While last year provided extreme
challenges for live music it also saw an outpouring of outstanding recordings. Many
artists switched their energies into recording projects as tours and festivals were
cancelled or postponed. So, here’s a selection of 2021 releases that are worth discovering - or revisiting...
Wardruna's stirring fifth
album,
Kvitravn, sounded like it could have been the dramatic
soundtrack to a Viking movie - and with good reason; the Norwegian band's
founder member, singer and composer Einar Selvik contributed music to the TV
series
Vikings.
Wardruna use rather esoteric
instruments including the taglharpa, kravik-lyr and goat horn, along with
occasional sound effects like thunder and wolves howling, in this collection of
songs about white ravens, stags and spirit-weavers. This might all sound
contrived but Wardruna perform with such conviction the effect is undeniably
compelling.
Selvik has a background in black
metal - he was previously the drummer in Gorgoroth - and insistent drums and
potent vocals feature here, evidence that dark, pagan folk might, after all, be
the more thoughtful cousin of satanic black metal.
Wardruna describe the album as
"a visual soundscape" and, on tracks like 'Fylgjutal' and
'Vindavlarljod', it's easy to imagine raiders setting sail across the North Sea
in longships. If you're facing a job interview or some other challenge Kvitravn
could be just the thing to put you in an invincible frame of mind.
Fans of Wardruna will be pleased
to hear the 2016 album by Ivar Bjørnson & Einar Selvik Skuggsjá has
just been reissued – and Warduna are embarking on a mammoth world tour starting
in March.
In a very different style,
another band who enjoy using esoteric instruments are Agent Starling, who
have made the hurdy-gurdy cool (again.) I wrote about this duo’s debut
album European Howl (not to mention their seasonal Northern Lights Trilogy EP) in a previous blog post, so I won’t
repeat myself. However, I would count European Howl among the most original albums of 2021 and I am thrilled to learn that Agent Starling are next month releasing a follow-up full-length
album - Constellation of Birds. I'll be reviewing that soon here on the blog.
2021 also saw the release of
Ghost
Owl, which came about after wildlife conservationist and
filmmaker/photographer Simon Hurwitz asked
Brooks Williams to compose
some music to accompany some short films. Williams (born in Georgia, USA but
now resident in Cambridge, UK) is a long-serving purveyor of rootsy,
full-blooded acoustic guitar. With touring on hold, he teamed up with violinist
Aaron Catlow and the duo found themselves with an album’s worth of
owl-inspired tunes.
These ten instrumentals evoke
images of the majestic creature with the heart-shaped face. The marriage of
guitar and violin recalls the style of Martin Carthy and Dave Swarbrick and,
occasionally, of Django Reinhardt and Stéphane Grappelli.
The title track and ‘Rene’s
Garden’ are sinuous and atmospheric, the ethereal violin on ‘Tipper’s Field’ is
suitably owlish while ‘First Dusk’ is an old-time waltz. With the bonus of
Hurwitz’s wonderful owl photography illustrating the CD, Ghost Owl is a
delight.
While Warduna’s Einar Selvik loves
his taglharpa,
Andy Aquarius prefers his harps to be of the Celtic
variety. If you’re thinking Andy Aquarius can’t be his real name, you’d be
right. Andy Ozbolt is a singer and multi-instrumentalist with German and
Croatian roots, currently based in Berlin. His previous musical output has been
accessible, dreamy pop, à la Tame Impala. But his 2021 album
Chapel
dispenses with synths and trippy drum patterns and features little more than
his self-built Celtic harp and vocals.
The opening title track sets the
tone with three minutes of solo harp before Aquarius’s vocal begins, soon
joined by Enya-like backing vocals provided by Maja Presnell. Aquarius’s
singing style reminds me of fellow German multi-instrumentalist Nils Kercher,
and the overall effect is similar to Kercher’s earlier albums – gentle and
meditative.
Although there are only six
tracks most are over six minutes, allowing plenty of time for the listener to
get lost in the unhurried flow of the music. At times, it could almost be the
kind of new age music used as an accompaniment to yoga, but there is enough
melodic and rhythmic interest to make Chapel more than mere background
listening.
One of the most surprising
collaborations of 2021 was
Sleeping Spirals which saw
singer, accordionist and dancer
Hannah James team up with French cellist
Toby Kuhn. This is a exquisitely-produced album, both musically and in terms
of the cover design – the CD is a thing of beauty. The combination of James’
voice and Kuhn’s often highly-experimental cello creates an atmosphere like a
melancholic, brooding European folk tale, unnerving but compelling.
Not many artists can boast twenty-three
studio albums to their name but Welsh singer-songwriter Martyn Joseph
achieved this last year with the release of 1960 – an album that takes
its title from the year of his birth. The eleven tracks on 1960 form an
extended reflection on reaching the age of sixty and all that entails. The
opening song ‘Born Too Late’ laments the fact that Joseph missed out on being
in Laurel Canyon in 1971, imagining what that would have been like, and
considers “How long does it take for a man to know himself?” A pleasant surprise is that the track ‘House’
features, rather wonderfully, the singer-songwriter Janis Ian on piano and
vocals.
Finally, if I had to name my favourite
release of 2021 it would have to be global folk collective
Mishra’s album
Reclaim. Recorded ‘live-in-the-room’ in a farmhouse in Gloucestershire,
Reclaim has immense freshness and positivity, a conscious attempt to
reclaim the joy that music can give us when so much of our freedom has been
restricted. Fusing British and American folk music with Indian classical music,
Mishra have a deftness and a wonderful lightness of touch. The blending of Ford
Collier’s whistles with Kate Griffin’s vocals and banjo and John Ball’s tabla
accompaniment is unique and irresistible, as is Ball’s santoor playing on ‘This
is the Sound.’ I am tempted to go off and live in a parallel universe where
Reclaim’s
bouncy, opening track ‘The Truth’ would be number one in the charts for a very long
time. If this were the case, all would be well! But, if not, why not allow yourself
to be transported in your imagination by trying some of the albums mentioned
here.