STYLE...... Ambient, Home Listening, Modern Classical LABEL...... Digitalis *Try
and imagine the kind of broken drones and edgy experimentation Ben
Frost makes crossed with the strings of Hildur Gudnadottir and the sea
shanties of Matt Elliott and you'll get some ideas of the incredible,
deeply original music of Myrmyr* This Oakland duo brings together Agnes
Szelag with Marielle Jakobsons (aka Darwinsbitch) for a debut album
consisting of incredible modified sea shanties, cinematic-style
ensemble pieces and folk/drone hybrids that have just blown our minds.
'Jurata' opens the album with a suspenseful opacity, loaded with string
and harmonium drones while vocals drift along in a ghostly, haunting
fashion. Somewhere in the background percussion jostles, occasionally
sounding like faulty central heating, and ultimately making a seamless
transition into 'Baltic WInds', whose fractured bowed tones make for a
semi-conscious soundscape while electro-static, processed bells clang
and cascade around the edges. 'First Seed' is a far more clear-cut
affair, concentrating on the tightly orchestrated confluence of cello,
clarinet, flute and trombone for a deep and cinematic piece of music.
From here on the sophistication and depth of variation in this music
only seems to heighten: 'Egle's Escape' presents a dark avant-folk
universe (bringing to mind Mi & L'au, Pantaleimon and Espers all at
once), while the string melodies and wonderful, thorny harp textures of
'Dancing In Captivity' suggest a kind of gothic avant-garde. Perhaps
best of all, at the centre of this album lies 'The Sea Returns', a
radiant fifteen minute composition that starts out as a tentative
ambient excursion - full of lulling drones and fragmented instrumental
eruptions - only to seemingly wake up after a few minutes of languid
swirling, eventually developing into a complex soundscape full of
euphoric dissonance, spurts of noise and plenty of harmonic flair.
There's a tremendous amount to take in here and you won't be able to
absorb even half of this album upon first listen, but in terms of its
vision, and the roving musical dexterity on show throughout, it's one
of the most unique and absorbing albums we've heard this year.
Essential Purchase.
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