2020
The Wire Issue 441 A Mimesis of Nothing Review (excerpt)
“this music is insular, hermetic and abstract. Amini often gets tagged as ambient and/or drone, which even allowing for those terms’ dilution of meaning through their use as shorthand is off the mark here. “Moonless Garden” is a calming cinematic take on isolationism with some kind of avian squawk coming and going —more animals of uncertain taxonomy can be heard on “Observance (Shadow)” — but on the whole this is more varied and more forbidding.”
2019
Bandcamp Best Experimental Music of 2019
“as Amini channelled his experience into deep, cavernous sounds that drift between documentary-like realism and abstract expressionism, echoing the hypnagogic state he endured. As a result, Serus is a heavy listen, but it also exudes the calm and reassurance that comes from turning distress into art.”
“His creative technique has remained almost unchanged over the past decade or so. Amini still uses a very simple recording setup—essentially just a guitar—alongside a very limited amount of software. What does keeps changing are his influences, which affect his work deeply. “To be able to create, you need to have a lot of inputs. For me, that plays a big role. I try to immerse myself in things I find interesting,” shares Amini. The inspirations range from literature—whether it be poetry, fiction, or philosophy—to cinema or other music, both contemporary and classical.”
“Amini’s work often flits between chamber instrumentation, sumptuous dark ambient, and head-splitting noise, and he finds the perfect foil in 9T Antiope, who pair electronic glitches and drones with almost shockingly beautiful singing. Together, they conjure a terrifying expanse of blackened buzz over which 9T Antiope vocalist Sara Bigdeli Shamloo slides between classical technique, bluesy affect, and, on the dreamlike “Black as in Burst,” a bone-chilling whisper.”
The Wire Issue 427 Serus Review
“While Amini’s Serus is a significantly darker, denser and more complex exploration of the texture and temporal nature of sound production, it still requires a backstory to be fully understood in relation to the preceding releases. 2017’s Tar concentrated on the collective and the individual unconscious, and the tension between the twa, in the way it (re)produced emotions, sounds and images. Foras the following year intensified this exploration, particularly in relation to the external influence governing our internal responses. Serus meanwhile examines its extreme effects on the composer, as the monstrous drone of opener “A Recollection Of The Disappeared” engulfs its listener in the raw affect of someone who’d experienced a nervous breakdown. This in between state of wakefulness and sleep emerges in orchestral motifs that rise in and out of textured noise on “All That Remained Pt 1” and “All That Remained Pt 2”, while “Semblance” buoys suspended in a cloud of its own grumbling inertia.”
The Wire Issue “Harmistice” Review (click on the link)
“Amini works in prickly textures, mimicking the crackle of synaptic activity as the brain prepares for sleep. The soundscape eventually deadens around its halfway point, clearing clutter as violin played by Nima Aghiani groans like it’s part of a Haxan Cloak track, then sprawls out, then finds footing, then sprawls out again in cinematic fashion. These dreams are movies, to paraphrase a Built to Spill lyric, and the plot is littered with twists.”
“This is a superb album that should please fans of any of the aforementioned genres, and cements the composer’s reputation as an artist of no mean significance”
2014-2018
For the sake for brevity only a small selection of press quotes from 2019 and onwards has been included. The music released before that time has been reviewed in The Guardian, Fact, A Closer Listen, DiS, The Quietus and Headphone Commute to name a few, please contact me for a complete press quotations list if you need one.