Home / Arts and Entertainment / Experimental Artist claire rousay Redefines Emo-Ambient Fusion with Nuanced Drones
Experimental Artist claire rousay Redefines Emo-Ambient Fusion with Nuanced Drones
13 Nov
Summary
- Canadian-born experimentalist claire rousay's latest album 'a little death' is the final entry in a trilogy
- Rousay weaves chimes, thuds, and snippets of chatter into longform musique concrete compositions
- Album features collaborations with artists like more eaze and M. Sage

In the past half decade, Canadian-born experimentalist claire rousay has become known for eliciting raw emotions using the sparsest of elements. Her latest album, 'a little death,' is the final entry in a trilogy that includes 'a heavenly touch' and 'a softer focus.'
Recorded primarily at dusk, the songs on 'a little death' function as conversations between rousay and her contemporaries, seamlessly weaving in samples from the work of close collaborators like more eaze and M. Sage. Granular drones are the controlled variables of choice here, always bubbling under live instrumental samples with the rapid, subtle vibrations of busy nighttime crickets.
While 'a little death' abandons the singer-songwriter structures of last year's 'sentiment,' rousay's strengths as a vocalist and musician carry over. Tracks like "night one" and "somewhat burdensome" showcase her ability to navigate individual tones and the ways they bend around empty space, a detail that gives her playing urgency and bears out her background in minimalism.



