Glass Feathers: Adkins, Sundin, Hedman, Arkvik
£13.78
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Label: Huddersfield Contemporary Records
Cat No: HCR38
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Release Date: 12th September 2025
Contents
Works
Glass Feathers (Paulina Sundin, Monty Adkins)Humlegangar (Paulina Sundin, Ylva Q Arkvik)
Movement (Paulina Sundin, Jens Hedman)
Artists
Jorgen Pettersson (alto saxophone)Jonny Axelsson (percussion)
Works
Glass Feathers (Paulina Sundin, Monty Adkins)Humlegangar (Paulina Sundin, Ylva Q Arkvik)
Movement (Paulina Sundin, Jens Hedman)
Artists
Jorgen Pettersson (alto saxophone)Jonny Axelsson (percussion)
About
Sundin and Adkins collaborate on the four-part composition Glass Feathers. Each movement comprises a section of an imaginary rite, as the alto saxophone performs pitch materials which are stretched, expanded, and refracted. Meanwhile, the electronics act in the manner of a Greek chorus, providing commentary or a musical mirroring of the virtuosic solo alto saxophone. The result is an evocative and compelling work blending instrumental virtuosity with immersive ambient textures.
Movement, an electroacoustic work by Sundin and Hedman, originates from sound recordings of ethnic instruments stored at the Swedish Music Museum. These fragile, instruments are not ordinarily displayed to the public, but Movement allows them to be heard as they never have before. Their unique timbres are amplified and augmented, evoking a haunting soundscape of an unheard past.
Finally, Humlegångar (which translates as 'bumble bees') is named after one of its constituent electronic sounds, created from recordings of the alto saxophone and various percussion instruments. Composed by Sundin and Arkvik, and performed by Pettersson and Axelsson, the work combines the extremes of Arkvik's instrumental writing and the refinement of Sundin's electroacoustic soundworld. We hear resonant percussion timbrally extended by electronic processing, contrasting with pulsating rhythmic passages. Undertaking an extended journey between quiet, tentative materials and intensely dramatic passages, Humlegångar finds moments of fragile stability amongst passages of disruption.
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