umbra
Umbra
is one of Seth Nehil's strongest solo efforts and his most immersive since
Tracing the Skin of Clouds. It consists of three mid-length tracks that move
in and out of each other like three movements of a larger work. For the most
part, they are drones of an acoustic nature, although when sounds are massed
like they are here, the mind can easily hear things that are not really there.
But the main components seem to be acoustic at heart: Tibetan bowls, bowed
metal, rubbed resonating objects, and field recordings, both the urban
and natural kind,
to which Nehil has added the contributions of Bobin Eirth on recorders and
reeds and Bethany Wright on voice (Michael Northam also appears, obliquely
credited
for "assistance"). All these elements (and there are many; each listen
seems to bring out new ones) are left untreated -- or so it seems -- but in
the denser passages, as in "Situla," the very nature of the drone
becomes ambiguous before reverting to its "obviously acoustic" state.
This ambiguity is Nehil's strongest asset, along with the fact that the music
always
sounds so meaningful and natural. The sudden arrival of a synthesizer tone
13 minutes into the third track threatens the architecture of the work, but
the
composer turns what is first perceived as an intrusion into another enigma,
making shimmering harmonics (again, acoustic or not?) grow out of the tone
for a gentle
finale. That part and the vocal drone in "Mira" are the highlights
of this very fine disc.
- François Couture, AMG
Favorites of 2003:
Umbra – Eric Lanzillotta (Anomalous Records)
Umbra – Dale Lloyd (And/Oar Records) www.and/oar.org
Umbra - Brendan Murray (Intransitive Recordings) I don’t know how Seth
makes this careful, concentrated music, but I do know that this record has never
sounded the same way twice. I feel like he’s switching the disc or something
each time I put it on. www.intransitiverecordings.com
In what seems to be a continuing series after Stria (Erewhon) and Confluence
(Intransitive), his recordings with Jgrzinich, Seth Nehil has set out on
his own. His new sound ventures formally into what could be structured
field recordings,
if there were such a thing. The listener almost hears lines being drawn
with some type of mechanical/electronic pen on “Naos.” Reflective of the
CD cover, which uses Nehil's Black Walnut Drawings made in 2002, the overall
image portrayed is one of connectivity, of a finite network of measurement projected
from an abundance of single cells. His patterns are organic and freeform, though
they pulsate and float, rise and fall. On “Mira” the vibration is
fertile and exhilarating, as if it were levitation incarnate. Umbra has its mysterious
crevices and eyebrow curling curiosities, so much so that if you listen with
headphones there may be a tendency to look over your shoulder more than once.
There is a certain presence looming in the near distance; This presence is carried
out through “Situla,” the final track, though here a passage has
been made, a disembodied escape hatch. Nehil incorporates the unrecognizable,
phantom voice of Bethany Wright, recorders and reeds by Bobin Eirth with assistance
from Michael Northam. The drama builds with the curve in the frequency and
the timbre of its resulting sound. This may be a lunar hangar for castaway
orbs and
other space missionaries. In fact, the lightheadedness of the ride is just
brief prior to a more compact venture down a running stream that renders an
intense
sense of calm. And just then, a swarm, a siren call, a warning is sent, as
if some chamber has been breached. The complex cadence is as haunting as the
echo
of a bell's hollow hazing. Overall there is a sense of oneness in this inter-gravitational
space, though you are never quite alone.
- TJ Norris, igloo.com, September, 2003
…
Seth Nehil has worked with Northam on a handful of releases and in the sound
arts organization Orogenetics. Umbra, his latest set of drone studies, holds
some obvious similarities to Northam’s work. For instance, both he and
Northam rely on the swarming choruses of sound that occur when layering multiple
versions on top of each other. They also define their work as a form of sonic
topography that articulates the patterns and ghostly echoes within ambient spaces,
while drawing scientifically poetic analogies to the body and the environment.
However, Nehil harvests comparatively more active sound fields for their resonant
tonalities. These often reflect an interest in performative actions such as rubbing
textured objects against each other. Umbra is a far more urgent recording than
Northam’s latest subdued production, yet both are incredibly strong works
that warrant favorable comparisons to Phill Niblock and Francisco Lopez.
- Jim Haynes, The Wire, June 2003