[alternative folk] (2022) Alison Cotton - The Portrait You Painte...
- Category Music
- Type Lossless
- Language English
- Total size 209.1 MB
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(2022) Alison Cotton - The Portrait You Painted of Me
Review:
Alison Cotton , when not playing alongside her partner, Mark Nicholas in indie-folk band The Left Outsides, makes a peculiar brand of folk-inspired, mostly instrumental music that defies classification. It is peculiar in the literal sense, in that it could only be her, but also in the way it belongs to the outside, coming from a world beyond. Her previous solo records, All is Quiet at the Ancient Theatre and Only Darkness Now conjure times, places and worlds as though engaging in musical sorcery, working rituals, re-enacting vanished events and generally sounding as though they are being broadcast from behind a gauze curtain which separates us from the beyond. It is music as seance, played as though the composer is a vessel for voices which have no other way to reach us. The Portrait You Painted continues along this unnerving path. Produced by Mark Nicholas, who was also responsible for the sound on Cottonâs previous solo work, the new album is just as stripped back, incantatory and strange. Tracks are, with one exception, wordless and feature layered sounds based around her viola and her voice, both of which are deeply resonant instruments. Some tell specific histories, as though the contact of bow on string can dial up other eras. Cotton is from the North East, and three tracks relate to events in the regionâs history. âThe Last Wooden Shipâ, the longest track on the album, is inspired by Sunderlandâs shipyards. It is full of echoes, and harmonium playing that sounds like a hymn at half speed. The atmosphere is thick with activity, movement, water and men, but thick like the ghost of a lost world, parading past us in slow motion. âThe Tunnel Underground Seemed Neverendingâ concerns the mines of Northumberland Itâs a subterranean piece. Droning viola echoes off tunnel walls, and Cottonâs eerie calls reach us from somewhere a long way beneath the earth. The ghosts of the miners are out there, but it is a lament for those who lived their lives while already buried. â17th November 1962â references the Seaham disaster, an event forgotten outside County Durham. The Seaham lifeboat, the George Elmy, went to the rescue of a fishing boat called Economy, in trouble just off the coast in a rising gale. The lifeboat took all five crew off the Economy, but capsized thirty feet short of the harbour entrance at Seaham. Only one man escaped: the five lifeboat crew and the four fishing crew, one of whom was a nine-year old boy, all drowned. The viola groans like the timbers of a vessel under strain, a bell sounds a vain warning, and Cottonâs layered vocals sweep through like a wild wind. The piece is a vision that forces its way through from the other side, as the pain of those who died seeks expression and acknowledgment. Cottonâs composition provides that acknowledgment, reimagining a defining disaster as a living memorial. The albumâs icy centrepiece is âViolet Mayâ. It could be a cover of a traditional song, and is the only track on which Cotton sings in the traditional sense. It tells a story in a second person voice which, it becomes apparent, belongs to a lost lover. It concerns a Rapunzel-style figure locked in a tower, in a dress her mother gave her âwhen she leftâ. Such stories usually end with the trapped woman being happily rescued, but this is different. Violet May will never meet the narrator again, his letters were in vain, and she will stay in her tower âup six flights of stairsâ gazing through the oriel window. She is an artist who has locked herself from the world to paint. He hangs on just in case she wakes from her âtranceâ, but the song does not offer much hope. Cotton was apparently inspired to write it by a visit to Sissinghurst Castle, former home to writer and gardener Vita Sackville-West, the kind of place where artistic isolation seems seductive. It is a song of the utmost desolation, encapsulated in the ultra-spare production: just Cottonâs voice, a bell that announces lines like a funeral knell, and a stark viola that accompanies her, falling silent between verses as she does. The character of Cottonâs singing is solemn, clear as the accompanying bell, and entirely captivating. Vocals and violin play dissonant harmonies with one another, at times almost painful to hear, underlining the most painful moments of the song. It is a modern folk masterpiece that sounds unlike anyone else exploring this repertoire. The remaining two tracks, while less specific to events and locations, are equally steeped in place. âMurmurations on the Moorâ, the short opener, consists of overlapping vocal lines, which call through what must surely be a fog, luring travellers towards them and sounding a warning at the same time. âI Buried the Candlesticksâ has the medieval trance atmosphere for which All is Quiet at the Ancient Theatre was particularly notable. A keening viola spills over âa thick carpet harmoniumâ, while a triple beat on a muffled drum sounds like an army approaching from a distance. It takes you directly into a world that seems entirely real. The Portrait You Painted of Me more than meets the exceptionally high standards Alison Cotton has set for herself. Her work can be compared to conceptual art, consisting of pieces that seem complete in themselves but acquire a whole new meaning when their purpose is explained. If this makes her music sound dry, it is anything but. She expresses visceral emotions through her viola, which cries in sympathy, whispers secrets, and groans in pain. Her voice has epic qualities, rising to fill a vast soundscape on âThe Last Wooden Shipâ and closing in with the walls on âThe Tunnel Underground Seemed Neverendingâ. Her music is also psychedelic, both because it sounds incredibly trippy, but more specifically because it uses a distorted perception by gazing at the present and seeing only the past beneath it. Precise definitions seem important in pinning down work that is meticulous and crafted, as well as enveloping and beautiful. Cottonâs talent is special, and her latest music will send you to places you never knew existed. The only problem will be finding a way back. â quietus
Track List:
01 - Mumurations Over the Moor
02 - The Last Wooden Ship
03 - I Buried the Candlesticks
04 - That Tunnel Underground Seemed Neverending
05 - Violet May
06 - 17th November 1962
Media Report:
Genre: alternative folk
Country: UK
Format: FLAC
Format/Info: Free Lossless Audio Codec, 16-bit PCM
Bit rate mode: Variable
Channel(s): 2 channels
Sampling rate: 44.1 KHz
Bit depth: 16 bits
Note: If you like the music, support the artist
Files:
(2022) Alison Cotton - The Portrait You Painted of Me [FLAC]- 02 - The Last Wooden Ship.flac (64.0 MB)
- 01 - Mumurations Over the Moor.flac (8.0 MB)
- 03 - I Buried the Candlesticks.flac (28.5 MB)
- 04 - That Tunnel Underground Seemed Neverending.flac (46.0 MB)
- 05 - Violet May.flac (33.4 MB)
- 06 - 17th November 1962.flac (29.0 MB)
- [TGx]Downloaded from torrentgalaxy.to.txt (0.6 KB)
- cover.jpg (97.8 KB)
- Torrent_downloaded_from_Demonoid.is_.txt (0.1 KB)
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