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"We find no vestige of a beginning, no prospect of an end"
James Hutton, Theory of the Earth, 1795
Deep underground, life moves slowly. Once teeming with
insect and amphibian life, the great swamps of the
Carboniferous era were buried under the weight of 300
million years, eventually returning to the surface as coal. In
this new form they would be consumed in fires and furnaces
for three thousand years before blackening the lungs of
Empire and driving the Industrial Revolution. It was then
that James Hutton, the first geologist, began to consider the
depths beneath our feet and the unimaginable abyss of time
that they represent. This is the world of The Stargazer's
Assistant. This is the forge of the Earth. This is deep time.
The Other Side Of The Island is the soundtrack to the
sculptural works collected under the same name, both being
the work of David J Smith. In addition to his percussion
duties with Guapo, Smith has spent the last two years
bringing his visions to life; life that emerged slowly,
painstakingly, out of wax, coal, copper and lead. In much the
same way, the soundtrack itself slowly writhes organically
before the listener: the groan of the motherlode, the shifting
of tectonic plates, the song of the Earth's crust.
In collaboration with longstanding musical cohort Daniel
O'Sullivan (with whom Smith plays in Miasma & The
Carousel Of Dead Horses) and audio engineer Antti
Uusumaki, Smith has created a strange work comprising of
layered vocals, percussion, electronics and prepared strings.
The Stargazer's Assistant offer up the soundtrack of eternal,
elemental labour.
1. The Other Side of the Island pt 1 (22:09)
- Click here to listen to a short clip.
2. The Transport (2:50)
- Click here to listen to a short clip.
3. The Other Side of the Island pt 2 (13:02)
CD in jewel case with metallic print.
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