tom the terrible
I happened to purchase this, my first Haptic album, while revisiting the fantastic Dan Simmons novel “The Terror”. I can recommend no better soundtrack for a frozen, organic, novel of hope, despair and terror. Look forward to more from this fantastic artist!
drone2805
Here is the "CAVERN" ATMOSPHERE BY EXCELLENCE! A cold and wet den that resonates with disturbing metallic creaking. And from a conceptual point of view, I like to conceive of this echo of metallic textures as a drawing of the cave, a sort of geo-localization process carried out in an artistic context. So, I'd like to be "bat" to draw what I hear! I really like this work and I RECOMMEND IT!
Glass mastered CD. Packaged in clear vinyl sleeve with folded insert on 300gr matt offset paper. Includes an additional art card on 300gr matt coated satin paper. Limited edition of 200 hand-numbered copies.
Includes unlimited streaming of ten years under the earth
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Streaming + Download
Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
Louisville, Kentucky, sits along the banks of the Ohio River, where the river cuts through the limestone and begins to drop away toward the Mississippi. The hills that rise above that river are honeycombed with caves. It was in one of those caves on the outskirts of the city that Ten Years Under the Earth was recorded.
In March 2016, Tim Barnes invited Haptic to come down from Chicago to perform with him at Dreamland, the performance arts space that he curated in Louisville. We were excited to have the chance to play together, and we wanted to take advantage of the opportunity to record as well. Rather than simply document the concert or book time in a studio, however, Tim suggested that we spend time improvising together in a particularly interesting—and resonant—place that he had access to, one where he had long wanted to record: a cave in the nearby hills. Chris Kincaid, a well-respected audio engineer, composer, and good friend of Tim’s, volunteered to bring his portable equipment along to engineer the recording for us.
The morning after our concert, Tim led us down a series of winding country roads to the cave. Its history is difficult to know for certain. It seems to have been used to store barrels of beer and whisky before the Civil War, and local legends say that it may have been used as a debtor’s prison after that. But now it is largely abandoned, left empty and—except for the occasional concert—forgotten.
Unlocking a heavy, rusted steel door that was set into the side of the hill, Tim led us inside. It took a several long moments to adjust to the darkness, but the light that poured through the doorway and filtered down from the stone ventilation shafts gave some illumination. Then someone hit a switch, a handful of lamps mounted along the walls buzzed into life, and we gradually began to take in our surroundings in the dim light.
It was the spring, and the rains had been falling all week. Inside the cave, the stone floor glistened with moisture and the temperature dropped immediately once we stepped within. From the ceiling above, rainwater that had seeped through the earth fell in sporadic drops.
We had brought only a few simple objects with which to make music: a shortwave radio, cymbals, a drum, a bell, and a handful of other instruments. The cave would give us the rest. A hollow wooden platform stood at one end of the chamber; struck with a stone, it boomed. The rocks that we found scattered on the floor could be scraped along the walls or tapped against one another.
When the microphones were ready, we simply began, working in an open and organic way, and responded to the space—not simply to its acoustic properties, but to its atmosphere: a mood of stillness, calm, and incredible age. We each moved slowly about the cave, placing cymbals where they might catch a falling drop of water, approaching and receding from each other, discovering and exploring, and often simply listening to the patient, almost hypnotic rhythms that the cave seemed to make without the need for our intervention. Each hushed gesture and footstep seemed to fill the entire space. Time seemed to stand still.
When, several hours later, we emerged from the cold half-light of underground, it was a powerful experience to feel the air again, to breathe deeply, and to see daylight. We hope that this recording captures something of the sense of that place and that experience.
(Haptic, 25 October 2017)
credits
released November 20, 2017
LOCATION : Louisville, Kentucky
Steven Hess
Joseph Clayton Mills
Adam Sonderberg
Tim Barnes
Recorded by Chris Kincaid / Mills.
Mixed by Haptic.
Transferred by Greg Norman.
Mastered by Tomas Korber.
Cover design, additional textures & treatments by Daniel Crokaert.
Based exclusively on photos by Haptic and Tim Barnes.
Lamp photo by Tim Barnes.
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