The Past of the Future

The Past of the Future is the third studio album by Slovak musician Karol Mikloš, released on May 20, 2008. Issued by Deadred Records,[2] the set was distributed in the neighboring Czech Republic through Starcastic Records,[3] and virtually by Music Kickup.[1] As such, the work followed the pattern of his previous release Vis-à-vis (2002), in which Mikloš began his gradual transition into the electronic circles. Unlike its predecessor, The Past of the Future featured a live instrumentation.

The Past of the Future
Studio album by
Released
RecordedGarage One, Trenčín, SK
Genre
Length38:34
Label
Producer
  • Matúš Homola
  • Mikloš
    Co-producer: Andrej Gmuca
Karol Mikloš chronology
Vis-à-vis
(2002)
The Past of the Future
(2008)
Singles from The Past of the Future
  1. "Insane"
  2. "Leaving for England"
  3. "You Never Listen"
  4. "In the Bubble"
  5. "Apocalyptical"

Mikloš reprised his collaboration with Andrej Monček for one song, "You Never Listen", promoted also on a single, which became his highest charting outcome on the SK Rádio Top 50 to date,[6] debuting and peaking at number twenty-six.[7] The rest of the compositions were written mostly by Mikloš himself and entered the top-forty of the component airplay list, with the exception of "Insane" from 2006. As a result, the album received two nominations for the annual Radio Head Awards, presented by Rádio FM.[8]

Upon release, The Past of the Future earned from favorable to positive reviews from music journalists, with many of them rating the work as the finest full-length effort recorded by Mikloš, or rather his most mature album until then. Although the set itself didn't enter the record charts, Czech Radio Wave listed the title as the Album of the Week[9] for the week beginning June 2, 2008.[10]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
EXITmusic.org(favorable)[11]
FreeMusic.cz70/100%[12]
Hudba.sk(positive)[13]
MusicServer.cz7/10[14]
The Prague Post(positive)[15]
Rock & Pop(favorable)[16]
SME(favorable)[17]
SpaceBoss.net(positive)[5]
UNI(positive)[18]
Žurnál(positive)[19]

Critical response

The Past of the Future generated mainly positive music critics with the earliest being published by the Czech media. Independent web portal SpaceBoss.net, introduced the final result as "more mature, more colorful and more genuine than anything [he] recorded so far."[5] Along with complimenting Mikloš for lyrical and vocal contributions, the website attributed much of his album's sound potential to those by Matúš Homola and Andrej Gmuca.[5] Tadeáš Haager from alternative Radio Wave station, acknowledged singer for managing to learn from mistakes in the past, referring to a monotonous sound of his previous outputs as observed by local journalists once upon a time. While stressing artist's credibility to perform also in English, Haager concluded that "listening to Mikloš doesn't mean to hear some sonic boom of a pioneer and trailblazer, it is more likely an incredibly skilled tribute to [his] foreign models with no need to be ashamed for and to dissociate self from them."[10]

A similar opinion was shared by Boris Filantrop of EXITmusic.org, an SK music-based web. "In terms of musical arrangement, no revolution can take place", he wrote.[11] In contrast to Haager though, Filantrop himself reproached Mikloš for a somewhat awkward English pronunciation, summarizing his notes with: "The Past of the Future with no export intensions, thus, has been quite obviously meant for audiences located in Central Europe, preferably in there, where the world music could be forty years seen only from behind the Iron Curtain. And it's a good album."[11] Also Pavel Zelinka from Czech UNI that covers local culture life on a monthly basis, cited Mikloš'es wording as the weakest spot whereas pointing out on his, more or less, remarkable lyrics.[18] American freelancer Darrell Jónsson who interviewed musician for The Prague Post, would find shocking, for a change, finding out "[he] is not British".[15] Describing his production "distinct and elegant",[15] Jónsson saw his native limits beneficial in fact.[15] Juraj Cagáň from Hudba.sk, part of search engine Zoznam.sk, commended singer's language skills. Yet, on the other hand, Cagáň also declared that his songs work better when they are sung in his mother tongue, appealing on "[his] very intimate and distinctive vocal".[13]

According to Jaroslav Špulák of Rock & Pop magazine, an otherwise "interesting work"[16] is good enough to be praised for, but it lacks an identity as whole. "At the same time [it] quickly runs into an all out interchangeability",[16] stated the music expert. Oliver Rehák from mainstream periodical SME graded the overall endeavor to be standard of his own,[17] and so did economical Profit actually. In addition, the latter branded the set as "way well done".[20] Maxim Horovic of streaming server FreeMusic.cz, he considered impossible as well unimportant to classify Mikloš'es format on the local scene and paid attention to the album's composition instead. Dan Hájek from MusicServer.cz, labelled the product as "a fair option for pop",[12] adding "[it] is a worked out sculpture of [his] talent."[12] Zuzana Husárová from now ceased Žurnál weekly with focus on social and political issues in SK, was most impressed by depth of the album's testimony, comparing his songs to "leaves [he] throws down off himself. Leaves falling from the past to the future and pouring these lands into one."[19]

Commercial performance

The album release didn't enter Top 50 Prodejní, an official chart effective for both Czech and Slovak Republic, formerly the countries of a common federal state. However four out of five promotional recordings covered by some of the SK radio stations, appeared on the local component Rádio Top 50 chart, such as "Leaving for England" at number thirty-three,[21] "You Never Listen" at position twenty-six,[7] "In the Bubble" at number forty[22] and "Apocalyptical" peaking at number thirty.[23]

Track listings

All lyrics are written by Mikloš with English language-supervision by Alan Dykstra.

No.TitleMusicFeatured artistLength
1."On Fire"Mikloš 3:19
2."You Never Listen"Andrej Monček 3:49
3."Insane"Mikloš 3:33
4."Still on Your Side"MiklošRadmila Kvasničková4:27
5."Get a Little Wild"Mikloš 4:28
6."In the Bubble"Mikloš 2:49
7."A Note"Mikloš 2:59
8."Leaving for England"Mikloš 3:07
9."Apocalyptical"Mikloš 3:49
10."Not Much Left to Do Wrong Now"Mikloš 5:04
Total length:38:34

Credits and personnel

Management
Production
  • Writers – Mikloš (music and lyrics) • Andrej Monček (music) • Alan Dykstra (additional lyrics)
  • Mastering – Soundshine, Myjava, SK
  • Production and mixing – Matúš Homola and Mikloš (as Garage One) • Andrej Gmuca (additional)
Personnel

Charts

Singles peak positions

Year Single Charts
SK
50[24] 100
2006 "Insane"
2008 "Leaving for England" 33
"You Never Listen" 26
"In the Bubble" 40
2009 "Apocalyptical" 30

Awards

Year Nominated work Award Category Result
2008 The Past of the Future Radio Head Awards Audience Choice Nominated [n. 2]
Critics Choice Nominated [n. 3]
gollark: Installation only takes hours!
gollark: Use Arch Linux, the superior Linux.
gollark: Isn't the market for high-powered VPSes/servers quite saturated at this point?
gollark: Even with computers they still managed to mess the phone network up so horribly.- calls appear to use an awful voice codec- multimedia messages are overcharged massively for- caller ID spoofing is a very common thing- mobile phones have stupidly complex modem chips with excessive access to the rest of their phone, closed source firmware and probably security bugs- SIM cards are self contained devices with lots of software in *Java*?! In a sane system they would need to store something like four values.- "eSIM" things are just reprogrammable soldered SIM cards because apparently nobody thought of doing it in software?!- phone towers are routinely spoofed by law enforcement for no good reason and apparently nobody is stopping this- phone calls/texts are not end to end encrypted, which is practical *now* if not when much of the development of mobile phones and whatever was happening- there are apparently a bunch of exploits in the protocols linking phone networks, like SS7
gollark: I think if a tick takes a few seconds or something.

See also

Footnotes

  1. The sources differ – iTunes reports Tuesday, May 20, 2008 as the release date,[1] while the official websites of both record labels, each Wednesday, the 21st.[2][3]
  2. Lost in favor of Bliiizko (Slnko Records, #SR 0025) by Noisecut.[8]
  3. Lost in favor of Rozhľadňa (Slnko Records, #SR 0021) by Ján Boleslav Kladivo.[8]

References

  1. "Karol Mikloš > The Past of the Future". iTunes. Apple Inc. May 20, 2008. itunes.apple.com. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  2. "Releases > Karol Mikloš – The Past of the Future". Deadred Records (in Slovak and English). DR. May 20, 2008. deadred.sk. Archived from the original on May 5, 2015. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  3. "Releases > Karol Mikloš – The Past of the Future". Starcastic Records (in Czech and English). SR. May 21, 2008. starcasticrecords.cz. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  4. Oves (May 22, 2008). "Karol Mikloš vydává své třetí album The Past Of The Future". Freemusic (in Czech). MMG. freemusic.cz. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  5. SpaceBoss (June 1, 2008). "Karol Mikloš - The Past Of The Future". SpaceBoss (in Czech). Anymade Studio. spaceboss.net. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  6. Mikloš, Karol. "Chart history". Rádio Top 50 (in Slovak). IFPI Slovakia. ifpi.sk. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  7. Mikloš, Karol. "You Never Listen". Rádio Top 50 (in Slovak). IFPI Slovakia. ifpi.sk. Retrieved April 30, 2015. No. 26
  8. "Radio Head Awards 2008". Radio Head Awards (in Slovak). Rádio FM. February 6, 2009. radiohlavy.sk. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  9. "Deska týdne - Karol Mikloš". Radio Wave (in Czech and Slovak). ČRo. June 5, 2008. rozhlas.cz. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  10. Haager, Tadeáš (June 2, 2008). "Karol Mikloš má Desku týdne na RW". Radio Wave (in Czech). ČRo. rozhlas.cz. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  11. Filantrop, Boris (July 2, 2008). "Karol Mikloš – The Past of the Future". EXITmusic (in Slovak). EXITAB. exitmusic.org. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  12. Horovic, Maxim (August 5, 2008). "Karol Mikloš – The Past of the Future". Free Music (in Czech). MMG. freemusic.cz. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  13. Cagáň, Juraj (January 20, 2009). "Karol Mikloš - The Past of the Future". Hudba.sk (in Slovak). Zoznam, s.r.o. hudba.zoznam.sk. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  14. Hájek, Dan (September 20, 2008). "Poctivá alternativa popu". Music Server (in Czech). IMEG. musicserver.cz. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  15. Jónsson, Darrell (June 4, 2008). "Big music from a small town". The Prague Post. Prague Post, spol. s.r.o. praguepost.cz. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  16. Špulák, Jaroslav (July 2008). "Karol Mikloš: The Past Of The Future". Rock & Pop (in Czech). One&One Company spol. s r.o. deadred.sk. Missing or empty |url= (help)
  17. Rehák, Oliver (July 3, 2008). "CD novinky > Karol Mikloš: The Past Of The Future". SME (in Slovak). Petit Press. sme.sk. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  18. Zelinka, Pavel (December 2008). "Hudba > Recenze > Karol Mikloš: The Past of the Future". Kulturní magazín UNI (in Czech). Unijazz, sdružení pro podporu kulturních aktivit. magazinuni.cz. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  19. Husárová, Zuzana (June 5, 2008). "Špeciál > Nové CD > Karol Mikloš: The Past of the Future". Žurnál (in Slovak). TV Tip. deadred.sk. Missing or empty |url= (help)
  20. "Karol Mikloš - The Past Of The Future". Profit (in Slovak). Horizont Slovakia, o.c.p. September 3, 2008. Missing or empty |url= (help)
  21. Mikloš, Karol. "Leaving for England". Rádio Top 50 (in Slovak). IFPI Slovakia. ifpi.sk. Retrieved April 30, 2015. No. 33
  22. Mikloš, Karol. "In the Bubble". Rádio Top 50 (in Slovak). IFPI Slovakia. ifpi.sk. Retrieved April 30, 2015. No. 40
  23. Mikloš, Karol. "Apocalyptical". Rádio Top 50 (in Slovak). IFPI Slovakia. ifpi.sk. Retrieved April 30, 2015. No. 30
  24. For peak positions of the Mikloš' singles on the SK Rádio Top 50 chart, use a link depending on a title.
    • Mikloš, Karol. "Leaving for England". Rádio Top 50 (in Slovak). IFPI Slovakia. ifpi.sk. Retrieved April 30, 2015. No. 33
    • Mikloš, Karol. "You Never Listen". Rádio Top 50 (in Slovak). IFPI Slovakia. ifpi.sk. Retrieved April 30, 2015. No. 26
    • Mikloš, Karol. "In the Bubble". Rádio Top 50 (in Slovak). IFPI Slovakia. ifpi.sk. Retrieved April 30, 2015. No. 40
    • Mikloš, Karol. "Apocalyptical". Rádio Top 50 (in Slovak). IFPI Slovakia. ifpi.sk. Retrieved April 30, 2015. No. 30
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.