
Void’s raw materials continue to draw heavily from samples (their own Walkman cassette field recordings and songs by others) and from a wide community of musical guests. Vocalists Haco on 'Time Zone' and Ytamo on 'Cloud Level' help levitate what could be lost tracks from a mid-90s Too Pure Records compilation of skewed-lounge electronica. Canadian musician Sook-Yin Lee sings on lead single 'Vertigo', a sinewy 80bpm tape-loop and bassline groove propelled by psychedelically-layered lyrics that eventually turn the song in on itself entirely, like Grace Jones’ 'Nightclubbing' covered by Animal Collective. One of Void’s greatest hip-hop loves is the Ruby Yacht collective; charter member Pink Navel drops some brilliant verses on 'Story Board'. The album’s two minimal tracks, an extended piano loop set to a slow beat and shimmering electronics on 'Muffin–A Song For My Cat' and the languid sampled bass riff and breakbeat of 'Event Flow', are perhaps most overtly ‘lofi chill.’ Indeed the whole album could be said to sit adjacent to those viral (if not already AI-generated) genre trends, which maybe begs the question on a lot of our minds: can specificity and authenticity of musical materials still be heard, still meaningfully signify substance and difference, still matter? Perhaps a question that fades in comparison to the career break Void could catch by landing on generic streaming playlists. More likely, these tracks remain too off-kilter, too genuinely lo-fi and ineffable, and too disqualified by the status of its peasant rights-holders, to catch the algos. Context remains the poor cousin of content. Meanwhile Void marches on, as a tireless organizer of local music events, bouncing around and often living in DIY venue, depending on the latest apartment eviction. With an ubiquitous polaroid camera in tow, they also document each communal happening with a single shot (and often blinding flash bulb): a memory and metaphor for lives illuminated preciously, singularly, ‘imperfectly’ in the moment. Dozens of these polaroids adorn the album’s back cover and inner sleeve art in grid-like montages, as a fitting analog for the careful construction, grainy intimate materiality, and ephemeral feeling of these songs.
'Every Life Is A Light' is Joni Void’s most coherent and congenial record while relinquishing none of their experimentalist acumen as a producer or emotional attunement as a composer. Instead these qualities flourish, on an album that lights a humble flame for the fragile promise of homespun creative collaboration as unalienated labour and therapeutic communion, making an enchantingly idiosyncratic contribution to downtempo sample music along the way. Thanks for listening.
TRACK LISTING
1. Everyday - A Sequel
2. Du Parc (with N NAO)
3. Time Zone (with Haco)
4. Cloud Level (with Ytamo)
5. Muffin - A Song For My Cat
6. L'Empire Des Lumières
7. In-Between Places
8. Event Flow - A Sequence
9. Story Board (with Pink Navel)
10. Vertigo (with Sook-Yin Lee)
11. Death Is Not The End
12. Joni Sadler Forever