Switched On – Amphior: Disappearing (Glacial Movements)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

For his second album in Glacial Movements under the Amphior alias, Danish musician Mathias Hammerstrøm explores the point where tangible dissolves into ethereal.

It is a deeply personal exploration, as he explains. “The album is a meditation on anxiety and the longing for a time when it had less sway over me. Reflecting on my childhood, I remember how playing the piano was deeply meaningful to me, and crafting Disappearing felt like reconnecting with my younger self through the music.”

What’s the music like?

The eleven tracks here cast a wide net, their moods very different as though experiencing different hours of the day. Some of them cut off abruptly, as though passing through a door from tangible to intangible.

Under The Stars has a suitably wide panorama in its musical outlook, with low piano and spacious textures, the sky arching overhead. By contrast Time Is A Thief has softer and slightly more ominous musings, its added notes portraying the anxiety Hammerstrøm mentions before growing in power.

Echoes From The Past presents a lighter picture, though is slightly wobbly on its feet, while other tracks are much less certain in outcome. The eerie Costume Party briefly resembles the fuzzy nostalgia at the chilling close to The Shining, while some tracks, notably Bring To Light, collapse into disconcerting fragments.

Disappearing itself has an impressive grandeur, a distinctive loop asserting itself against a texture the listener can dive into, while the clock ticks ominously through the fuzzy Bloom. Everything Is Passing has a good deal of musical wow and flutter, removing the firm ground from the listener’s feet before ending in cold ambience.

Does it all work?

It does, and Mathias Hammerstrøm’s music often plays tricks with the listener’s sense of perspective. This is overall a good thing, though can be quite unnerving at times.

Is it recommended?

It is. Amphior’s latest has some highly descriptive music in its eleven short chapters, and though anxiety is never fully quelled it is certainly confronted with the overall ambience of Mathias Hammerstrøm’s distinctive writing.

For fans of… Tim Hecker, Biosphere, Aphex Twin

Listen / Buy

Published post no.2,473 – Friday 14 March 2025

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.