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David Torn - now i imagine a place not the same

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David Torn - now i imagine a place not the same

now i imagine a place not the same is a double LP and a new solo statement by guitarist and composer David Torn, released by Kou Records, returning to the raw electricity of his early processing language while pushing it forward with the clarity of decades of exploration. Equal parts visceral and weightless, the album centers Torn’s long-standing dialogue between alternate tunings, looping architectures, and touch-sensitive electronics — a sound world where melody, noise, and atmosphere continuously fold into one another.

A pioneering figure in electric guitar processing, Torn is widely recognized for his work across music and film, including long-standing collaborations with composer Howard Shore, contributions to films by David Cronenberg, and influential releases on ECM Records that helped define an atmospheric, cinematic language for the electric guitar.

Approaching each piece as a form of composition-minded improvisation, Torn treats everything within reach as musical material: strings, pickups, amplifiers, external electronics, voice, resonant surfaces, and the physical space itself. Recorded, mixed, and produced by Randall Dunn, and captured with an emphasis on immediacy and physical presence, the guitar becomes part of a larger system — circuits breathing, delays repeating imperfect memories, tones regenerating through contact. Sounds emerge through accident, gesture, and intuition, then are shaped through attentive listening as they evolve.

Rather than composing toward fixed outcomes, Torn allows form to arise through feedback and repetition, absorbing every sound — intentional or otherwise — into a continuously evolving musical body. Revisiting foundational tools from his formative processing years — alternate tunings, looping logic, tube saturation — Torn refuses nostalgia, instead reclaiming their immediacy as living materials. At once intimate and immense, now i imagine a place not the same captures an artist in full command of his singular language: deeply melodic, rigorously experimental, and grounded in trust, touch, and electricity. Not a retrospective gesture but a presenttense declaration, the album offers a powerful meditation on impermanence, renewal, and the ongoing life of tone.

$24.91

Original: $71.18

-65%
David Torn - now i imagine a place not the same

$71.18

$24.91

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now i imagine a place not the same is a double LP and a new solo statement by guitarist and composer David Torn, released by Kou Records, returning to the raw electricity of his early processing language while pushing it forward with the clarity of decades of exploration. Equal parts visceral and weightless, the album centers Torn’s long-standing dialogue between alternate tunings, looping architectures, and touch-sensitive electronics — a sound world where melody, noise, and atmosphere continuously fold into one another.

A pioneering figure in electric guitar processing, Torn is widely recognized for his work across music and film, including long-standing collaborations with composer Howard Shore, contributions to films by David Cronenberg, and influential releases on ECM Records that helped define an atmospheric, cinematic language for the electric guitar.

Approaching each piece as a form of composition-minded improvisation, Torn treats everything within reach as musical material: strings, pickups, amplifiers, external electronics, voice, resonant surfaces, and the physical space itself. Recorded, mixed, and produced by Randall Dunn, and captured with an emphasis on immediacy and physical presence, the guitar becomes part of a larger system — circuits breathing, delays repeating imperfect memories, tones regenerating through contact. Sounds emerge through accident, gesture, and intuition, then are shaped through attentive listening as they evolve.

Rather than composing toward fixed outcomes, Torn allows form to arise through feedback and repetition, absorbing every sound — intentional or otherwise — into a continuously evolving musical body. Revisiting foundational tools from his formative processing years — alternate tunings, looping logic, tube saturation — Torn refuses nostalgia, instead reclaiming their immediacy as living materials. At once intimate and immense, now i imagine a place not the same captures an artist in full command of his singular language: deeply melodic, rigorously experimental, and grounded in trust, touch, and electricity. Not a retrospective gesture but a presenttense declaration, the album offers a powerful meditation on impermanence, renewal, and the ongoing life of tone.