With this, his first solo outing since 2013's "To See More Light", Colin Stetson ventures into territory both familiar and strange. Here still, is the dogmatically stripped down approach to performance and capture (all songs recorded live with no overdubs or loops) but there is an immediacy to the album that belies a more invasive and thorough miking of the various instruments being utilized and a seeming influence drawn from the early nineties electronica of artists like Aphex Twin and Autechre, evident in the more pointed role played by the instruments' many percussive elements.
There are ancestries, motivic and timbral, woven through these six songs that plainly anchor them within the shared universe of his Trilogy. The brief and brutal "In the clinches" recalls (or presages) echoes of songs like "Judges", though now feeling like one has fallen down the bell of Stetson's ancient bass saxophone itself. "Spindrift", crystalline and serene, calls to mind the ambient works of Aphex Twin, while "Between Water and Wind" with it's "Immigrant Song" swagger, relentlessly carves it's way into the bedrock here, paving the way with an increasing focus on the minute and the minimal, with a deepened sense of patience shared by most of the album's six tracks.
STAFF COMMENTS
Barry says: It's been high up on my to-listen list for a while this one. Being a big fan of his work with Sarah Neufeld, and constellation records work in general, this was a no-brainer. Turns out it is decidedly more direct and forceful than his previous work, casting ambience in the abyss in favour of a more thundering, jagged approach to sound design. It's brilliant, brutal in places, but thoroughly worth your attention.TRACK LISTING
All This I Do For Glory
Like Wolves On The Fold
Between Water And Wind
Spindrift
In The Clinches
The Lure Of The Mine