max cooper ebb flow

Gorilaspain Fashion and Art Magazine – Culture Independent Magazine

Max Cooper explores balance and motion in Ebb and Flow

max cooper ebb flow
Max Cooper’s “Ebb and Flow” previews an album where structure becomes meaning. Interwoven melodies and precise design create a fluid yet calculated sound, mirrored by its visual piece. Born from a Royal Albert Hall commission, the work feels deeply human despite its scientific, meticulously crafted foundation.

Some pieces tell you something. Others put you in a state. Ebb and Flow does the latter: it’s a constant movement between opposing forces that aren’t trying to resolve, only to coexist. Max Cooper has been working like this for years, but here something clicks especially well.

The single arrives as a preview of Feeling Is Structure, his upcoming album. The title says it all: for Cooper, the way a piece is constructed isn’t secondary. It is the message. There’s no romantic improvisation or “it just happened in the studio.” There are decisions. Many of them. And you can hear it.

In Ebb and Flow, the melodies mirror each other: one rises while the other falls, creating a balance that never quite settles. The synthesizers flow smoothly but conceal a precise architecture underneath. You hear something organic and beautiful, but you know there’s a system behind it, thought out down to the last detail.

What accompanies the single isn’t a conventional music video either. The visual piece, created with Yoshi Sodeoka, seems to follow the same principle: flocks, flows, movements that feel natural but carry something inevitably calculated. As if nature and design were the same thing. Or as if we couldn’t understand one without organizing it like the other.

The album was born from a commission for the Royal Albert Hall—one of those places where scale forces you to think differently. Tickets sold out in 48 hours. It makes sense: Cooper doesn’t just fill venues; he creates the kind of experience people make space for in their schedules.

And with all this, with all this almost scientific precision, what remains after listening isn’t cold. Quite the opposite.

Because Ebb and Flow, beneath everything, speaks about something very simple: that we are always between two states. That change never stops. That there’s no fixed point from which to observe things.

Rising. Falling. Breathing.

Cooper doesn’t dramatize it or simplify it. He just designs it, lets it play, and somehow manages to make something so constructed feel completely human.

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