Niels Rønsholdt - 'Aftermath'

7/10

There’s a quiet devastation that runs through 'Aftermath', the new solo project from Danish composer Niels Rønsholdt. Across fourteen stark and evocative tracks, 'Aftermath' flirts with the mythos of the American road trip, peeling back the romanticism to expose a nation in slow-motion collapse.

From the cracked sidewalks of Brooklyn to a weather-beaten motel in Memphis, Rønsholdt documents the erosion of dreams across a continent shaped by contradictions. Here, the once-glorious promise of boundless possibility buckles under the weight of social fragmentation, economic stagnation, and environmental decay.

There’s a strange intimacy to it all. Though steeped in the iconography of Americana, these songs are meditations filtered through a European lens, as if Rønsholdt is peering into a mirror that reflects something both eerily familiar and completely alien. Much like his previous forays into reimagining genre (most notably in his cello concerto Country), Rønsholdt isn’t interested in pastiche. Instead, 'Aftermath' lives in the liminal space between reverence and reckoning. His use of “method composition” means each track feels like a dispatch from a different identity, each voice brushing up against the remnants of a once-dominant cultural force that now feels brittle and worn.

The songs are sparse but emotionally rich, less narrative storytelling than tonal sketching. Some moments shimmer with the first light of spring, while others drag their feet through post-festival streets strewn with broken beads and the scent of something long gone. But even in the decay, there’s beauty: a stubborn hope that glints through the cracks, like wildflowers blooming through the asphalt.

'Aftermath' isn't interested in offering a resolution. There’s no crescendo, no catharsis. Instead, Niels Rønsholdt invites us to sit with the stillness, to listen to the echo of empire fading out along the highway. Unresolved, untethered, and achingly human.

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