Aboutface
The water that glows like dancing glass cuts crimson
Coordinates
/
2022
LP
12.99/19.99
COORDLP001
Eco vinyl, gatefold sleeve
Incl. VAT plus shipping / Orders from outside the EU are exempt from VAT
Tracklist
1Small hands and feet in the sand show you the great illusion
2Coutata Couyata save Couyata
3We flee whilst the wild smoking horses swim among us
4The water that glows like dancing glass cuts crimson

A self-release, all artist profits will go towards Extinction Rebellion’s legal fund to help provide counsel to those protesting against contributors to the climate emergency. All artist profits from this release are to be donated to Extinction Rebellion’s legal fund to help provide counsel to those protesting against contributors to the climate emergency, much needed since the UK government have decided to criminalise disruptive protesting, at a time when civil disobedience is urgently needed most to force action and help mitigate the climate emergency.

Conceptual artist Aboutface reveals his vaporous new LP, a vital climate emergency-themed project which utilises poetry collected from his dreams alongside sound recordings captured during polar expeditions to Antarctica’s most vulnerable areas c/o the Alfred Wegener Institute - a centre for polar and marine research. Featuring long-term violin collaborator Taro and dream prose reciter Leyla Pillai, it explores a surreal intersection between the collective dream realm and the disappearing polar cryosphere The water that glows like dancing glass cuts crimson comes after his warmly-received debut LP on revered experimental London label AD93. Released last September, the four-tracker titled °s was inspired by patterns found in urban nature, such as the fibonacci sequence, and it also introduced Aboutface’s lucid leanings into poetry as an inspiration source to spur sound creation. Weaving between experimental, ambient and leftfield territory, his follow up comes off of a three-month period of dream journaling. “A recurring theme of flooding came through,” he explains. “I’d see a railway line that led into the sea; a room filled with seawater; a city centre flooded.” He’d become adept at recalling their content in more detail, which was further aided by a meditation practice to prolong the hypnopompic state - the state of consciousness leading out of sleep. “Revisiting and reflecting on this theme, I decided to pursue a project based on glaciology and rising sea levels. Following some initial research, I initiated a dialogue with the Alfred Wegener Institute, who kindly granted access to their incredibly valuable expedition recordings. A lot of these are taken from polar locations that aren’t there anymore, as well as the mammals that once inhabited it, because the glaciers and ice shelves are retreating rapidly. This LP presents a piece of aural history in that regard.” Another interesting development in Aboutface’s processes was his ability to see dream prose. Sections of text literally seen in his dreams became the song titles in advance of the music being made and influenced the songs through musical interpretation. “Take the title track - I saw this line of text typed out in red on an old typewriter.” Next came his acrylic painting of a glacier with a background made from recycled plastic cosmetic bottles collected from the UK’s coastlines. Aboutface and violinist Taro would then take turns performing to and in front of the painting as a guide. “The track starts off with traditional harmonious nature sounds - birdsong, a gentle stream and insects. It progresses to synthetic representations of nature in a dystopic future, such as the sounds of a printer mimicking a seagull, and the metallic drones of machinery being shaped to imitate the crashing of sea waves. Taro used his violin to interpret the painting textures and an acceleration of glacial ice density loss and subsequent climate destruction - his playing starting as a gentle meandering, then progressing to sharp foreboding arpeggios all in one 12-minute improvised take. I then used this as the master unedited template to build my own musical interpretations and composition around.” Perhaps the most poignant of the tracks is the opener. Featuring the evocative sound of ice falling into the sea and breaking away from an ice shelf that’s since retreated towards the Antarctic landscape, the track is a masterclass in affective composition. “ ‘Small hands and feet in the sand show you the great illusion’ comes from a dream in which I saw a group of children on the beach, articulating their perspective through drawings in the sand, revealing the truth in what’s truly important, right now and for our future. You can hear sea leopard calls throughout which sounds like underwater lasers reflecting off the glacial base. I shaped and composed their vocalisations to have an evocative impact on the listener, which I think is achieved, especially with the pensive quality and prowess of Taro’s playing.” Concerned with a lack of transparency of the true environmental impact of music releases, Ben is also including an essay which highlights the hidden environmental cost of current music consumption, and the potential reforms to stimulate industry action with the aim to contribute to music becoming more environmentally sustainable and energy transparent. Enabling consumers and artist’s alike to exercise their judicious right to make an environmentally informed choice to release or consume music, in a time of climate emergency. Eco-friendly recycled vinyl , limited to 300 copies only. Mastering and lacquer cut by Ruy Mariné at Dubplates & Mastering. Meditators are also invited to immerse themselves in a bonus package of polar soundscape compositions, crafted by Aboutface for guided dream meditations to aid lucidity and recollection.