Remembrance (EP)
Remembrance is the first extended play of Suicideyear, a project by American producer James Richard Prudhomme. Issued in September 2014, it was the first record of the project to be released under Daniel Lopatin's Mexican Summer label Software. Reviews of the eight-track release from music critics were generally favorable, some reviewers praising its uplifting and emotional style of trap music uncommon in the internet music scene.
Background and composition
Prudhomme began working on Remembrance in Florida in mid-2014. This was shortly before one night when moving from the state to his home territory that his house burned down, which was "one of the longest, most emotionally trying nights of his life" as Impose magazine described. As a result of the incident, Prudhomme was forced to drop out of his school and live only with couches and minimum wage from working at Little Caesars. As he recalled, "It really propelled me to do a lot of shit that I wasn’t ready to do, like I had to look for a place to live real quick. I had to get a job immediately. Like I had to do a bunch of shit.” He had "felt a lot of feelings" and wanted to migrate back to where he started recording Remembrance, which he described as a "really beautiful place".The staccato-note percussion and fast-paced click tracks on Remembrance represent Prudhomme's bitterness during this period. However, he also had hope that his life would get back together and that he could learn how to improve the music he was producing, a calm feeling that was also a heavy contributor to the album's sound. Loud and Quiet described Remembrance
Release and promotion
On July 9, 2014, "Hope Building A" was released as RemembranceCritical reception
Remembrance garnered generally favorable reviews from music journalists. Some reviewers, including Tiny Mix Tapes critic Gage Taylor and Mark Richardson of Pitchfork Media praised the album for making a different type of trap music from what was common by acts associated with the internet music scene, the rare type being trap music that creates its own emotion and is optimistic. Taylor and Richardson especially praised the last track, which was a cover of "When You Sleep" by My Bloody Valentine; Richardson wrote, "MBV covers can go wrong so easily, but Prudhomme finds something new in the song, an iciness and feeling of isolation that move in opposition to the warmth found on the most oceanic of albums".Spectrum Culture called Remembrance an improvement over Suicideyear's mixtape Japan: "Japan could lean to the more kawaii sillier side of things at times, but Remembrance, more often than not, turns gorgeous." AllMusic's Paul Simpson was another critic that called Remembrance better than Japan, noting its more "complex" arrangement and introduction of new sounds to Suicideyear's style. A reviewer for The Wire had a more mixed opinion towards the album, writing that it sounds "somewhere between being tentative and caught in a frozen, allegorical state of sketchiness, turning the sleepy head of bedroom pop into a death's head."