Switched On – Unstern: Es Geht Der Tag (Alter)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

Unstern are described in the press release for this album as a ‘devotional music outfit’, a label that makes perfect sense when you listen to their music.

At its heart are the workings of ambient artist Arzat Skia and pianist Leo Svirsky, with studio collaboration from Civilistjävel!, Skia and Stefan Betke. While leaning heavily on electronics there is a good deal of acoustic input, from two pianos ‘refracting across the stereo field, processed recordings from the Peruvian Amazon, bowed percussion by Greg Stuart, alongside strings and renaissance meantime organ recorded at Orgelpark in Amsterdam.

The idea is to produce an audio illusion, where incremental repetition leads to an eventual departure from the music heard at the start, inspired by but not limited to the craft of Morton Feldman. The album title – translating as The day goes – links up with that.

What’s the music like?

Es Geht Der Tag works on several levels. As background music it is sonorous and sublime, its foreground giving a deep sense of perspective made even more rounded with the bass of the opening track, whose curious title – All the Kingdoms of the World in a Moment Of Time – suddenly becomes clear. It is as though ancient and modern civilizations are aligning in the same place, and the wide range of the spectrum gives it a huge spatial arc.

And yet it works as music without any of the floral descriptions, slow moving progressions that are both soothing and energising. We hear the reassuring tread of the organ pedals during Of Fire And The Many-Eyed Wheels, with thicker clouds of ambience up top and an insistent, throbbing percussion right at the far end.

Malign Star has a slow moving stillness and distance, cast by what sounds like a muted trumpet, ending up as a disparate chorale. In The Roar of Your Channels has a colder, static ambience, but Es Geht der Tag sur Neige introduces heavy footprints and an even colder outlook, the sense of snow beneath the feet difficult to shake off! 

Does it all work?

It does. You can approach this music from several directions – from the thick ambience of GAS and the like, the reserved yet intense writing of Morton Feldman, or the more processed chillout music of Chicane. All are valid departure points to end up in an extremely chilled-out place.

Is it recommended?

It is. This is a rather special album, its mixture of ancient and contemporary creating a strange tension but ultimately a wonderful sense of calm. Listen and fall under its spell.

For fans of… GAS, Loscil, Morton Feldman, Arvo Pärt, Sofia Gubaidulina

Listen & Buy

Published post no.2,234 – Tuesday 9 July 2024