Switched On: Forest Swords – Bolted (Ninja Tune)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

Six years on from Compassion, his debut release for Ninja Tune, Matthew Barnes returns under his Forest Swords moniker for a powerful follow-up. The intervening period has seen him working on commissions writing music for film, ballet and video games – but as listeners will discover from his second album, Barnes continues to take a bold approach to his work.

Bolted was recorded in Barnes’ home city of Liverpool, in a warehouse space – and it includes singles The Low and Butterfly Effect.

What’s the music like?

Expansive. The Forest Swords sound world is one with wide, panoramic views that are especially effective on headphones. Big, reverberant beats and synths are complemented by vocals that are deliberately treated, sometimes warped to blend in with their surroundings as they are on End or brought to the front for maximum effect, as they are on the powerful Line Gone Cold, an epic and emotive piece of work that closes the album.

Often it feels like Barnes’s music is telling the story of an industrial process, with the clanging of percussion in Rubble a working example. Butterfly Effect has rolling beats like a pinball machine but with widescreen synths out front, while Tar sounds like an old, distorted squeezebox pressed into action at short notice. Night Sculpture, an impressive construction, is dominated by a bold melodic chime and is typical of an ability to paint vivid and meaningful pictures in sound.

Does it all work?

It does. Forest Swords stands for distinctive, evocative music that draws from the past – 1980s acts such as Cabaret Voltaire could be mentioned – but also feels part of the future.

Is it recommended?

Yes. This is a bold, striking album that repays repeated exploration.

Listen

Buy

Published post no.2,004 – Thursday 9 November 2023

Switched On: Barry Can’t Swim – When Will We Land? (Ninja Tune)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

This is the debut album from Scottish artist Joshua Mannie, better known in musical circles as Barry Can’t Swim.

His singles Sunsleeper and Woman have fared particularly well during 2023, fulfilling Mannie’s wish to deliver the energy of electronic music but with real time performance, so that the music doesn’t sound too manufactured.

The diversities of this album include the sampling of Brazilian group Trio Ternura on Dance Of The Crab, and a rich choral palette on Always Get Through To You. There are vocal guests, too – somedeadbeat, Falle Nioke & Blackboxx and just lil.

What’s the music like?

There is a great deal of positive energy in the music here, helped by Barry Can’t Swim’s refusal to limit himself to a single area of music. Instead he shows himself to be a prodigious shape shifter, capable of bringing uplifting vocals to a mix that includes Afrobeat, deeper house, a bit of jazz, and what sounds like a freely improvised piano.

All of Mannie’s music is freshly minted, as though it were recorded yesterday. It ranges from Sonder, a lovely bit of airy, down tempo music with a soaring sax solo and bumpy rhythm, to Sunsleeper, which is a beauty with its rippling piano line. How It Feels is a good vocal, and could easily be a lot longer, but that promise is fulfilled by I Won’t Let You Down, which is a beauty thanks to the voices of Falle Nioke and Blackboxx. Often the music of Barry Can’t Swim reaches a semi-spiritual high, thanks to songs like Always Get Through To You.

Does it all work?

It does – and because of the instinctive approach to recording, this is electronically based music with a living, breathing heart.

Is it recommended?

Yes. When Will We Land? is an uplifting piece of work made by a producer of great promise and potential. Barry Can’t Swim has definitely provided some sunshine for the winter months, serving notice of another new talent on the Ninja roster.

Listen

Buy

Published post no.1,994 – Monday 30 October 2023

Online Concert: Esther Yoo & Jae Hong Park @ Wigmore Hall – Debussy, Grieg, Rachmaninoff & Vieuxtemps

Esther Yoo (violin), Jae Hong Park (piano)

Debussy Violin Sonata in G minor (1916-7)
Grieg Violin Sonata no.3 in C minor Op. 45 (1886-7)
Rachmaninoff Vocalise Op. 34 no. 14 (1915)
Vieuxtemps Souvenir d’Amérique on ‘Yankee Doodle’ Op.17 (pub. c1845)

Wigmore Hall, Monday 6 November 2023 1pm

by Ben Hogwood

This was the first recital given in the UK by the relatively new team of violinist Esther Yoo and pianist Jae Hong Park – but on this evidence, many more will follow. Yoo has been a regular concert giver for ten years now, having joined the BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artist scheme in 2014, so it is easy to forget she is still just 29. Park, meanwhile, took first prize at the Busoni-Mahler Foundation Competition in 2021 and, at the age of 24, looks set for a fine future as soloist and chamber pianist.

The duo began with a fresh take on Debussy’s oft-heard Violin Sonata, his final completed work. The first movement has meaningful if short melodic cells and quickly changing moods, which both performers characterised to great effect, with Yoo’s intonation and phrasing particularly impressive. The second movement was lighter, before the Finale set off at quite a lick, Yoo’s commanding and very impressive virtuosity giving the music a great deal of energy. This was Debussy with a fresh coat of glossy paint, but with a great deal of feeling and understanding too.

Following the Debussy with Grieg’s third essay in the genre was a particularly smart move, as the two composers have closer parallels than one might think. The Violin Sonata no.3 in C minor is a particularly fine work, closely adhering to sonata principles while allowing the performers plenty of room for flights of fancy and characterisation. Both clearly love this work, for the crisp attack of the first movement was immediately gripping, the turbulent passages given the requisite drama. Yoo was fully invested in the fantastical aspects of Grieg’s writing, the violin dreamily floating at some points while swooping with full tone at others. Park ensured the forthright piano writing was delivered at just the right level, too, offering substantial support when needed. The slow movement had an appealing singing style, responding to Grieg’s marking of Allegretto espressivo alla Romanza, while the harmonic twists and turns of the third movement were high on red-blooded drama.

The pair followed with a set of extended encore pieces, beginning with a tasteful account of Rachmaninoff’s versatile Vocalise, which works particularly well in the Michel Press & Josef Gingold arrangement used here. Yoo’s long phrases were nicely floated, but in the following Souvenir d’Amérique on ‘Yankee Doodle’ by Belgian composer Henri Vieuxtemps she took the opportunity to go for broke. This is a great audience piece, with a brilliant send-up of the familiar theme, allowing for portamento, spiky snaps, quickfire left hand pizzicato and much more. In these hands it was a proper showstopper!

Then we heard a Korean folksong, the poignant Milyang Arirang – which, with its pentatonic melody, was not too far removed from the language of the Rachmaninov. A passionate central section and a free, rhapsodic coda were delightful – as was an extra bonus, an affectionate account of Elgar’s Chanson de matin.

For more livestreamed concerts from the Wigmore Hall, click here

New music – David Allred – Hey Stranger (Take 2) (Erased Tapes)

by Ben Hogwood

The latest post from the Erased Tapes label on Bandcamp is a deeply personal one. Portland based recording artist David Allred chose the mark the birthday of a close friend on 5 November with a new song. Nothing too unusual about that, you might think – only the stranger has been missing for 12 years. In his own words, Allred says:

“‘Hey Stranger’ is about a close and deeply troubled lifelong friend who disappeared without any trace or explanation, and the experience of navigating an undying paranoia that he might appear back into my life when I least expect it. I find myself scanning crowded public places to assure that he’s not in my presence as often as I wonder where he is and how he is doing. It’s his birthday on November 5 and here is Hey Stranger (Take 2), written in dedication to him. Happy Birthday, J. You are deeply loved and missed, and you always have a friend when you need one.”

A deeply moving utterance, Hey Stranger is both troubling and strangely comforting – in the fact that, although missing, Allred’s friend still has people out there thinking of him and rooting for him.

Let’s hope this desperately sad story has a peaceful and somehow uplifting ending.

Published post no.2,001 – Monday 6 November 2023

In appreciation – Yuri Temirkanov

This week we learned of the death of a legendary Russian conductor, Yuri Temirkanov, at the age of 84. Temirkanov enjoyed extended stints as principal conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and also the St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra. You can read in detail about his critical reception at the Gramophone website, but to complement it, here is a playlist of recordings loaded with his repertoire specialities from his home country:

Published post no.2,000 – Sunday 5 November 2023