Eyre Transmissions XXVI: Interview With Ambient Experimentalist, Anser Flare

As I continue to explore the depths of Ambient music, I often find myself amazed at the talent that is out there. Daily, I dig through the trenches of Bandcamp, in search of something new and innovative. Other times, it’s chance encounters on social media that brings in the amazement. My introduction to Anser Flare was the latter. Where as a lot of Ambient and Dark Ambient music slowly builds in layers, creating songs of epic lengths, Anser Flare takes a more modest approach, creating celestial incantations that are shorter and often times more lively. I recently had the opportunity to have a discussion with the artist known as Anser Flare (now simply known as Anser), to find out what this project is all about. Hope you enjoy this interview and please check out the fascinating works of Anser!

1. Thank you for taking the time to answer a few questions for The Dungeon In Deep Space. Let’s start with the origins of Anser Flare. How did this project come about?

I was originally interested in doing something more minimal than my old project Madrigals. It made sense to keep the styles separate as in July ’22 I was in the middle of recording a DS split.

2. Your first release was ‘Gnosis’ back in September of 2022. I find a lot of musical influences on this recording and it transcends the thresholds of just Dark Ambient. Who were some of your influences at this time?

Gnosis was heavily inspired by Aphex Twin, Kraftwerk, Prurient, and some of my dark ambient collaborators on Umbra Vulgaris such as Sylvanum and Narbaiz. Gnosis was about a young man who leaves Earth after it’s rendered mostly uninhabitable by a meteor. There is a full story but lately I’ve paid less attention to shaping the narrative.

https://anserflare.bandcamp.com/album/gnosis

3. After the ‘Gnosis’ release, you had a track on the ‘Falling From A Star’ collaboration. Can you talk a little about that project and how it came about with the other artists?

This split was fairly spontaneous. Aradias Kingdom and Fenrir both expressed interest in a “space ambient” split after they had original tracks on UVR’s “Shades of Dark Ambient V2”. My comfort zone leans more to the “pure dark ambient” side with less percussion or overt DS.

https://anserflare.bandcamp.com/album/falling-from-a-star

4. In June of 2023, you released ‘The Ethereal Hours’, which is another stellar musical journey that branches outside of the ambient genre more than ever. What led to the inclusion of these elements?

Thank you for your kind words! I have always been a big fan of 80s electronic, its revival with outrun/retrowave, and needed to step out of the comfort zone and make something pop fans might like. “Can You See Heaven” came about in trying to channel the 80s. As well as hearing The Weeknd in every shop for over a year and needing to get those songs out of my head!

https://anserflare.bandcamp.com/album/the-ethereal-hours

5. I really dig the track, “Space Habitation” as it perfectly sums up the discordant and sonic journey for this album. What’s the story behind this 8+ minute track and is this longest song you’ve produced to date?

Space Habitation is the longest track across all my projects so far, yes. At this point in the story, the main character has left earth for good and lives permanently on a space station closer to Mars.

6. In October of 2023, you released the ‘Apostate’ album and it’s more of a Dark Ambient adventure, filled with a good amount of celestial drones. What influenced the soundscapes on this album?

“Apostate” was influenced a lot by Mortiis and Burzum, but without high fantasy reference points. Where the previous album was more extroverted, I tried to create a very subdued, solitary feeling. It also basically ignored the story written so far.

https://anserflare.bandcamp.com/album/apostate

7. In my opinion, the track “Reincarnate” is some of your best work and has a minimalistic quality that can easily be built upon. What’s the chances of releasing more works of this nature?

Very high. One of the Logic synths “Haunted Castle” from that song makes its way onto each release at least once.

8. I know that 2023 is coming to a close but do you have any more releases planned for the immediate future?

Nothing immediate. There will be another full-length from Anser in mid 2024.

9. How about collaboration efforts? Is there any more of those in the works?

You might know that I play synths in the Dungeon Synth project “Deabruen”. I consider that a long-standing Anser-Narbaiz collaboration. But no splits planned at the moment. “Ethereal Hours” will also be out on cassette this winter from Fantasy Audio Magazine, and “Apostate” from Umbra Vulgaris on November 17.***

10. I know that for many independent artists, the Bandcamp platform has been extremely reliable (up to this point) but do you release music on any other platforms, including physical releases?

Bandcamp is the main way. All the tapes and CD-R’s of Anser are available through UVR on Bandcamp and Discogs, and for streaming on Spotify, Apple etc.

11. You’ve mentioned Umbra Vulgaris a few times so far. Is this a label that you put together? If so was it intended only for your own projects or was it open to other artists as well?

Yes, UVR was an idea dating back to early 2021 as a way to release my own music on CD or cassette at low cost. There have been multiple people tangentially involved behind the scenes but it’s always been my label. It was open to other artists from Fall 2021, but with an emphasis on split EPs and albums, such as those with Sylvanum, Narbaiz and Frostgard. Full length albums from other artists arrived in 2022 and it became a “proper” label.

12. If I’m not mistaken, the first release on this label was ‘Fallen’ by Madrigals. Can you talk a little bit about this project and is it one that you plan to continue at some point?

That’s right, it was a digipak limited to 100 copies. I still have about a dozen. Madrigals was a melodic dungeon synth project that mostly used ideas I had been holding onto for years, before really becoming aware of DS as an active genre. After realizing a lot of it existed, and people were doing much cooler things with it than me – e.g. any of the other artists on those splits – it lost its magic and Anser became my primary focus. I don’t plan to continue as Madrigals.

13. What’s your opinion on digital releases versus physical releases? How have both formats helped shape Umbra Vulgaris Records?

Digital releases without a physical tend to get unfairly written off. Cassettes have their obvious charm, and CD’s too in my opinion; so they’ll always be part of what I do. As far as the label goes, it would be great to try and grow the digital side – free compilations, e-zines, even considered a podcast. In the current setup, we’re trading and wholesaling off a lot of cassettes to build up an extensive distro selection, which will help support more digital output. The distro is overwhelmingly tapes, so we’ve been pigeonholed as a “tape label” which is probably fair.

14. I really appreciate you taking the time to have this interview session. Do you have any final thoughts for those that may be reading this?

Thank you very much for your questions, and thank you to the readers!

Eli aka Anser Flare!!

Links:

BC:

https://anserflare.bandcamp.com

https://umbravulgaris.bandcamp.com/

Instagram:

https://instagram.com/anserflare?igshid=dHpwNnIwb3BmNnRo

https://instagram.com/umbravulgaris?igshid=MWlpc2dkOWsxZHl6OQ==

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