Release Date: October 12, 2009 Label: [self-released / digital] Location: Vancouver, BC / Internet
The name itself evokes tiki-bar exotica meeting geometric abstraction. The album art (a pixelated, sun-bleached photograph of a tropical plant) suggests something organic but decaying, viewed through a digital lens. This was the era of Flying Lotus’ Los Angeles , Hudson Mohawke’s Butter , and the rise of “wonky” hip-hop—beat music with syncopated, off-kilter rhythms. But where those records were dense and virtuosic, Sing a New Sapling Into Existence was skeletal, loop-based, and deeply introverted. The album’s sonic signature is immediately disarming. Drum machines hit like padded mallets. Basslines are round, dubby, and unhurried. Melodies—often played on what sounds like a cheap digital keyboard or a detuned music box—drift in and out of focus. Kona Triangle Sing A New Sapling Into Existence 2009
It is humid, cracked, and impossibly tender. By 2009, CFCF had already released Panamanian Nights (a Balearic-disco homage) and The River (a moody, piano-led EP). But under the alias Kona Triangle , Silver allowed himself a different kind of freedom—one unmoored from dancefloor functionality. Release Date: October 12, 2009 Label: [self-released /