ALBUM: Naoko Sakata – ‘Dancing Spirits’

Sweden is better known to most for being home to the beating heart of quality pop music than for its long legacy of experimental and improvisational composers. But what a legacy it is! Women have been at the forefront of this extraordinary scene for decades and in recent years have become increasingly visible. It’s possible, for example, to draw a direct line from artists like 1970s drone pioneer Catherine Christer Hennix through to current critical favourites Ellen Arkbro, Maria w Horn and Anna von Hausswolff.

Since moving to Sweden in 2008, Japanese-born Naoko Sakata has established herself as a major talent. First with her eponymous jazz trio and lately as a soloist of fierce intuition. Dancing Spirits is her second album of solo piano improvs, following last year’s impressive Inner Planets, and the first to be released through von Hausswolff’s own label, Pomperipossa Records.

Recorded in a Gothenburg church over two evenings in August 2020, these seven highly expressive improvisations are the sound of an artist pulling threads of composition not out of thin air – there is no such thing in a church – but from some other unknowable source of energy and emotions. Sometimes those threads unravel wildly, yanking something portentous into focus before resolving into musical dust motes that settle on the floor. At other times, the drama is more gently prescribed and the directionless journeying feels in thrall to something distant and tidal.

Sakata believes in the hidden influence of planetary alignment and in creating sacred spaces where peace and chaos are allowed to coexist and to channel ideas and emotions. As with astrology, part of the enjoyment of Sakata’s music comes from the ability to project one’s own imaginations and stories onto each composition. Anna von Hausswolff’s striking photography suggests a strong folkloric element at play. Dancing spirits, often women, have been referenced in popular stories dating as far back as Neolithic times. These spirits go by many names, from the tragic rusalka of central Europe to the dawn goddess Ame-no-Uzume and other dancing kami of Japanese mythology, and their stories are often linked with fertility, of the earth and of the people.

Whatever their rhyme or reason, Sakata does not discriminate in opening herself up to these dynamic energies and others. Her unobstructed playing gives body to whomever or whatever is drawn into the music, at the mic’d place at the mic’d time. Dancing Spirits, then, functions as a non-canonical window into a cosmic choreography of player, piano and what lies beyond the limits of scientific detection. It’s a challenging listen in that it makes a ritual of fearlessness, but admirable, too, for the very same reason.

Follow Naoko Sakata on bandcamp, Spotify, Twitter, Instagram & Facebook

Artwork: Gianluca Grasselli

Alan Pedder
@_neverdoneing

ALBUM: Anna von Hausswolff – ‘Dead Magic’

In case its cover wasn’t enough of a giveaway, Anna von Hausswolff commences her fourth album with distant footsteps, melancholy synths and an organ sound straight out of a horror movie. It’s a confirmation that Dead Magic will live up to both halves of its title’s promise, and appropriate for the opening section of a twelve-minute epic, entitled ‘The Truth, The Glow, The Fall’.   

The organ is almost certainly the one found in Copenhagen’s Marmokirken – the Marble Church, in which the album was recorded. Its setting can’t have hurt Dead Magic‘s flights of gothic fantasy, created in part by producer Randall Dunn, whose collaborations have previously included Earth, Sunn O)))) and Boris. His production adds an extra layer of atmosphere, carrying Von Hausswolff’s sound away from the folk-metal/post-rock tendency of previous album The Miraculous and into a new, but no less dark, chamber-pop landscape. If the organ and its counter-pointed shimmer of violin is ‘The Truth..’ of the opening track, then the twinkles of synths sitting on top of the arpeggio in the track’s middle section is its ‘…Glow’. Finally, Von Hausswolff’s voice is left echoing over the sound of alarming, descending synths and this is our ‘Fall’ into her world, and into Dead Magic.

The following track, ‘The Mysterious Vanishing of Electra’ is a ballad in the tradition of Cave and Harvey – its stompy drum and folksy guitar particularly reminiscent of the likes of ‘C’mon Billy’, albeit with a Siouxsie Sioux vocal. Its ending flips the script though, its final two minutes giving us Kate Bush-esque top-notes over an increasingly doom-laden, orchestral rock backing. It’s still theatrical, but on another stage entirely.

 Third track ‘Ugly and Vengeful’ is a none-more-bleak slow build, Fever Ray-ish oddity, before von Hausswolff’s vocals kick in fully after six minutes, leading to a operatic crescendo with Anna as its phantom. The track, the central sixteen minute epic of Dead Magic, closes with a final third that is part dark Goat psych, part sinister carnival.

‘The Marble Eye’ is a relatively pacey five minute organ concerto, still perfectly in keeping with the album’s sombre feel. Closer ‘Källans Återuppståndelse’ opens like an instrumental, before, admidst the electrical storm, von Hausswolff’s voice and the analogue sound of violins break through. It’s a reminder that, even in the age of the internet, something exists beyond the digital realm, unknowable, and magical.  

As part of the promotion of the album, Anna von Hausswolff chose a poem by Walter Ljungquist, in which the Swedish writer observes “[T]here are no legends in our time”. By creating a spectral, dark wonderland of the sublime, both within and without, von Hausswolff has perhaps shown that the magic and the legends aren’t completely gone.

Dead Magic, the upcoming album from Anna von Hausswolff, is out 2nd March via City Slang. You can catch her live in London at The Dome on 12th March.

John McGovern
@etinsuburbiaego

Photo Credit: Gianluca Grasselli

 

Track Of The Day: Anna Von Hausswolff – ‘The Mysterious Vanishing Of Electra’

Following the announcement of her fourth album, due out in March, Swedish artist Anna Von Hausswolff has now shared a brand new video for the majestic first single.

Filled with the soaring power of PJ Harvey alongside an eerie mysticism reminiscent of Kate Bush, ‘The Mysterious Vanishing Of Electra’ is a truly bewitching creation; oozing a haunting, ethereal splendour. Starring Siri Wigzell and Anna von Hausswolff, the video was was directed by Anna’s sister Maria von Hausswolff, who recently won the Cinematography Debut award at the prestigious Camerimage film festival.

Of the video, Maria explains:

“… (it’s) driven by a desire to dig up something that has been wanting to get dug up for a long time. It’s a transition of music, character and images…”

Watch the spellbinding new video here:

Dead Magic, the upcoming new album from Anna Von Hausswolff, is out 2nd March. And catch her live at The Dome, London, on 12th March.

Mari Lane
@marimindles