Wednesday 10 March 2021

Erland Dahlen - Bones

An immersive listening experience. Norwegian percussionist releases fourth solo LP. 

 

On a recent episode of Radio 4's Desert Island Discs, the author David Mitchell spoke about one of his record choices as making him feel emotions he didn't know existed and making him feel nostalgic for times and places he doesn't even know. I may have got the wording slightly wrong there but hopefully you get a sense of the sentiment. I'm reminded of this quote while listening to the new album by Erland Dahlen, a much respected percussionist within free-jazz circles in his native Norway. Bones is Dahlen's fourth album, having previously released Rolling Bomber (2012), Blossom Bells (2015), and Clocks (2018).

You would think that the tendency for drummers as bandleaders would be to make virtuosity and showiness the central feature when it comes to recording. (I'm reminded here of a Gene Krupa/Buddy Rich LP I picked up at a charity shop, where the two pitch up against each other. It's a fine record but its emotional resonance is hampered by the desire to show off chops.) Thankfully that's not the case here – Bones is all about the emotional journey. Meditative, hypnotic, at times soothing, always immersive.

Dahlen plays pretty much all the music himself, which features a broad range of drums and percussion instruments along with Mellotron, modular synths, dulcimer and zither. The album has a rich instrumental palette, and one that embraces experimentation – along with the vintage drum skins used there are musical saws and the sound of marbles rattling on a plate. Also notable is the use of heavy reverb, which along with the virtuosic drumming and focus on emotion makes for a compelling one-sitting listening experience, full of progression and forward movement.

The last year has been one of increased solitude for many, a time when if you've been lucky enough to stay healthy and solvent there's been an opportunity to take yourself on an inner journey. A record such as Bones is a perfect soundtrack for such moments of reflection. It's an album that requires you to turn off the phone, TV, and tablets, to put on some headphones and let the music take you somewhere.

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