


GREEN-HOUSE - Hinterlands - LP - Blue Eco-Mix Vinyl [MAR 20]
LP - Limited Edition Blue Eco-Mix Tape.Â
As Green-House, musicians Olive Ardizoni and Michael Flanagan engage human nature and the natural world through joyous, dynamic synthesis. Overlaying frequencies and expressions like camouflage, their deeply layered collaborative process begins with either artist; Ardizoni is often drawn to melody, Flanagan to harmonics. The power lies in how their ideas helix together, achieving a depth greater than the sum of its parts. For their first LP with new label home, Ghostly International, Green-House grows and refines their vivid instrumental songcraft with uncharted, genre-defying freedom and movement, a more active, percussive, and emotion-filled energy, marked by flowing bodies of sound and sweeping vistas. Hinterlands tunes into the beauty of the world with defiant, radical sincerity.
Since 2020, across a catalog of acclaimed releases via the scene-creating Los Angeles imprint, Leaving Records, the duo has pursued a curiosity in environments, reaching for innate and faraway spaces by way of organic and synthetic instrumentation, high-definition sound design, and âidiosyncratic melodies crafted with the patient and methodical hand of a gardener,â writes Pitchfork. Green-House doesnât fit neatly into any single category. Ardizoni and Flanagan arenât aligned with New Age ideologies or spirituality, and the ambient tag feels increasingly limited given all thatâs going on in their songs, which skew closer to the realms of IDM or even modern classical on their new album. What remains inherent is an open sense of wonder, âthe idea of legitimizing certain emotions within music that often arenât taken seriously in art, like happiness and joy,â says Ardizoni, whose eclectic personality shines through even without lyrics.
They welcome influences from all over; moments on Hinterlands evoke hypnagogic folk, tropical synth-pop, pan-flute mountain music, jazzy lounge, film scores, library sounds, and other forms of paradise-world-building. The duo simply makes the music they want to hear, earnestly dreaming of idyllic settings, their hope borne of necessity.
Like any artist living in Los Angeles, the 2025 wildfires disrupted any semblance of normalcy in creative life. However, they give careful consideration to how ever-looming environmental and political anxiety may relate to the project. âThere's freedom in music, not requiring nuance in order to share an emotion or a fantasy or a utopian ideal with others,â Ardizoni says. âI'm an anarchist and an artist. I don't have to explain that. I can just put the emotion in and hope that it can be used as a tool, to be comforting or inspiring for people.â
As their third LP, Hinterlands is notably fuller, bigger-feeling than past work; brimming with kaleidoscopic guitar lines, bubbling synth textures, and an orchestral radiance that often registers as more than just two people. They bring up biomimicry â learning from and adapting alongside nature â as a formative notion. âWhen weâre talking about mimicry, it is also like projecting yourself as being larger in a certain way, in a sonic sense, sounding like a full band, but also as people, interconnected with a broader world,â says Flanagan. âThis record is us letting go a little bit as well, giving ourselves the freedom to just write and see what happens, to let the music grow naturally.â Ardizoni adds, âWe try to utilize whatâs right in front of us, just being in an urban environment and making do with what's there in order to continue to foster that connection we have to the natural world.â
Ardizoni and Scott Tenefrancia shot the images that appear within the droplets of the LPâs artwork on a trip to Yosemite and the Inyo National Forest; Flanagan later magnified the scenes through the water with macro photography, using the droplets as a series of lenses. The striking visual serves as a fitting metaphor for music that straddles the organic and the digital â a collection of auditory microcosms developed through imaginative fusion.
It begins in the languid heat of âSun Dogsâ, which nods to the coastal sway of Haruomi Hosono's Pacific album and Paradise View soundtrack with washes of keys, horns, and strings. âSanibelâ is pure shoreline bliss, named after the Florida island a young Ardizoni would visit, growing up on the nearby Cape Coral Island (âmy first real experiences as a human exploring natureâ). âFarewell, Little Islandâ borrows its title from the 1987 short animated film directed by SĂĄndor ReisenbĂŒchler, which depicts the drowning of a village by modern technology. The trackâs buoyant, spiraling guitar samples, their first time exploring the effect, reminded them of the filmâs paper-cut animation and of how the story balances serene splendor with tragedy.
âDragline Silkâ conjures a curious trip. Built on a bed of ascending synth and guitar chords bathed in spring reverb (stemming from their shared love for Jessica Prattâs latest album) and named after the natural phenomenon of spiders that use static electricity to sail through the atmosphere, the track soars with grandeur. The Hinterland suite is the albumâs centerpiece, three tracks traversing wide hilltop terrain, with flute and guitar playfully surveying the scene (âHinterland Iâ) before more contemplative strums and astral synth and woodwinds take hold (âHinterland IIâ and âIIIâ).
Hinterlandsâ sequencing takes the listener from sea to mountains to somewhere more abstract and fantastical; late highlight âUnder the Oakâ possesses an otherworldly calm on warbled keys, followed by âBronze Ageâ, even more subdued. âValley of Blueâ ends the movement in melancholy, overlooking a blue flower field with swells of synthetic strings and oboe in the style of Final Fantasy (Ardizoni originally called it âMemory of a Chocoboâ). These traces of sadness permeate the otherwise effervescent collection, reminders that, behind the wonder, lies often profound worry (after all, Sanibel Island was nearly wiped out in 2022). Green-House makes sense of these feelings through their art, with genuine tenderness and refreshing conviction.Â
Tracklist:Â
Side A
1. Sun Dogs
2. Sanibel
3. Farewell, Little IslandÂ
4. Misty Step
5. Dragline Silk
Side B
1. Hinterland I
2. Hinterland II
3. Hinterland III
4. Well of the World
5. Under the Oak
6. Bronze Age
7. Valley Of Blue
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Product Information
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Shipping & Returns
Description
LP - Limited Edition Blue Eco-Mix Tape.Â
As Green-House, musicians Olive Ardizoni and Michael Flanagan engage human nature and the natural world through joyous, dynamic synthesis. Overlaying frequencies and expressions like camouflage, their deeply layered collaborative process begins with either artist; Ardizoni is often drawn to melody, Flanagan to harmonics. The power lies in how their ideas helix together, achieving a depth greater than the sum of its parts. For their first LP with new label home, Ghostly International, Green-House grows and refines their vivid instrumental songcraft with uncharted, genre-defying freedom and movement, a more active, percussive, and emotion-filled energy, marked by flowing bodies of sound and sweeping vistas. Hinterlands tunes into the beauty of the world with defiant, radical sincerity.
Since 2020, across a catalog of acclaimed releases via the scene-creating Los Angeles imprint, Leaving Records, the duo has pursued a curiosity in environments, reaching for innate and faraway spaces by way of organic and synthetic instrumentation, high-definition sound design, and âidiosyncratic melodies crafted with the patient and methodical hand of a gardener,â writes Pitchfork. Green-House doesnât fit neatly into any single category. Ardizoni and Flanagan arenât aligned with New Age ideologies or spirituality, and the ambient tag feels increasingly limited given all thatâs going on in their songs, which skew closer to the realms of IDM or even modern classical on their new album. What remains inherent is an open sense of wonder, âthe idea of legitimizing certain emotions within music that often arenât taken seriously in art, like happiness and joy,â says Ardizoni, whose eclectic personality shines through even without lyrics.
They welcome influences from all over; moments on Hinterlands evoke hypnagogic folk, tropical synth-pop, pan-flute mountain music, jazzy lounge, film scores, library sounds, and other forms of paradise-world-building. The duo simply makes the music they want to hear, earnestly dreaming of idyllic settings, their hope borne of necessity.
Like any artist living in Los Angeles, the 2025 wildfires disrupted any semblance of normalcy in creative life. However, they give careful consideration to how ever-looming environmental and political anxiety may relate to the project. âThere's freedom in music, not requiring nuance in order to share an emotion or a fantasy or a utopian ideal with others,â Ardizoni says. âI'm an anarchist and an artist. I don't have to explain that. I can just put the emotion in and hope that it can be used as a tool, to be comforting or inspiring for people.â
As their third LP, Hinterlands is notably fuller, bigger-feeling than past work; brimming with kaleidoscopic guitar lines, bubbling synth textures, and an orchestral radiance that often registers as more than just two people. They bring up biomimicry â learning from and adapting alongside nature â as a formative notion. âWhen weâre talking about mimicry, it is also like projecting yourself as being larger in a certain way, in a sonic sense, sounding like a full band, but also as people, interconnected with a broader world,â says Flanagan. âThis record is us letting go a little bit as well, giving ourselves the freedom to just write and see what happens, to let the music grow naturally.â Ardizoni adds, âWe try to utilize whatâs right in front of us, just being in an urban environment and making do with what's there in order to continue to foster that connection we have to the natural world.â
Ardizoni and Scott Tenefrancia shot the images that appear within the droplets of the LPâs artwork on a trip to Yosemite and the Inyo National Forest; Flanagan later magnified the scenes through the water with macro photography, using the droplets as a series of lenses. The striking visual serves as a fitting metaphor for music that straddles the organic and the digital â a collection of auditory microcosms developed through imaginative fusion.
It begins in the languid heat of âSun Dogsâ, which nods to the coastal sway of Haruomi Hosono's Pacific album and Paradise View soundtrack with washes of keys, horns, and strings. âSanibelâ is pure shoreline bliss, named after the Florida island a young Ardizoni would visit, growing up on the nearby Cape Coral Island (âmy first real experiences as a human exploring natureâ). âFarewell, Little Islandâ borrows its title from the 1987 short animated film directed by SĂĄndor ReisenbĂŒchler, which depicts the drowning of a village by modern technology. The trackâs buoyant, spiraling guitar samples, their first time exploring the effect, reminded them of the filmâs paper-cut animation and of how the story balances serene splendor with tragedy.
âDragline Silkâ conjures a curious trip. Built on a bed of ascending synth and guitar chords bathed in spring reverb (stemming from their shared love for Jessica Prattâs latest album) and named after the natural phenomenon of spiders that use static electricity to sail through the atmosphere, the track soars with grandeur. The Hinterland suite is the albumâs centerpiece, three tracks traversing wide hilltop terrain, with flute and guitar playfully surveying the scene (âHinterland Iâ) before more contemplative strums and astral synth and woodwinds take hold (âHinterland IIâ and âIIIâ).
Hinterlandsâ sequencing takes the listener from sea to mountains to somewhere more abstract and fantastical; late highlight âUnder the Oakâ possesses an otherworldly calm on warbled keys, followed by âBronze Ageâ, even more subdued. âValley of Blueâ ends the movement in melancholy, overlooking a blue flower field with swells of synthetic strings and oboe in the style of Final Fantasy (Ardizoni originally called it âMemory of a Chocoboâ). These traces of sadness permeate the otherwise effervescent collection, reminders that, behind the wonder, lies often profound worry (after all, Sanibel Island was nearly wiped out in 2022). Green-House makes sense of these feelings through their art, with genuine tenderness and refreshing conviction.Â
Tracklist:Â
Side A
1. Sun Dogs
2. Sanibel
3. Farewell, Little IslandÂ
4. Misty Step
5. Dragline Silk
Side B
1. Hinterland I
2. Hinterland II
3. Hinterland III
4. Well of the World
5. Under the Oak
6. Bronze Age
7. Valley Of Blue

















