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Moraines
- Paul Bradley & Cría Cuervos Paul
Bradley and Cría Cuervos conspire to accelerate the fabric of time itself
with their collaborative work, "Moraines." It is an extensive ambient
piece, and begins with such quiet subtlety it found me double-checking the speakers
for a minute or two before I decided that indeed, there was a track playing. Forty-six
minutes and unknown ages later, "Moraines" had transformed a tapestry
of sibilant drones and harmonic hums into an acoustic time machine, dialed to
the late Pleistocene. A moraine is an accumulation of boulders, stones, or
other debris carried and deposited by a glacier. Paul Bradley and Cría
Cuervos have either created the very music by which to watch glaciers, or a soundtrack
in which the ghosts of ice flows passed are revisited at a glacial pace. The listener
is transported to a sparse land of grey earth and windswept vegetation, where
cycles of climate and erosion have remade vistas time and again. From vantage
atop a small ridge - amassed in the wake of a glacier many thousands of years
before - hints at booming undercurrents rise to the listener's ears through uncharted
meters of long-forgotten ice. "Moraines" is a system of deposits; a
complex sediment of sounds. In its beginning, the haunting echoes of falling stones
scatter through lulling white noise, like unseen things rustling in dark crevices.
The piece gradually shifts toward more harmonic tones and builds intensity with
hissing crescendos reminiscent of trapped air escaping through widening cracks.
Finally, after more than thirty minutes have passed, the collaborators usher in
thawing ice and sounds of trickling, seeping and gurgling water. At the static-filled
culmination of "Moraines," waking life - buzzing insects and restless
amphibians, perhaps - gathers in the slowly warming pools and scrub where glaciers
once enthralled the land. Sandswept,
Connexion Bizarre
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