This is Mamiffer’s first solo release since 2011’s "Mare Decendrii".  The line up for this incarnation of Mamiffer consists of the core duo of  Faith Coloccia and Aaron Turner.
 "It can be difficult to keep tabs on the elusive entity known as  Mamiffer. Originating as the a studio project centered around Faith  Coloccia, former mastermind of the Southern California desert-based  experimen-tal music collective Everlovely Lightningheart, the first  Mamiffer recordings were driven by somber piano instrumentals and backed  by a rotating cast of musicians who lent martial drum patterns,  rumbling distorted bass, melodic vocal incantations, and swaths of  abrasive guitar. Mamiffer eventually gravitated towards a core duo of  Coloccia and husband Aaron Turner (ISIS, Old Man Gloom), yet the project  continued to morph and evolve as guest contributors came and went. The  group rarely performed live, and when the band did opt to play a show,  they were more likely to play an Eastern European squat or a small club  in Tokyo than one of the standard rock clubs in their home state of  Washington.
 
 Statu Nascendi is the band’s first full-length since 2011’s Mare  Decendrii, though that isn’t to imply that Mamiffer has been quiet for  the last three years. Since Mare Decendrii’s release, Coloccia and  Turner have released a collaboration with Chicago noise experimentalists  Locrian, teamed up for split releases with Texan soundscapers Pyramids  and Finnish art metallurgists Circle, and issued more than a few limited  edition cas-settes. If Mamiffer’s self-imposed exile to the rustic  enclave of Vashon Island in Washington’s Puget Sound wasn’t enough to  lower their profile, their dearth of live appearances and their  gravitation towards old formats for their releases helped solidify their  stature as a clandestine underground unit.
 
 And then Mamiffer did something uncharacteristic in the fall of 2013:  they did a large club tour open-ing for the majestic French black metal  band Alcest. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the group opted to further  distinguish themselves from the more metal sounds of the evening by  shedding auxiliary members and reducing the band to its core of Coloccia  and Turner. While Mamiffer has always eschewed rock clichés, they  parted ways with even more conventions for the tour—drums were excised,  distorted guitars were kept to a minimum, the use of space and  repetition were pushed beyond the realms of the average metalhead’s  attention span. The result was a 40-minute set that conjured the  restrained minimalism of early Low, the stark territories of Blixa  Bargeld’s solo work, and the textural sensitivity of Fennesz. Upon  finishing the tour, Mamiffer returned to the Pacific Northwest and  tracked their set live at Avast Studios with Randall Dunn (Earth,  Marissa Nadler, Sunno)))), on November 16th, 2013. The resulting four  tracks are Statu Nascendi.
 
 While Statu Nascendi’s four tracks span 37 minutes, Coloccia is hesitant  to view it as the band’s third proper full-length. Rather, she sees it  as a “transitional album to the full-length coming out next year.” Statu  Nascendi keeps to Mamiffer’s ongoing theme of humankind’s deep ties to  nature, and then delves deeper to explore the nexus of life and death,  the significance of matriarchal blood lineages, and the purging  relationship between birth, rebirth, and exorcism. The percussive  element to Mamiffer has been virtually eliminated on these four songs.  Not only are drums completely absent, even Coloccia’s percussive piano  lines are kept to a minimum, with ethereal washes of guitar, organ, tape  loops of field recordings, and Coloccia’s hypnotic vocals serving as  the foundation to the songs." - Brian Cook, October, 2014