My first review for A Closer Listen! And what a dandy.
Poignancy with brevity. That about sums up the ambient chamber duo Olan Mill, a pair from England who compose strictly in the winter time. “Bleu Polar” picks up right where their debut Pine
left off with gorgeous etchings of violins and guitar (and some voice!)
slowly drifting through the seams. It’s a lovely and sombre connection
between the two albums, making way for some different approaches.
“Springs” opens with sober and lush piano work and is the only track to
feature this instrument. Pine featured a bit more piano, but the story goes that Paths
is a product of two live performances that Alex Smalley and Svitlana
Samoylenko recorded: one was with Peter Broderick, the other with
Hauschka. Smalley admitted being intimidated by these two impeccable and
talented pianists, so Olan Mill ended up dropping piano almost all
together for the show. Perhaps the self-imposed limitation helped them
step up their compositions a notch.
Smalley spent many years working as a music therapist in a maximum
security mental institute, and the music he creates is more of a
personal respite (in the summer he works on the euphoric drone project
Pausal). In listening to Paths, one might detect a bit of the
dread and madness that accompanies such a profession. “Amber Balanced”
ratchets up the anxiety with a rough edged drone peppered with heart
wrenching violin work. Field recordings and backward plucks and errata
help grant the piece a sense of helplessness in the face of devastation.
As the ending to side A, this track essentially razes the landscape and
wipes the slate clean before having to turn the record over.
Each track on Paths delivers a decisively different feeling,
and that is its greatest strength. The album can drift by as one song,
but the details are full of lush stories to discover. “Eye’s Closed (for
Rube)” is an ode to Smalley’s late grandmother, and is apparently the
first Olan Mill song written in the summer time. It has much more of a
Stars of the Lid vibe due to its multiple layers of vibrant violin
melodies intermingling. It makes for dynamic listening to hear the
confident swing from despair to optimism occur several times over the
course of one album. There is no doubt that though Olan Mill’s overall
sound is one of sobriety, pause, and deep emotional memory, it expresses
a desire to connect, to break down barriers in the listener’s mind.
Above all Paths is ridiculously gorgeous and cannot be missed by the lovers and poets of the listening world.
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