LIMITED EDITION CDR VERSION IS AVAILABLE: 15 JANUARY 2023
The Corrupting Sea (Jason Lamoreaux) is a soundscape project from the USA, that varies from tense moments to drone moments that "massage the brain".
The project started in 2008 and released the first album as TCS in 2017 after honing his sound. Jason is on more than eight labels around the world and has played numerous shows in Dallas, Austin, Louisville, Lexington, Evansville (IN), Buffalo, Montpelier, and Laconia (NH).
The Corrupting Sea and autodealer (under the name Transverse) are scoring a Hollywood play due to premiere in February 2023. The Corrupting Sea has opened for Bloody Knives, ATOP, Jaguar, Blak Flak, Star Guided Vessels, droneroom, and many others through the last seven years.
For more, please visit
thecorruptingsea1.bandcamp.com
www.facebook.com/TheCorruptingSea
www.instagram.com/thecorruptingsea
"The Corrupting Sea continues it's soundscape journey closing out 2022 in collaboration with Australian label "Nothing Comes To My Mind Right Now" with a brand new album. For those not in the know The Corrupting Sea is an ambient/soundscape project based out of Shelbyville by one Jason T. Lamoreaux, composing spacial and deeply personal waves of sound. Following the emotional undertaking that was 2022's "Lungs Like Lead", "Float" feels like somewhat of a palette cleanser.
As a singular piece, the 37-minute "Float" begins slowly with a wavering yet soothing tone and slowly drifts, with high tones surrounding the listener. It's a slow drift and sometimes an anxious one and yet, weirdly soothing in all it's tension in the first ten minutes. This eerie ambiance finds it's path and drifts on, slow yet seemingly endless. Subtle low drones begin to carry this sound onward in it's final act before fading into the low end and unknown.
As it's own conceptual piece, "Float" is somewhat meditative even in it's most tense moments. As a follow-up to recent works it could be observed as a transition to further mindbending ambiance and thoughful instrumentation. There's a bit of a mystery to this one I find quite charming."
~Doodlehound
doodlehound.blogspot.com/2023/01/kentucky-music-review-corrupting-sea.html