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  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    Purchasable with gift card

      $10 USD  or more

     

  • Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album

    there is nothing obvious about this music.

    it is ambiguous on nearly every level.

    it is intensely private, yet has none of the usual halting cadences of tortured introspection. on the contrary, it hard to imagine a music more plain-spoken: the melodies are presented unadorned and the accompaniments are what one might term sturdy if that didn’t sound backhanded.

    it conveys an at times strong feeling of nostalgia, yet carries none of nostalgia’s usual signifiers. there’s no aping of old-fashioned styles, and there’s no hiss, crackle, surface noise or reverb to distance us. the recorded sound is clear and direct. we feel the two musicians playing together in the room, as if they were to be here tomorrow or next week.

    it both does and doesn’t feel like jazz or folk music. it doesn’t really adhere to the forms or the performance style that mark those styles, but does foreground a sort of specificity that is fundamental to both: in jazz the way that contingent features of performance become structural; and in folk music the way a certain performer distinguishes themselves from tradition.

    this record’s predecessor offers a strong clue to the sensibility at work here. on that one, each of the songs was functionally related to a person or context. and while this set of songs were composed specifically for the record, the general feeling remains that this is music that lives in everyday life. and not as background tint, but as a subjective means of being in the world and taking note of ones circumstances. this is why it can still feel private while being so direct and present. it is charged with the undeniable intimacy of the listening that lies at the heart of the private relationships with people that anchor our lives.

    when we try to make sense of meaning in music we tend to reach for the social. how genres form, how and where particular styles of music are performed, and the manner of social engagement that accompanies the music. each style has its own baggage, that weighs it down, but also helps us make sense of it and deepen our own experiences through reference to tradition. what this manner of thinking privileges is performance and the public space of music with a capital m.

    it elides the fact that our most private memories are often shaped by music that was heard alone, out of context, or with just one or two friends. it elides the memories that can be wrapped up in playing a song after dinner, alone or with other people. or that week that you listened to the same record all day every day. the most deeply lived social spaces of music, in other words, are often domestic.

    that music has some kind of privileged status with respect to memory is a commonplace. it’s in everything from proust to oldies radio. people organize their memories of their lives according to what was playing in the background.

    but it is more subtle than that. there’s a sense that by listening again we can find exactly the attentiveness to our surroundings that marked the corresponding moments in the past. we can feel exactly as we did, or at the least we can grasp threads of our previous experience. it is precisely the privacy and vulnerability of the listening experience that allows for this. further, because this kind of listening is a complete immersion in the present, the desire to re-live, to re-hear these experiences is not just to remind ourselves of where we were when we heard that song, but even more to find the feelings of possibility from those other hearings that opened into the future.

    Includes unlimited streaming of The Box Tree via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    ... more
    ships out within 7 days
    Purchasable with gift card

      $25 USD or more 

     

  • The Box Tree - Vinyl LP
    Record/Vinyl + Digital Album

    there is nothing obvious about this music.

    it is ambiguous on nearly every level.

    it is intensely private, yet has none of the usual halting cadences of tortured introspection. on the contrary, it hard to imagine a music more plain-spoken: the melodies are presented unadorned and the accompaniments are what one might term sturdy if that didn’t sound backhanded.

    it conveys an at times strong feeling of nostalgia, yet carries none of nostalgia’s usual signifiers. there’s no aping of old-fashioned styles, and there’s no hiss, crackle, surface noise or reverb to distance us. the recorded sound is clear and direct. we feel the two musicians playing together in the room, as if they were to be here tomorrow or next week.

    it both does and doesn’t feel like jazz or folk music. it doesn’t really adhere to the forms or the performance style that mark those styles, but does foreground a sort of specificity that is fundamental to both: in jazz the way that contingent features of performance become structural; and in folk music the way a certain performer distinguishes themselves from tradition.

    this record’s predecessor offers a strong clue to the sensibility at work here. on that one, each of the songs was functionally related to a person or context. and while this set of songs were composed specifically for the record, the general feeling remains that this is music that lives in everyday life. and not as background tint, but as a subjective means of being in the world and taking note of ones circumstances. this is why it can still feel private while being so direct and present. it is charged with the undeniable intimacy of the listening that lies at the heart of the private relationships with people that anchor our lives.

    when we try to make sense of meaning in music we tend to reach for the social. how genres form, how and where particular styles of music are performed, and the manner of social engagement that accompanies the music. each style has its own baggage, that weighs it down, but also helps us make sense of it and deepen our own experiences through reference to tradition. what this manner of thinking privileges is performance and the public space of music with a capital m.

    it elides the fact that our most private memories are often shaped by music that was heard alone, out of context, or with just one or two friends. it elides the memories that can be wrapped up in playing a song after dinner, alone or with other people. or that week that you listened to the same record all day every day. the most deeply lived social spaces of music, in other words, are often domestic.

    that music has some kind of privileged status with respect to memory is a commonplace. it’s in everything from proust to oldies radio. people organize their memories of their lives according to what was playing in the background.

    but it is more subtle than that. there’s a sense that by listening again we can find exactly the attentiveness to our surroundings that marked the corresponding moments in the past. we can feel exactly as we did, or at the least we can grasp threads of our previous experience. it is precisely the privacy and vulnerability of the listening experience that allows for this. further, because this kind of listening is a complete immersion in the present, the desire to re-live, to re-hear these experiences is not just to remind ourselves of where we were when we heard that song, but even more to find the feelings of possibility from those other hearings that opened into the future.

    Includes unlimited streaming of The Box Tree via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    ... more

    Sold Out

1.
2.
The Box Tree 03:56
3.
Fragments 03:38
4.
5.
The Typist 03:25
6.
7.
8.
Keeper 03:06
9.
10.
Óli 01:49

about

there is nothing obvious about this music.

it is ambiguous on nearly every level.

it is intensely private, yet has none of the usual halting cadences of tortured introspection. on the contrary, it hard to imagine a music more plain-spoken: the melodies are presented unadorned and the accompaniments are what one might term sturdy if that didn’t sound backhanded.

it conveys an at times strong feeling of nostalgia, yet carries none of nostalgia’s usual signifiers. there’s no aping of old-fashioned styles, and there’s no hiss, crackle, surface noise or reverb to distance us. the recorded sound is clear and direct. we feel the two musicians playing together in the room, as if they were to be here tomorrow or next week.

it both does and doesn’t feel like jazz or folk music. it doesn’t really adhere to the forms or the performance style that mark those styles, but does foreground a sort of specificity that is fundamental to both: in jazz the way that contingent features of performance become structural; and in folk music the way a certain performer distinguishes themselves from tradition.

this record’s predecessor offers a strong clue to the sensibility at work here. on that one, each of the songs was functionally related to a person or context. and while this set of songs were composed specifically for the record, the general feeling remains that this is music that lives in everyday life. and not as background tint, but as a subjective means of being in the world and taking note of ones circumstances. this is why it can still feel private while being so direct and present. it is charged with the undeniable intimacy of the listening that lies at the heart of the private relationships with people that anchor our lives.

when we try to make sense of meaning in music we tend to reach for the social. how genres form, how and where particular styles of music are performed, and the manner of social engagement that accompanies the music. each style has its own baggage, that weighs it down, but also helps us make sense of it and deepen our own experiences through reference to tradition. what this manner of thinking privileges is performance and the public space of music with a capital m.

it elides the fact that our most private memories are often shaped by music that was heard alone, out of context, or with just one or two friends. it elides the memories that can be wrapped up in playing a song after dinner, alone or with other people. or that week that you listened to the same record all day every day. the most deeply lived social spaces of music, in other words, are often domestic.

that music has some kind of privileged status with respect to memory is a commonplace. it’s in everything from proust to oldies radio. people organize their memories of their lives according to what was playing in the background.

but it is more subtle than that. there’s a sense that by listening again we can find exactly the attentiveness to our surroundings that marked the corresponding moments in the past. we can feel exactly as we did, or at the least we can grasp threads of our previous experience. it is precisely the privacy and vulnerability of the listening experience that allows for this. further, because this kind of listening is a complete immersion in the present, the desire to re-live, to re-hear these experiences is not just to remind ourselves of where we were when we heard that song, but even more to find the feelings of possibility from those other hearings that opened into the future.

credits

released October 16, 2013

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Mengi Reykjavik, Iceland

Mengi hosts diverse art events. releases by some of the nations most ambitious musicians and operates as an art and record store.

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