
Reviewed by Ben Hogwood
What’s the story?
Juha Mäki-Patola’s third solo album is his first release for FatCat Records’ post-classical imprint 130701.
It consists of twelve carefully composed and intricately layered pieces, “built around upright piano and Prophet 10 loops processed through tape echo and reverb”. The linked pieces were recorded during the dark winter of 2024–2025, where Mäki-Patola sought light and solace through memory and imagination. The pieces look to blend memories with the present for times of healing.
The album was recorded live in Juha’s Helsinki studio, using tape-based processing techniques, and with guests including his daughter Frida, Jessica Hébert, Tapani Rinne and Julia Gjertsen – with the addition of vocals, violin and bass clarinet.
What’s the music like?
Deeply calming. Rather than suggest a dark winter, this is music that captures the rarefied light Helsinki often experiences. The twelve movements have a simple musical language, but that is their strength – musical gestures that are easy to listen to, but which set an atmosphere all of their own.
Often the music hangs in the air like a suspended cloud, free of hassle but progressing onwards in a fluid and attractive way. Many of the moments are free of obvious melody, free to wallow in the bright textures that Mäki-Patola has formed. Moment 2 is one of those, while Moment 3 steps back for thoughtful introspection before introducing a lovely, thick duvet of sound to dive into.
Moment 6 is led by softly voiced keyboards with mottled textures around, before Moment 7 drops the frequency effectively for a slow, mellow stream of consciousness. Yet this turns out to be a prelude to the blissful Moment 8, where languid guitar hovers over a reassuringly dense drone. Moment 10 is similarly calming with its lazy loops, while Moment 12 ends with waves of calm.
Does it all work?
It works, through being a natural evolution of musical thinking. Mäki-Patola doesn’t try too hard at any point, being comfortable to let the music forge its own path – which it does effortlessly.
Is it recommended?
Momentary Movements of Landscapes is a deeply restful time out for the listener, at the same time offering pinpricks of light in the darkness. It is a cleansing experience, slowing the heartbeat and softening the soul.
For fans of… William Basinski, Tim Hecker, Stars Of The Lid, Machinefabriek
Listen / Buy
Published post no.2,874 – Friday 1 May 2026