Hatis Noit - Aura Reworks
Enchanting Japanese vocal artist Hatis Noit has announced Aura Reworks to be released 26th September. The new release reimagines her 2022 debut album, Aura, by legendary artists and collaborators, including the godfather of ambience Laraaji, hip hop duo Armand Hammer, composers and electronic experimentalists Jlin, Alex Somers, William Basinski, Emel, Matthew Herbert and Yu Su.Ā
Ā
Aura Reworks opens with a transcendental reinterpretation of the title track āAuraā by laughter meditation practitioner, mystic, and āambient godfatherā Laraaji. Hatisā haunting vocals whir and groan in conversation with Laraajiās bouncing hums, over open-tuned zither, kalimba, and timbrels. The soft organic percussion is replaced by thumping, shamanic kick drum on āThorā, reworked by DJ and producer Matthew Herbert. The track is a playful, primal devotion, evoking a bonfire-lit ritual in the centre of a dancefloor. Matthew Herbert describes the track as an āauditory hallucination where more modern techniques merged with ancient-sounding voices.ā. Preservationās rework of āJomonā combines Hatis Noitās powerful cries that evoke Japanās prehistoric Jomon period with slow, considered vocals by cult New York rap duo Armand Hammer over a minimalist drum loop. Ā The result is a bold call to arms, bridging thousands of years.Ā
Ā
Alex Somersā haunting reimagination of āAngelus Novusā splinters Hatisā heavy vocals, transforming them into glitchy ASMR-effect blips that bounce in intensity before a brutal, heartbreaking passage, forcing the listener to stop and breathe. As Somersā track fades, Hatisā long, soft hums continue into the most contemplative track, āInoriā, reworked by avant-garde composer William Basinski, introduces a delicate piano to the track. āInoriā features a field recording of the ocean only one kilometre away from the nuclear power plant in Fukushima, destroyed by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. Hatis Noit had been invited there for a memorial ceremony which marked the re-opening of the area for local people to return to their homes. The emotive and compassionate song is dedicated to the lives lost due to 2011ās tsunami, but equally to the memories people have of their hometown. Aura Reworks closes with āSir Etokā a haunting track reworked by Emel, whose own voice enters into dialogue with Hatisā, mixing Arabic with her wordless sounds to create new dimensions.Ā
Hatis Noit is a Japanese vocal performer hailing from distant Shiretoko, Hokkaido, who now resides in London. The name Hatis Noit is taken from Japanese folklore, meaning the stem of the lotus flower, as the flower represents the living, while its root represents the afterlife. Therefore, Hatis Noit connects the two worlds, able to move between here and the other side; the past, memory, and subconscious.
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Hatis Noit - Aura Reworks
Hatis Noit - Aura Reworks
Enchanting Japanese vocal artist Hatis Noit has announced Aura Reworks to be released 26th September. The new release reimagines her 2022 debut album, Aura, by legendary artists and collaborators, including the godfather of ambience Laraaji, hip hop duo Armand Hammer, composers and electronic experimentalists Jlin, Alex Somers, William Basinski, Emel, Matthew Herbert and Yu Su.Ā
Ā
Aura Reworks opens with a transcendental reinterpretation of the title track āAuraā by laughter meditation practitioner, mystic, and āambient godfatherā Laraaji. Hatisā haunting vocals whir and groan in conversation with Laraajiās bouncing hums, over open-tuned zither, kalimba, and timbrels. The soft organic percussion is replaced by thumping, shamanic kick drum on āThorā, reworked by DJ and producer Matthew Herbert. The track is a playful, primal devotion, evoking a bonfire-lit ritual in the centre of a dancefloor. Matthew Herbert describes the track as an āauditory hallucination where more modern techniques merged with ancient-sounding voices.ā. Preservationās rework of āJomonā combines Hatis Noitās powerful cries that evoke Japanās prehistoric Jomon period with slow, considered vocals by cult New York rap duo Armand Hammer over a minimalist drum loop. Ā The result is a bold call to arms, bridging thousands of years.Ā
Ā
Alex Somersā haunting reimagination of āAngelus Novusā splinters Hatisā heavy vocals, transforming them into glitchy ASMR-effect blips that bounce in intensity before a brutal, heartbreaking passage, forcing the listener to stop and breathe. As Somersā track fades, Hatisā long, soft hums continue into the most contemplative track, āInoriā, reworked by avant-garde composer William Basinski, introduces a delicate piano to the track. āInoriā features a field recording of the ocean only one kilometre away from the nuclear power plant in Fukushima, destroyed by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. Hatis Noit had been invited there for a memorial ceremony which marked the re-opening of the area for local people to return to their homes. The emotive and compassionate song is dedicated to the lives lost due to 2011ās tsunami, but equally to the memories people have of their hometown. Aura Reworks closes with āSir Etokā a haunting track reworked by Emel, whose own voice enters into dialogue with Hatisā, mixing Arabic with her wordless sounds to create new dimensions.Ā
Hatis Noit is a Japanese vocal performer hailing from distant Shiretoko, Hokkaido, who now resides in London. The name Hatis Noit is taken from Japanese folklore, meaning the stem of the lotus flower, as the flower represents the living, while its root represents the afterlife. Therefore, Hatis Noit connects the two worlds, able to move between here and the other side; the past, memory, and subconscious.
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Description
Enchanting Japanese vocal artist Hatis Noit has announced Aura Reworks to be released 26th September. The new release reimagines her 2022 debut album, Aura, by legendary artists and collaborators, including the godfather of ambience Laraaji, hip hop duo Armand Hammer, composers and electronic experimentalists Jlin, Alex Somers, William Basinski, Emel, Matthew Herbert and Yu Su.Ā
Ā
Aura Reworks opens with a transcendental reinterpretation of the title track āAuraā by laughter meditation practitioner, mystic, and āambient godfatherā Laraaji. Hatisā haunting vocals whir and groan in conversation with Laraajiās bouncing hums, over open-tuned zither, kalimba, and timbrels. The soft organic percussion is replaced by thumping, shamanic kick drum on āThorā, reworked by DJ and producer Matthew Herbert. The track is a playful, primal devotion, evoking a bonfire-lit ritual in the centre of a dancefloor. Matthew Herbert describes the track as an āauditory hallucination where more modern techniques merged with ancient-sounding voices.ā. Preservationās rework of āJomonā combines Hatis Noitās powerful cries that evoke Japanās prehistoric Jomon period with slow, considered vocals by cult New York rap duo Armand Hammer over a minimalist drum loop. Ā The result is a bold call to arms, bridging thousands of years.Ā
Ā
Alex Somersā haunting reimagination of āAngelus Novusā splinters Hatisā heavy vocals, transforming them into glitchy ASMR-effect blips that bounce in intensity before a brutal, heartbreaking passage, forcing the listener to stop and breathe. As Somersā track fades, Hatisā long, soft hums continue into the most contemplative track, āInoriā, reworked by avant-garde composer William Basinski, introduces a delicate piano to the track. āInoriā features a field recording of the ocean only one kilometre away from the nuclear power plant in Fukushima, destroyed by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. Hatis Noit had been invited there for a memorial ceremony which marked the re-opening of the area for local people to return to their homes. The emotive and compassionate song is dedicated to the lives lost due to 2011ās tsunami, but equally to the memories people have of their hometown. Aura Reworks closes with āSir Etokā a haunting track reworked by Emel, whose own voice enters into dialogue with Hatisā, mixing Arabic with her wordless sounds to create new dimensions.Ā
Hatis Noit is a Japanese vocal performer hailing from distant Shiretoko, Hokkaido, who now resides in London. The name Hatis Noit is taken from Japanese folklore, meaning the stem of the lotus flower, as the flower represents the living, while its root represents the afterlife. Therefore, Hatis Noit connects the two worlds, able to move between here and the other side; the past, memory, and subconscious.


















