03 Mar 2022 // A review by Callum Wagstaff
Daniel Hayles is a piano and keyboard player, performing regularly in a
variety of styles and settings. He also writes and arranges music for
local and international artists, bands and shows.
His album,
Other
Futures, is constructed around improvised bursts of piano, with puffs of
synth and percussion, pulsing bass, held together by sample-based beats
born in the golden era of hip-hop.
Other Futures is an excellent
accompaniment to a video game session and plays like "lo-fi hip-hop
beats to study to" with the addition of a friendly ghost improvising
over it. The room quality of the piano fits with the beats in a way that
feels like you're a child playing in the doorway of your aunt's kitchen
that uses plastic tassels instead of a door and she's got the turntable
on in the other room but the incense smoke is starting to drift towards
you.
The album is fit to accompany any puzzling, reading or coffee
imbibing activity. In particular, songs like
Puffs and Jabs,
Neo Dela
Piano and
The Discount have a "sunny bay window seat" quality to them.
There's
a couple of moments where the agreeable tone of the music forces you to
look up from your book and take active notice; the title track
Other
Futures has a distinct limp that refuses to be relegated to background
music. A couple of songs like
Nyagashiru have bass note stabs that have a
similar gait. The end of Herbaceous has a meaty synth outro that sounds
like cancer being burned out of your retinas. Some songs have slight
discolourations and odd quirks.
The Coder and
Echo Dance Part 1 in
particular both sound like an old, detuned TV would look, with hues
sitting just outside the normal sphere in a conspicuous way. Like purple
skin, yellow jumpsuits and cyan grass.
A standout track for me was
Samba, which, given the warble and the context of the other tracks, felt
like the "please stand by" music accompanying technical difficulties in
a public access TV channel.
My favourite track was
Choir Jam. It's
pensive and anxious, but emotionally balanced. It felt like it moved me
from one headspace to another over the course of the song.
Choir Jam had
a poise and presence that I really enjoyed and felt in my guts.
It's
been a fun ride getting to know these songs. Hayles has his fingers in a
lot of pies, so you can check out other stuff he's been involved with
at
danielhayles.com and dip your toe into his world.