Maïak creates one of key post-rock releases of 2015. They created to something big, something to be heard!
Created in 2010 in Lausanne, Switzerland, Maïak is composed of four musicians influenced by the lyricism and wide dynamics of post-rock soundscapes and fearless to experiment sudden shifts of atmospheres.
The group was named after Maïak, a nuclear plant in the Soviet Union, where one of the worst nuclear disasters of all times took place and despite its dramatic consequences, stayed hidden for decades.
Filled with the symbolic weight of a catastrophe that arose as the punishment of man’s guilty arrogance in an outburst remained silent, Maïak delivers a dark and powerful instrumental rock that evolves between tenuous melancholy and chaotic blast.
Recorded with a certain sense of urgency (three days session for forty two minutes of pure post-rock music), “a very pleasant way to die” wanders through the different colours of the band’s aural palette. The album seethes with raw energy.
The five tracks share complex constructions, blending murky soothing melodies with outbursts of powerful clamour and noiseful explorations. You would at times crave to lie down and gaze at the stars, but you would soon feel the urge to bounce back on your feet and bang your head until you break your neck.