Temple Invisible Streams Full 'Enter_' EP On Culture Collide EP Out This Week In The US/Canada
Temple Invisible Streams Full 'Enter_' EP On Culture Collide
EP Out This Week In The US/Canada
EP Out This Week In The US/Canada
Temple Invisible is the musical project of Irina Bucescu, Costas Ivanov and Daniel Olteanu – three multi instrumentalists from Bucharest, Romania.
A band exhibiting a considerable array of styles, Temple Invisible have fast developed their own tonal environment for electronic pop, dark experimental and futuristic industrial. Their music propagates a unique blend of electronic influences and musical genres combined with a classical sense of composition.
Temple Invisible songs are mathematically placed between Massive Attack and Nine Inch Nails, with a smidgen of Portishead and the sort of big choruses and bells-and-whistles-and-choirboys production once trademarked by Depeche Mode.
Always willing to push new frontiers with a mixture that blends electro beats, psychedelic guitars, symphonic elements, 80s synth goth and trip hop with a nod to classic post industrial notes, it’s hard to pinpoint just where the hallowing chords of this three piece sit, landing them on a distinct and intriguing plateau of sound.
Striking a balance between the trip hop landscapes of Portishead and the dark industrial zones inhabited by Nine Inch Nails, the three piece summon tectonic plates of noise that shift subtly with earth shattering consequences.
Speaking about their debut release Temple Invisible describe the EP as a vibrational state in which they dwell among their absolute love for music and their contradictory need for self identification as a way to reconcile both.
Enter_ is an introduction to their blended style of multi-layered electronica.
A band exhibiting a considerable array of styles, Temple Invisible have fast developed their own tonal environment for electronic pop, dark experimental and futuristic industrial. Their music propagates a unique blend of electronic influences and musical genres combined with a classical sense of composition.
Temple Invisible songs are mathematically placed between Massive Attack and Nine Inch Nails, with a smidgen of Portishead and the sort of big choruses and bells-and-whistles-and-choirboys production once trademarked by Depeche Mode.
Always willing to push new frontiers with a mixture that blends electro beats, psychedelic guitars, symphonic elements, 80s synth goth and trip hop with a nod to classic post industrial notes, it’s hard to pinpoint just where the hallowing chords of this three piece sit, landing them on a distinct and intriguing plateau of sound.
Striking a balance between the trip hop landscapes of Portishead and the dark industrial zones inhabited by Nine Inch Nails, the three piece summon tectonic plates of noise that shift subtly with earth shattering consequences.
Speaking about their debut release Temple Invisible describe the EP as a vibrational state in which they dwell among their absolute love for music and their contradictory need for self identification as a way to reconcile both.
Enter_ is an introduction to their blended style of multi-layered electronica.
Press Quotes
""Everything From Above" eases you in and gives off Portishead feels, but follow up track "Disappearance" gives off a hint of Nine Inch Nails and a How to Destroy Angels vibe (Trent Reznor's other project, with his wife on vocal duties). The layered vocals on "Anima" are best played in surround sound. We really dig it." - Culture Collide
"[Anima] with its unapologetically aggressive industrial beats paired with lead singer Irina Bucescu's ethereal vocals, is a sensoral bombardment in the best possible way." - Gigwise
“Temple Invisible hails from Romania, and makes a brand of dark, icy, electronica that feels like someone took the industrial tremor of Depeche Mode and the trip-hop sprinklings of Portishead, and made them spend the night locked together in a pitch black dungeon.” - Thump
“Creeping, emotive, glitchy” - BULLETT
"Romania may not be the first country to spring to mind when you think of those paving the way in electronic music, but experimental three piece Temple Invisible are out to change that." - Hunger Magazine
“Dark, neo-industrial electronics from Romania - a sentence we don’t get to write often enough - the trio have been attracting with their dense, Nine Inch Nails inspiring writing.” - Clash
“Imagine if Daughter went ‘80s goth or a more psychedelic Portishead and you’ll probably land in the ballpark of Temple Invisible.” - The Line Of Best Fit
""Everything From Above" eases you in and gives off Portishead feels, but follow up track "Disappearance" gives off a hint of Nine Inch Nails and a How to Destroy Angels vibe (Trent Reznor's other project, with his wife on vocal duties). The layered vocals on "Anima" are best played in surround sound. We really dig it." - Culture Collide
"[Anima] with its unapologetically aggressive industrial beats paired with lead singer Irina Bucescu's ethereal vocals, is a sensoral bombardment in the best possible way." - Gigwise
“Temple Invisible hails from Romania, and makes a brand of dark, icy, electronica that feels like someone took the industrial tremor of Depeche Mode and the trip-hop sprinklings of Portishead, and made them spend the night locked together in a pitch black dungeon.” - Thump
“Creeping, emotive, glitchy” - BULLETT
"Romania may not be the first country to spring to mind when you think of those paving the way in electronic music, but experimental three piece Temple Invisible are out to change that." - Hunger Magazine
“Dark, neo-industrial electronics from Romania - a sentence we don’t get to write often enough - the trio have been attracting with their dense, Nine Inch Nails inspiring writing.” - Clash
“Imagine if Daughter went ‘80s goth or a more psychedelic Portishead and you’ll probably land in the ballpark of Temple Invisible.” - The Line Of Best Fit
Links
-
Read the full story at UnRatedMagazine.com
Post a Comment