Album artwork for Continuous Portrait by Inventions
Album artwork for Continuous Portrait by Inventions

On their first album together since Maze of Woods (2015), Matthew Robert Cooper (Eluvium) and Mark T. Smith (Explosions in the Sky) further their creative curiosities as Inventions and release the beautiful new record A Continuous Portrait.

A Continuous Portrait is an album of strange hypnosis, punctuated by songs that venture quite far from the respective oeuvres of Cooper and Smith. Spry, playful layers bounce against a steady thrum of rhythms and samples from everyday noises, while the dancing lightness of Outlook for the Future is met with a storm of emotional resonance. The music emerges as a distinctively different direction for Inventions - and the two members' day-jobs - and it is that very sense of exploration, pleasure, and ceremonial melancholia which informs the entire record from front to back.

Inventions

Continuous Portrait

Temporary Residence Ltd.
Album artwork for Continuous Portrait by Inventions
LP +

$24.99

Indie Exclusive. Single-Pocket Sleeve with Custom Dust Inner Sleeve.

Pearlescent Bronze Vinyl.

Released 08/07/2020Catalog Number

TRR346LPC1

Learn more
Album artwork for Continuous Portrait by Inventions
CD

$14.99

Released 08/07/2020Catalog Number

TRR346CD

Learn more
Inventions

Continuous Portrait

Temporary Residence Ltd.
Album artwork for Continuous Portrait by Inventions
LP +

$24.99

Indie Exclusive. Single-Pocket Sleeve with Custom Dust Inner Sleeve.

Pearlescent Bronze Vinyl.

Released 08/07/2020Catalog Number

TRR346LPC1

Learn more
Album artwork for Continuous Portrait by Inventions
CD

$14.99

Released 08/07/2020Catalog Number

TRR346CD

Learn more

On their first album together since Maze of Woods (2015), Matthew Robert Cooper (Eluvium) and Mark T. Smith (Explosions in the Sky) further their creative curiosities as Inventions and release the beautiful new record A Continuous Portrait.

A Continuous Portrait is an album of strange hypnosis, punctuated by songs that venture quite far from the respective oeuvres of Cooper and Smith. Spry, playful layers bounce against a steady thrum of rhythms and samples from everyday noises, while the dancing lightness of Outlook for the Future is met with a storm of emotional resonance. The music emerges as a distinctively different direction for Inventions - and the two members' day-jobs - and it is that very sense of exploration, pleasure, and ceremonial melancholia which informs the entire record from front to back.