Prog

WHITE MOTH BLACK BUTTERFLY

The Cost Of Dreaming KSCOPE

- GARY MACKENZIE

21st century prog-pop elegance from TesseracT’s Daniel Tompkins.

Where White Moth Black Butterfly’s 2013 debut album, One Thousand Wings, was a union between singer Daniel Tompkins – then on hiatus from TesseracT – and Skyharbor guitarist/programmer Keshav Dhar that had the whiff of an expanded solo project, 2017’s follow-up, Atone, felt more like the work of an actual band.

Four years on, The Cost Of Dreaming picks up where its predecesso­r left off. Characteri­sed by Tompkins as “an outpouring of love and a cry for help”, it delves deeper into the lush electropop and ambient dance vibes explored on its predecesso­r – a world away from the music Tompkins makes with TesseracT, but no less striking on its own terms.

Ushered in via the thick, warm synth pad embrace of

Ether, the singer’s voice veering from plaintive to soaring,

The Cost Of Dreaming is a series of vignettes that explore dichotomie­s within human experience – how happiness can create stagnation, how struggle can produce profound change for the better and how we might find beauty in awfulness.

There’s little in the way of traditiona­l prog here. The Dreamer wouldn’t be out of place on nighttime pop radio, while the alchemy produced by the combinatio­n of Tompkins’ voice and the rich, sensuous tones of co-vocalist Jordan Turner casts a two-handed spell over Portals and Liberate. Turner is by turns entrancing, beguiling and deeply moving, equally astounding with the fragile Sands Of Despair as she is with the vocal mischievou­sness of Soma.

A cinematic quality pervades the album, exemplifie­d by

Under The Stars, which could be the kind of atmospheri­c incidental music beloved by producers of moody Scandi Noir crime dramas. Elsewhere, Use You wraps up barely disguised threat, audible distress and uncomprehe­nding impotence in the face of domestic abuse in a suitably discomfiti­ng fashion. Similarly, Darker Days’ eminently danceable vibe can’t disguise its disquietin­g undertones. With much of the music built upon programmed keys and drum machine rhythms, Bloom is the nearest The Cost Of Dreaming gets to a straight rock song (and the point where flesh-and-blood drummer Mac Christense­n gets to shine).

Tompkins and Dhar have clearly chosen their sounds with enormous care, resulting in a beautifull­y produced and meticulous­ly arranged album. Not every fan of TesseracT and modern prog in general will enjoy it, but those willing to set prejudices aside and embrace everything the 21st century has to offer will revel in the journey.

IT DELVES DEEP INTO LUSH ELECTROPOP AND AMBIENT DANCE.

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