| The
Independent
(UK)
7 june 2002
Piano
Magic
Writers Without Homes
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Since
their first release in 1996, Piano Magic's constantly shifting line-up
has apparently gone through more than 30 members. Writers Without
Homes, their follow-up to last year's soundtrack to Bigas Luna's
Son De Mar, adds a further battalion of collaborators to the multicultural
core of Glen Johnson, Miguel Marin, Alasdair Steer and Jerome Tcherneyan,
including former Cocteau Twin Simon Raymonde and members of the
Czars, Tarwater, Life Without Buildings and Tram. It's a departure
of sorts from the tone-poems and instrumentals of Son De Mar, not
least in featuring vocals throughout. Not that you'd call these
pieces "songs" ˆ in most cases, they're simply texts
recited over settings, which aim to crystallise the moods of their
poetic observations and dreamlike tableaux. "Postal" is
typically quirky, with tinkling gamelan shading Suzy Mangion's fragile
plaint, "I was a postal worker from May to July/I left because
of allergies - the letters made me cry"; "Certainty",
likewise, features gentle harp arpeggios behind musings on mortality.
Elsewhere, tracks such as "Silence" and "The Season
Is Long" seek to impose more pronounced rhythmic structures,
the latter's slow, sluggish progress sounding like trip-hop minus
the hop, it's theme of longing picked outon vibes and that most
melancholic of the string family, the viola. Found sounds ˆ
rain, bells, a thunderclap ˆ are used to fashion subtle musique
concrete textures in places, but they're always carefully employed
further a track's atmosphere and temperament, rising out of the
backing like ghosts, or lingering like mist. Exquisite, if a touch
diffident at times.
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