The Ambient and Drum and Bass musician is setting foot on Anjunadeep‘s sublabel, as he’s shared the news on his new album coming out on said label in mid-April.
British producer Mark Barrott is one of those artists who have had quite a lengthy musical career. Having jumped into the electronic scene during the 1990s as his famous alias Future Loop Foundation, he’s seen his discography extend from Drum and Bass, Ambient, Early Rave Techno, House, and more. Under his own name, he’s branched into a more organically inspired catalogue, with works such as his Sketches From An Island series (click the link for the first album) and the Nature Sounds Of The Balearics LP. Barrott’s early releases made him the first Drum and Bass DJ to play on BBC Radio 1, and even though he’s left said part of his sound aside for a while now, the quality of his music has kept a sensational level throughout the years. Ask Anjunadeep for example.
Mark Barrott’s arrival at Anjunadeep Reflections
Today, Anjunadeep Reflections, the ambient-oriented side of leading label Anjunadeep, has shared the news on Mark Barrott becoming the most recent inclusion to their artist roster. The imprint will see Mark release his forthcoming album Jōhatsu (蒸発), an 8-track film score arranged in Ibiza, yet heavily inspired by Japan. The first single, ‘Kyoto (京都)‘, is out today, as the first track lifted from the album — and also its opening track.
The album was produced as the soundtrack for the documentary ‘Jōhatsu (蒸発) … the art of Evaporation‘, a film about a man vanishing from his ordinary life and disappearing from Kyoto, all the way to Scandinavia. The jōhatsu are the people who fade away, were it due to addiction, loss, or simply, just leaving their daily lives behind without a trace. The album follows the documentary’s protagonist in his journey of becoming jōhatsu. Barrott’s Jōhatsu (蒸発) will be released on April 17th on Reflections.
‘Kyoto (京都)’ evolves from an ethnic arpeggio into Synthwave-like sustained chords, vocal beds, and a soft piano melody. Jazzy rides and a rhythmic funky bassline complete the work, which ends having you fly inside this odd, yet forward-moving story Mark is painting along the ride. The music video, also posted today, shows the busy nightlife of Japan’s iconic narrow passages, walking you through restaurants and metro stations, as well as those same streets now empty, and only cozily welcoming you to wander around them under dimmed lights.
Check the video by clicking below. Also, help yourself with a Spotify play by scrolling to the bottom of the article, and click here to support the song any other way you like. Pre-order Jōhatsu (蒸発), the album, were it digital or vinyl, by clicking right here.