of us feel lost and confused with our lines blurred. Life is now different. By removing our own applied restrictions of preconceptions and habits, which often choke us, we feel lost. But it is only at this point that we find ourselves.”
Amanda Whiting, 2022