EARMILK EARMILK
  • NEW MUSIC
    • DANCE
    • ELECTRONIC
    • EXPERIMENTAL
    • HIP-HOP
    • INDIE
    • POP
    • ROCK
  • INDUSTRY NEWS
    • DOCUMENTARIES
    • EVENTS
    • FASHION
    • LIFESTYLE
    • MUSIC GEAR
    • MUSIC INDUSTRY
    • TECHNOLOGY
  • OPINION
  • ALBUM REVIEWS
  • GEAR REVIEWS
  • INTERVIEWS
  • FEATURES
    • FESTIVALS
    • EXCLUSIVES
    • LISTS
    • CONTESTS
    • Photo Journals
  • SERIES
    • Artist to Watch
    • Under The Crust
    • Flashback Friday
    • Suicide Sundaes
    • Daily 2%
    • The Club
    • Weekend Selector
    • Mashup Mondays
    • Artist Remixed
    • Wobble Wednesday
    • Night Rumours
    • Indie Sabbath
    • Straight No Chase
    • Straight From the Teet
  • Jobs
  • About EARMILK
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Music
EARMILK EARMILK
EARMILK EARMILK
  • NEW MUSIC
    • DANCE
    • ELECTRONIC
    • EXPERIMENTAL
    • HIP-HOP
    • INDIE
    • POP
    • ROCK
  • INDUSTRY NEWS
    • DOCUMENTARIES
    • EVENTS
    • FASHION
    • LIFESTYLE
    • MUSIC GEAR
    • MUSIC INDUSTRY
    • TECHNOLOGY
  • OPINION
  • ALBUM REVIEWS
  • GEAR REVIEWS
  • INTERVIEWS
  • FEATURES
    • FESTIVALS
    • EXCLUSIVES
    • LISTS
    • CONTESTS
    • Photo Journals
  • SERIES
    • Artist to Watch
    • Under The Crust
    • Flashback Friday
    • Suicide Sundaes
    • Daily 2%
    • The Club
    • Weekend Selector
    • Mashup Mondays
    • Artist Remixed
    • Wobble Wednesday
    • Night Rumours
    • Indie Sabbath
    • Straight No Chase
    • Straight From the Teet
  • Album Reviews
  • Experimental

Black Swan – Heaven [Album Review]

  • July 1, 2012
  • EARMILK Staff
Total
0
Shares
0
0

The few brave readers who for some unknown reason like what I write here – if there's any, I mean – probably are starting to wonder why I don't write about actual recent releases. I understand that by the time I talk about a release it has probably been discussed and surely better reviewed by some other, more competent people. So, I give you my reason. I don't intend to write about any release that I don't consider worthy enough to be on my end-of-the-year list. So, my reviews show up here as the spark of inspiration to one of my horrific texts is ignited by an album that marveled me some weeks, months ago or even by a freshly discovered work – which will probably be the case for my next review, but don't trust my promises.

Also, EARMILK's unofficial policy, which I totally support, is that of only writing about things we like. That what's not worthy to my meaningless randomly built taste, let it die alone in a corner, right? Which leads me to this week's case, the new work of an artist that has already gracefully presented us with a brilliant album this year, reviewed by me here – ain't that just dandy? 

Therefore, Heaven is Black Swan's latest entry in this year's catalogue of great albums. Released on his own label, Swan Plague, on May 28 (it only took me a month, look at that!) this is, much like the his debut, In 8 Movements, an eight-part work intended to be listened thoroughly in one sitting.

As with his last album – and as with most albums I review, I don't know why I even do this – this is a very difficult work to describe in words. But this one is particularly harder.

      --Heaven-Part-I--EM0712
Download: Black Swan – Heaven: Part I

And it's not even for the same reasons that it's hard. I'll stay away from the term "difficult" though. That's a term people use to describe albums that they're into only because somebody said to them that they should. Not that there isn't albums that require effort to be fully appreciated – that's a totally different thing, don't mix up your drinks here. Most great albums are like that and this is surely one of them, I just hate the term "difficult", it has lost its purpose amidst pseudo-intellectual-hipster-bullshit.

Anyway, it's not because it's harsh. (That was The Quiet Divide, and Black Swan is surely proving to be an artist that doesn't repeat himself.) Nor because it's of any other single-adjectively describable reason. The reason is much deeper, and it is a culmination of something that, to me, was architected from In 8 Movements up to now, throughout four such magnum records that this may very well be the most incredible sequence of albums ever released.

With Heaven, it now feels as if, right from the beginning, Black Swan's music was gradually losing its touch with humanity's falsified view of reality, of life and the Universe, in order to, as a conscious indescribably pitiful part of the latter, fuse itself with It. Therefore being a part of It. Therefore being It.  A musical tetralogy of humanity's idiocy beautiful despair; that of the consciousness of nothingness. A cinematic sequence of sound-provoked images resulting in a film never made before, but that all of the greatest auteurs wished to direct. Heaven is an epilogue to the death of God; now there's no connections, nothing to grip in a vain attempt of keep yourself falsely secured – but actually much closer to madness than sanity. This is what heaven is. Nothing; endless void, infinite space.

When once samples of classical music, among other stuff, fused themselves to different languages of drone, creating stages of gorgeous-violent dialogue between the emptiness and its antithesis,Heaven is clean, smooth, dark, pure, as a rectangular piece of an unknown black metal; as if it was sliced from the Universe background itself.

 

      --Heaven-Part-IV--EM0712
Download: Black Swan – Heaven: Part IV

Changes in pace are minimal, and discreet. The music doesn't flows, it floats.

And that's pure bliss. Why? You find out why!

This is my shortest review yet, but that's because after In 8 Movements, The Quiet Divide, Aeternaand now Heaven, there's nothing to be said. So I've already tambled for far too long. Listening to those four albums in sequence might turn out to be one of the most satisfying experiences of your life, as it was with mine; as meaningless as this cursed-through-meaning life may be.

It's all chemistry, anyway.

  • Buy Heaven on Black Swan's Bandcamp
  • Black Swan Official Website
  • Black Swan on Facebook

P.S. Don't forget to follow the artist's recommendation: "The sound contained on this album is intended for headphone use and without equalization. Uninterrupted listening at highest (but tolerable) volume is kindly advised."

Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Share 0
Share 0
Related Topics
  • Black Swan
  • cinematic
  • heaven
  • Swan Plague
EARMILK Staff

Previous Article
  • Experimental
  • Rap

Azealia Banks – "Nathan" (Feat. Styles P)

  • June 30, 2012
  • Adrian Smith
View Article
Next Article
  • Experimental
  • Hip-Hop
  • Jazz Hop
  • R&B

Robert Glasper Experiment – "Smells Like Teen Spirit" (Nirvana Cover) [VIDEO]

  • July 1, 2012
  • Liz Choi
View Article
You May Also Like
View Article
  • Album Reviews
  • Mainstage
  • New Music
  • R&B

Yaya Bey reclaims her narrative on 'Fidelity' [Album Review]

  • April 23, 2026
View Article
  • Indie
  • Music Videos
  • Noise
  • Punk
  • Rock

Drama Dolls share our rage with punk rock masterpiece "Robot" [Video]

  • April 22, 2026
Mt. Kili
View Article
  • Acoustic
  • Album Reviews
  • Folk

Mt. Kili takes a bold step in the folk journey with sophomore album "The Noticer"

  • April 20, 2026
Floating Sheep
View Article
  • Album Reviews
  • Jazz

Floating Sheep delivers a jazz experience with self-titled album, "Floating Sheep"

  • April 20, 2026
View Article
  • Alt-Pop
  • Electro Pop
  • Electronic
  • Experimental

Ahva turns isolation into energy on “Trapped in Freedom”

  • April 20, 2026
Hiroki Tanaka
View Article
  • Album Reviews
  • Rock

Hiroki Tanaka explores identity and cultural roots on "Isan" (album)

  • April 16, 2026
View Article
  • Album Reviews
  • Dreampop
  • Easy Listening
  • Folk
  • Mainstage
  • New Music

Memory Spells & Jordan Whitlock turn distance into something sacred on 'This Is What It Feels Like' [Album Review]

  • April 9, 2026
View Article
  • Ambient
  • Experimental
  • New Music

The Album Leaf drops dreamy collaboration with Maiah Manser on new track "Falling"

  • April 4, 2026
Popular Music
  • HoodTrophy Bino and Chrisean Rock turn public chaos into praise on "Proud Of You"
    • April 24, 2026
  • Michael Gilas turns love‑bombing into empowerment on "You Don’t Get To Say Goodbye"
    • April 24, 2026
  • Lauren Presley
    Lauren Presley turns rebellion into power on new single “Everything You Hate”
    • April 24, 2026
  • InteliDey explores the connection between technology, humanity and music on "Offline"
    • April 24, 2026
  • The Hypnotiks
    The Hypnotiks & Wolfgang Valbrun ignite Paris soul-funk heat on “Stone Cold Sober”
    • April 24, 2026
Recent Scoops
  • YVNGBRYYY channels honesty, faith and spirituality into his genre-fluid soundscapes
    • April 2, 2026
  • Rising YouTube talent bigboyz is turning viral streams into hit records
    • March 23, 2026
  • Winter Music Conference expands 2026 programming with Sara Landry, Radio Slave, DJ Minx, Danny Tenaglia
    • February 26, 2026
  • Georgina Willis delivers compelling environmental documentary 'INSECT_O_CIDE'
    • January 21, 2026
Community Voices
  • From Machismo To Mujeres: Women As The Face Of Reggaeton
    • July 14, 2022
  • Tyler the creator
    4 things I learned on the 'Call Me If You Get Lost' tour
    • March 31, 2022
  • 4 things every artist needs to think about in 2022
    • January 27, 2022
  • The TikTok Takeover of Hip-Hop
    • January 11, 2022

EARMILK EARMILK
  • Jobs
  • About EARMILK
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Music
All Milk. No Duds.

Input your search keywords and press Enter.