Duval Timothy and Carlos Niño have announced a collaborative album called Rain Music, bringing together two of experimental and ambient music's most thoughtful practitioners. The project also enlists Navy Blue, Laraaji, and Nate Mercereau across its tracks.
Pitchfork premiered "Loopy," a standout cut from the forthcoming LP that exemplifies the album's approach to texture and improvisation. The track moves with unhurried purpose, layering Timothy's production sensibilities with Niño's jazz-inflected sensibility. Navy Blue's presence adds another dimension to the sonic palette, while Laraaji's zither work and Mercereau's contributions round out the collaborative vision.
Timothy has built a reputation through his solo work and production across various projects, establishing himself as a craftsperson of intricate, often meditative soundscapes. Niño, a saxophonist and producer with deep roots in Los Angeles' experimental jazz and electronic music scenes, brings decades of accumulated wisdom to the collaboration. Their partnership suggests a meeting of minds rather than a conventional recording session, with both artists contributing equally to the album's direction.
Rain Music arrives as part of a broader moment in experimental music where boundaries between jazz, electronic production, and ambient composition continue to dissolve. The album's title itself speaks to its intentions. rain often serves as metaphor in music for mood and atmosphere. here it suggests something organic yet artificial simultaneously.
The guest appearances from Navy Blue, Laraaji, and Mercereau demonstrate Timothy and Niño's standing within contemporary experimental circles. These are artists who move fluidly between contexts, respected for their innovation and taste. Their presence on Rain Music elevates what might have been a straightforward producer collaboration into something more layered and conceptually ambitious.
Release details for Rain Music remain fluid, but the arrival of "Loopy" signals momentum behind the project. The track promises an album that rewards patient listening, one that values space and silence as much as sound itself.
