Home Hear Now Hear This: Phosphene | Transmute

Now Hear This: Phosphene | Transmute

The Portland duo channel the hardship of recent times into lush synth-pop beauty.

The walls close in on dream-pop duo Phosphene’s third album Transmute — showcasing today on Tinnitist.

Narrowing, however, isn’t always a negative. The Portland, Oregon, pairing of Rachel Frankel and Matt Hemmerich wrote and recorded much of Transmute during various stages of the pandemic, when both worked and practised from home. On one hand, their thoughts naturally drifted toward larger current events and existential anxieties. On the other, small spaces were often the coziest. Increased proximity allowed Phosphene to expand their own creative boundaries. They experimented with synths and digital string arrangements for the first time, adding a layer of warmth to their propulsive rock songs. Within the weighty subject matter, Phosphene pushed toward empathy — a transmutation of pain into human connection.

Frankel and Hemmerich reunited with close friend, engineer, and producer Greg Francis — who also engineered the band’s second album Lotus Eaters — to record Transmute at Brothers (Chinese) Recording studio in Oakland last September.

Photo by Jeffrey Placencia.

“The making of this record together was — surprisingly — our most enjoyable to date,” Hemmerich said. “It allowed us to sit down and write new material, but also sift through the archives.” The result — a mix of new songs and tracks from among scores of demos and voice memos in the Phosphene vault — is the duo’s most adventurous work to date. Lead single and second track Black Sheep examines a life where depression is everpresent, like a dog trailing at your feet. “Laying on the floor, I felt it hold me / Never had control of this old friend,” Frankel sings as the drums cut out for an instant and her guitar rumbles underneath. Hemmerich took inspiration from artist Kaye Blegvad, whose Dog Years comic felt like an apt metaphor for his own mental health. “I had to learn to empower myself through self-love and excavation while understanding that depression is something I must manage,” he said.

Phosphene shift their perspective as the album continues, moving from the personal on Black Sheep to the collective on fourth track Jigsaw. Digital string arrangements from collaborator Ryan Huff flow beneath arpeggiated guitar, giving more room for Frankel’s vocals to oscillate between doubt and determination. The mood takes a humorous turn on Everyone Is Gone, as Phosphene detail the tentacles of disinformation and cultural appropriation that have worked their way into every societal corner. Jade eggs a la Gwyneth Paltrow, deepfakes of Barack Obama, and QAnon conspiracies all zoom past while Hemmerich keeps a beat just right for dancing. The critique takes a twist at the end, when the band express nostalgia for simpler times — if they ever even existed. “In love with another time / Where I hadn’t lost my mind / My last good high,” Frankel sings.

Watch the video for Black Sheep above, sample Transmute below, and follow Phosphene on Instagram and Facebook.

 

Photo by Jeffrey Placencia.