Patience is one of those virtues people admire from a safe distance, like glaciers or monks. Cleared have spent nearly fifteen years practicing it in public, which is either admirable discipline or a very slow refusal to hurry up. On "Lustres", that patience finally condenses into something that feels less like a method and more like a climate.
The duo - Steven Hess and Michael Vallera - have always worked through exchange: fragments passed back and forth, reshaped, recontextualized, sometimes stripped of their original identity entirely. This time, the process has been refined to a kind of asymmetrical collaboration. One generates the raw material, the other dismantles and reassembles it. It sounds almost clinical, but the results are anything but.
Released on Room40, "Lustres" leans more decisively into an electronic palette than their earlier work, though “electronic” here doesn’t mean clean or predictable. The sound is layered with different fidelities, where pristine textures coexist with degraded, almost corroded fragments. It’s less about contrast for its own sake and more about memory: how sound is never just itself, but also the device, the space, the context that carried it.
The title track, “Lustres”, opens like a slow rotation. Not quite a melody, not quite a drone. More like a surface being revealed under changing light. Elements drift into focus, then recede, leaving behind a faint afterimage. It’s music that doesn’t present itself all at once. You have to wait for it to admit what it’s doing.
“Shore” suggests something more grounded, though only just. There’s a subtle sense of boundary, of one texture pressing against another, but the edges remain porous. Nothing fully separates. Field recordings, processed tones, and distant harmonic traces blend into a continuum that feels both organic and slightly unreal, like a landscape remembered rather than observed.
“Aubade” introduces a faint sense of emergence, though not in any dramatic sense. If this is a dawn, it’s one that happens behind clouds. Gradual shifts in density and tone create the impression of light without ever fully illuminating the scene. It’s restrained to the point of near-denial, which is exactly why it works.
“Far”, the closing piece, feels appropriately named. It extends the album’s logic into a kind of distance, where sound becomes less about presence and more about implication. Things are suggested, hinted at, then withdrawn. You’re left with traces, not statements.
What "Lustres" does particularly well is resist the urge to resolve. Many records in this territory eventually reveal a hidden structure, a moment where everything clicks into place. Cleared avoid that satisfaction. Instead, they maintain a state of suspension, where meaning remains slightly out of reach. Not frustratingly so, just enough to keep you listening.
There are echoes of other artists operating in the long-form ambient and electroacoustic continuum, but Cleared’s approach feels less concerned with atmosphere as a fixed mood and more with atmosphere as a shifting condition. Subterranean and celestial, as they suggest, but also something in between: a space where orientation is never quite stable.
The mastering by Lawrence English gives the material a quiet precision, ensuring that even the most delicate elements retain their presence. Which matters, because this is music built on small differences, on the slow accumulation of detail.
Four tracks, each around ten minutes, none of them in a hurry to justify their existence. "Lustres" doesn’t demand attention so much as require a certain kind of listening: patient, slightly unfocused, willing to accept that not everything needs to declare itself immediately.
In other words, the exact opposite of how most people consume music now. Which probably explains why it feels necessary.