in brief
12.10.2022

En tur i Europas mørke kammer

Diamanda Galas: »Broken Gargoyles«
© PR
© PR

Det kan virke oplagt at anmelde mørkets fyrstinde og hendes august-album Broken Gatgoyles i en tid, hvor festlige sjæle pynter deres dørgavl med skeletter og sjove gyserhatte. Men gyset, der møder en i den ufremkommelige afgrund i pladens to installationer, er tydeligvis noget andet og mere jordnært. Det er jo Diamanda Galás, det her! Med udgangspunkt i pestdød og krigsepidemier boltrer den snart 70 år gamle gregorianske sortseer sig i sine vanlige virkemidler som hørt på hovedværker som The Litanies of Satan (1982) og Saint of the Pit (1986): Dybe klaveranslag, opklippede loops og Galás’ karakteristiske dæmonskig, som leveres fra et stemmebånd spændende tre et halvt oktaver.

Der er grove løjer på de to installationer »Mutilatus« og »Abiectio«, og når de spyttende lyrikgloser samtidig er holdt i germanske gloser, kan det hele virke en anelse utilnærmeligt, hvilket helt sikkert også er Galás intention. Efter årtier som cover-sanger af bluesstandards er det imidlertid rart at høre sangeren som rædslens budbringer igen, og især første installation leverer deciderede gruopvækkende ture ind i den europæiske histories mørkeste kamre. 

På Galás' nok særeste udspil bliver det hele faktisk en smule fjollet i sidste ende – men denne tendens til at smile midt i de pinefylde rædsler retfærdiggør sangerens berettigelse i 2022. Det er svært at se, hvornår man rent faktisk kommer til at høre Broken Gargoyles uden for et museum eller et galehus. Men det er vel egentlig også meningen?

in briefrelease
07.02.2025

The Sinister Mastery of Shame

Ethel Cain: »Perverts«
© Silken Weinberg
© Silken Weinberg

To describe American Ethel Cain’s (Hayden Silas Anhedönia) stylistic shift from her debut Preacher’s Daughter (2022) to Perverts as an extreme U-turn would almost be an understatement. The distance from the debut’s gothic lo-fi pop to this monstrous work – combining dark ambient, noise, and dystopian ballads – is vast, all the while continuing Cain’s familiar reckoning with her religious upbringing and her struggle for sexual liberation.

On paper, Perverts is an EP running 89 minutes, but it feels like far more than that. Crushing noise drones, dusty piano strikes, and distant preacher voices from crackling radios are woven together with acoustic spaces. And although the record also contains more conventional ballads such as »Punish« and the beautiful »Vacillator« – which even features a clearly defined rhythmic progression – it is the long, epic ambient tracks that draw the listener into the often harrowing darkness.

One thing is that Cain suddenly makes dark ambient; another is just how good she is at it. Perverts is not only a profoundly unsettling insight into the friction between sexuality and religious fanaticism, but also an immediate, creative, and fully realized homage to a fascinating niche genre. A necessary album for anyone unafraid of the dark.

in briefrelease
04.02.2025

The Deep Breath

Blaume: »excess air«

The Copenhagen-based duo Blaume’s EP excess air is a field study in the shared pulse of breathing, calmly taking a deep breath. The EP’s airy sound unfolds cyclically from the physical conditions of respiration, and with hoarse choral voices and chirping flute, the two artists – Laura Zöschg (IT) and Mette Hommel (DK) – wind their way around the healing and artistic qualities of breath.

Perhaps it is the strangely warm winter or the blooming figures on the cover, but excess air seems to carry a fragile sense of spring. The sparse instrumentation gropes its way forward improvisationally across the three tracks, and the many choral voices add a tangible physical sense of musicians at work, underscoring a feeling of tentative sprouting.

The electronic element, in the form of vocal effects and the music software Ableton, is an important part of Blaume’s expression. Vocal effects often come across as quite prominent, but when the processed voice on the track »vivus tremus« drifts into a hoarse rasp, the artificial divide between voice and effect dissolves, and the electronic becomes an obvious extension of Blaume’s shared breath.

Blaume’s excess air is a delightfully vital EP. It is music with the surplus energy to stretch far from a simple and immediate point of departure, and with a few simple means, Blaume’s debut emerges as a welcome harbinger of spring.

© Ellie Brown

»Music for me is: inevitable.« 

Ryong is a composer, artist & DJ that explores: Danish and Korean heritage, spirituality, embodiment, family and love, Ryong is also a member of the experimental pop band haloplus+. Across her releases, she draws on both ambient, noise and pop music, incorporating the sound of field recordings and spoken word. Having previously released on Why Be’s label Yegorka, and debuting on Posh Isolation with Isa Ryong, an 11 part work that explores transition and the anguish of complexity, Ryong has established herself as a unique artist in the experimental electronic music scene in Copenhagen.
 

in briefrelease
26.01.2025

She Makes the Music Vibrate Like a Living Organism

Astrid Sonne: »Great Doubt« 
© PR
© PR

When I first listened to the Danish violist, singer, and producer Astrid Sonne’s new album, Great Doubt, I honestly wasn’t quite sure what to make of it. I immediately noticed how extraordinary Sonne’s viola sounds on the album – such a powerful presence that it almost feels like a deeply complex living organism, breathing, feeling, and moving dramatically through the album’s nine songs.

My favourite track was without a doubt »Almost«, where Sonne’s fragile, subtly intense voice is accompanied solely by the viola’s minimalist pizzicato melody, which reminds me of a forgotten composition from Japanese new age pioneer Hiroshi Yoshimura’s masterpiece Green.

On most of the tracks, however, voice and viola are also joined by electronic rhythms, piano chords, and synth figures which, in contrast to the viola’s organic, vibrating sound, initially struck me as almost plastically artificial. To me, it sounded as if the viola and the electronics were being transmitted from two very different universes, unable to fully coexist. There was something about the contrast that felt slightly… uncanny.

Yet with repeated listens, everything begins to make sense. Sonne’s coolly understated voice is the glue that binds the entire soundscape together, as if it itself exists in the porous space between the viola’s raw natural force and the electronics’ tamed purity. I like it more and more – and perhaps I may even come to love it. Great Doubt is an album that, despite its modest running time of just 26 minutes, demands immersion and reflection – and ultimately rewards the listener for it.

© PR

»Music for me is a highway hotel. Open 24 hours a day. There are no receptionists, and you are not given keys. You wander sleepily around the hotel's many corridors, from door to door. Some doors are ajar, others you have to pry open. Behind them all are rooms. Some are sparsely furnished, others are filled to the brim with dancing people. You can stay in there for a few minutes. Some rooms you return to. Many are a bit boring, others almost knock you over. What I like most is the ones I can't really orient myself in. The rooms where I have doubts about what is floor and what is wall. And what the furniture is actually used for. All the rooms fit together. You leave the hotel and drive on along the highway of life. A different person than when you arrived.« 

Anders Søgaard is a poet and professor of artificial intelligence and philosophy at the University of Copenhagen. He has written eleven books and more than 300 research articles. He has three children and lives in a housing community in Roskilde.