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A Present from a Small Distant World

by Alex Eddington

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drewmorrismusic
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drewmorrismusic I really love the suite of electronic tracks that connect the works of this album. The first and last tracks have a spatial quality that surrounds you and pull you along. "Interstellar" was a wonderful concluding piece that left you wanting more.
Another track that really hit me when I was listening was "The Stolen Child". At moments it is so melancholy but at others it was quite playful. It made me stop what I was doing and really listen. Favorite track: INTERSTELLAR / To the Makers of Music.
David Archer
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David Archer I came for the Voyager Golden Record concept and stayed for the evocative storytelling. "Time Will Erase" is among my faves, with an incredible performance by Kristin (vox) and Jennifer (sax). Also the ALL CAPS pieces are rad! Let's fling more music into the outer solar system. Favorite track: Time Will Erase.
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1.
2.
Sonnet XVIII 05:15
3.
HELIOSPHERE 01:41
4.
5.
6.
7.
HELIOSHEATH 02:44
8.
9.
HELIOPAUSE 02:07
10.
Scintillator 06:20
11.

about

Toronto composer Alex Eddington's unorthodox debut album A Present from a Small Distant World is many different things all at once. Sometimes dark, sometimes downright silly, certain moments bear a resemblance to traditional art song, whereas on other occasions Eddington unfurls strange synthetic textures. Its uncharacteristically broad aesthetic reach is matched by its temporal span. Traversing — and often revisiting — music from the past 18 years, it serves as a portrait of his close collaborative relationship with soprano Kristin Mueller-Heaslip, who plays a number of different protagonists throughout the album.

While its nearly two-decade coverage accounts for a certain amount of the album's gleeful heterogeneity, this can also be attributed to its underlying inspiration, which is revealed in the opening cut. There a faded-xerox-choir of Mueller-Heaslips intones Jimmy Carter's 1977 speech that launched the Voyager spacecraft and its so-called Golden Record—a phonographic disc containing an encyclopedic dog's breakfast of earthly texts, images, and music—into space. "The chances that an alien civilization will intercept and decode the record are not high," explains Eddington, "but there is something wonderful about sending greetings hurtling outward."

Of course, A Present from a Small Distant World makes no pretenses of being as ambitious or all-encompassing as its golden counterpart. Its relationship to it lies more in this spirit of interstellar benevolence; the ramifications of putting a document of one's world out into the unknown. That being said, Eddington has managed to cram quite a bit of information onto this disc. Shakespeare receives a forlorn solitary voice treatment, whereas the titular beloved children's author is cast as a set of feverish genre-hopping cabaret songs on Eddington's celebrated Dennis Lee Songs. His episodic treatment of Yeats lunges between slow, hovering minimalism and moments of perverse word-painting. Time Will Erase (featuring a text authored by Mueller-Heaslip) is billed as a chamber opera for soprano and alto saxophone and draws upon Eddington's background as a playwright and actor to spin richness from its spartan resources (and—crucially—silence.) Its libretto, authored by Mueller-Heaslip frames a poem written by its subject, Russian poet Anna Akhmatova. Scintillator's gibberish text, on the other hand was excavated from Eddington's spam folder. Mueller-Heaslip imbues it with maximum urgency, her intensity only magnified by searing electronic effects that Eddington integrated for this recording. INTERSTELLAR / To the Makers of Music, continues this electronic trajectory, and offers the culmination of the brief and cryptic miniatures scattered throughout the album. Where Eddington's scores for these short guitar-and-electronics interjections are collages of chopped-
up morse code and Bach, the grainy synthesized sound foreshadow his recent move toward noisier terrain. Meanwhile as the album concludes the aforementioned multi-tracked chorus of Kristins returns atop the electric furries and gnarly guitar to sing the words etched onto the Golden
Record itself, "To the makers of music: all worlds, all times." (Nick Storring)

www.AlexEddington.com
redshiftrecords.org/releases/tk483/

credits

released February 19, 2021

Composer: Alex Eddington www.AlexEddington.com
Vocals: Kristin Mueller-Heaslip
Saxophone: Jennifer Tran
Piano: Elaine Lau, Joseph Ferretti
Guitar: Daniel Ramjattan
Electronics: Alex Eddington
Recorded by: Paul Talbott at Union Sound Company
Editing and Mixing: Paul Talbott
Mastering: Sage Kim at Lacquer Channel


1) A Present From a Small Distant World (text: 39th President of the U.S.A., Jimmy Carter)
Vocals: Kristin Mueller-Heaslip
Electronics: Alex Eddington

2) Sonnet XVIII (Text: William Shakespeare)
Vocals: Kristin Mueller-Heaslip

3) HELIOSPHERE
Guitar: Daniel Ramjattan
Electronics: Alex Eddington

4) Time Will Erase (Text: Kristin Mueller-Heaslip, Anna Akhmatova trans. Don Thomas)
Vocals: Kristin Mueller-Heaslip
Saxophone: Jennifer Tran

5) TERMINATION SHOCK
Guitar: Daniel Ramjattan
Electronics: Alex Eddington

6) Dennis Lee Songs (Text: Dennis Lee)
Vocals: Kristin Mueller-Heaslip
Piano: Joseph Ferretti

7) HELIOSHEATH
Guitar: Daniel Ramjattan
Electronics: Alex Eddington

8) The Stolen Child (text: W.B. Yeats)
Vocals: Kristin Mueller-Heaslip
Piano: Elaine Lau

9) HELIOPAUSE
Guitar: Daniel Ramjattan
Electronics: Alex Eddington

10) Scintillator (text: Anonymous spam bot)
Vocals: Kristin Mueller-Heaslip
Electronics: Alex Eddington

11) INTERSTELLAR / To the Makers of Music (text: Inscribed by hand on the Golden Record aboard the Voyager spacecraft)
Vocals: Kristin Mueller-Heaslip
Guitar: Daniel Ramjattan
Electronics: Alex Eddington

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Redshift was founded in Vancouver, Canada with a focus on championing the music of contemporary composers.

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