Mirrorwork cover

Mirrorwork

Released

Alastair Galbraith’s third album isn’t quite beatific, but there’s certainly a calmer radiance to this one, as though he’s maybe resolved some of the emotional conundrums that informed its precursors, Morse and Talisman. The tension and foreboding of the opener, “For Free,” a mantra thatched with highly strung guitars that drone like hornet’s nests, is disquieting, but much of Mirrorwork is more pastoral in tone; it’s rich with snippets of gentle melody, backwards guitar and violin, buzzing casio, softly chanted and mumbled vocals. There are very few artists who can translate such simply complex emotions and experiences – sadness, joy, love, loss, intimacy, everydayness – into songs of such profundity, and furthermore, to make them sound like spectral, yet homely folk songs that’ve always reverberated through our collective consciousness. That’s Galbraith’s gift.

Jon Dale

Suggestions
Corsano, Maranha & Youngs cover

Corsano, Maranha & Youngs

David Maranha, Richard Youngs, Chris Corsano
Around cover

Around

Tom Verlaine
Musikautomatika cover

Musikautomatika

Musikautomatika
Tarot cover

Tarot

Walter Wegmüller
Ghosts On Water cover

Ghosts On Water

Ghosts on Water, Andrew Chalk, Naoko Suzuki, Daisuke Suzuki
Live in the First Year of Heisei, Vol. 2 cover

Live in the First Year of Heisei, Vol. 2

Keiji Haino, Motoharu Yoshizawa, Kan Mikami
High Tide cover

High Tide

Able Noise
Scelsi: Okanagon cover

Scelsi: Okanagon

Joëlle Léandre
Gudrun cover

Gudrun

Pierrot Lunaire
Battiato cover

Battiato

Franco Battiato