Chantal Acda - Saturday Moon [vinyl 180g]

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Premiera: 23.04.2021

Nowa płyta pochodzącej z Holandii artystki.
Chantal Acda zaczynałą swoją przygodę z muzyką w takich zespołach jak Isbells, True Bypass, Marble Sounds czy Distance, Light & Sky, który współtworzyła z Chrisem Eckmanem. Od czasu swego debiutu "Let Your Hands Be My Guide" z 2013 roku współpracowała z takimi artystami jak Nils Frahm, Bill Frisell (wspólna płyta) Peter Broderick, Heather Woods Broderick, Valgeir Sigurdsson, Gyda Valtysdottir czy Adam Wiltzie.

„When it comes to singer-songwriters, Chantal Acda is one of the world’s best kept secrets.“ - Eclipsed

„Chantal Acda’s for everyone looking for songs with an edge and personal depth to them!“
- Good Times

„With a touch of tremolo, Chantal Acda's voice sneaks everywhere.“ - Rolling Stone







Chantal Acda komponuje, pisze do piosenek poetyckie teksty w języku angielskim, gra na gitarze, fortepianie i śpiewa głosem przypominającym Suzanne Vega, może nieco bardziej rozwibrowanym. Niniejsze wydawnictwo jest jej dziewiątym projektem, który został nagrany z rozbudowanym akompaniamentem instrumentalnym i wokalnym.

(...) Niezmiennie starannym wokalizom liderki, utrzymanym w tonizujących klimatach, towarzyszą zmyślne sploty gitarowych pasaży, gdzieś w oddali pojawiają się tęskna trąbka lub skrzypce, z tła wyłania się nastrojowo zawodzący chór. To wszystko pozwala wytworzyć i utrzymać na płycie atmosferę pełną melancholijnego liryzmu.

Osiem piosenek napisanych przez Chantal Acdę ma bardzo osobisty charakter, jest retrospekcją ważnych momentów z jej życia. "Saturday Moon" to piękny autoportret dojrzałej artystki.

Cezary Gumiński / audio.com.pl

 

Najnowsze dzieło holenderskiej otula ciepłem i spokojem nawet wtedy, gdy utwory wybrzmiewają siłą, niemal walecznością, dają ujście pierwotnym instynktom. (...) Zahaczający o folk i muzykę korzeni, a sporadycznie też brzmienia elektroniczne (Disappear) materiał porządkują przede wszystkim wyważone partie gitarowe i wyeksponowana sekcja rytmiczna.
Katarzyna Turowicz / Tylko Rock




Tak o nowej płycie pisze Chris Eckman:

I first heard Chantal Acda sing and play the early 2000’s in San Sebastian, Spain. I shared the bill that night with her group Sleeping Dog. After their set was finished and I had caught my breath, I thought of Sandy Denny and Cat Power and Van Morrison and every singer who had ever hijacked my tears and lifted me towards a light. She was that gifted, that unique and that honest and the ensuing years have only strengthened her gifts.

Chantal and I eventually joined forces in a trio with drummer Eric Thielemans that we named Distance, Light & Sky. If we were to assign one of those words, to each of the group’s band members, I would imagine the best fit for Chantal would be “sky.” Her favorite place in the world is Iceland, with its vast open-roof horizons. Her music at times echoes such spaces and the deep awe that they inspire. There is a hard earned sense of possibility in her songs. Even in the saddest ones, she won’t let us give up. She nudges us to keep searching until we find our home – even if it is in a far flung place. At the edge of what we know.

While Chantal’s three previous solo albums were immaculately produced by two luminaries of the so-called “post-classical” scene (Nils Frahm, Peter Broderick and Phill Brown respectively), “Saturday Moon” is a more feral child and is all the stronger for it. Caution is thrown to the wind and the emphasis is now on instinct and what is discovered from the get-your-hands-dirty process of just doing things. When I talked to Chantal about the album, she made it clear that this shift in tone and method was quite purposeful. She had decided to produce the album herself to protect the clarity and freedom of that vision:

“when I started this it was a very clear and very easy idea – still very organized in a way – one microphone, only me in the room. That’s it. Simple four minute songs for a change. But then I just felt lonely and I started connecting and reconnecting with people who I really love musically. Nobody producing and telling me to stop. I felt a little bit out of control and I loved it. It was a celebration of a part of me that is quite chaotic and not thinking and impulsive. And I guess a part of me that I didn’t touch musically much before.”

The first song and title track “Saturday Moon” feels liberated and bursting with ideas from its first notes onward. Drummer Eric Thielemans supple groove sets up Congolese guitarist Rodriguez Vangama’s gorgeous soukous flourishes which sets up the Pūwawau singers’s soaring vocalizations on the refrain. It is a free spirited mix of things, that maintains an elegant coherence because of Chantal’s always assured songwriting, arranging and vocal presence.

The album continues to spin and turn and upend preconceptions throughout its length. There are sonic surprises like Alan from Low’s guitar synth on “Disappear,” a song that ends in a tornado of electricity and also features backing vocals from Low bandmate Mimi. Atmospheric guitar legend Bill Frisell delicately converses with two tracks. Shahzad Ismaily of Tom Waits and Marc Ribot fame plays haunted six string fractures on one of the album’s darkest songs “Conflict of Minds”, together with Borgar Magnason (Sigur Rós, Björk).

There are eighteen musicians in total on the album. Strings, horns, contrabass and piano are also woven into the kaleidoscopic, eclectic mesh. It is a human-all-too-human balance of things. Clarity and randomness. Anger and elation. Loss and awakening. The personal and the communal.

Through all of the diverse sonic shapeshifting and emotional ground covered on “Saturday Moon” Chantal may have at last discovered her natural musical home. One that includes many sympathetic collaborators but at the same time is not boxed in by other people’s agendas and expectations. She told me:

“with my previous records I still had this idea that they should be done in a style with which I could fit in somewhere. I always felt in between, but with every record I thought maybe I can now fit in? But with this one I didn’t want to fit in, so that opened up so many options. The sky is the limit because I am not going to fit in anyway.”

For a moment she paused, and then continued:

“this record taught me things about myself that I was not fully aware of and I think it all came together with the lockdown. My need to work with other people was really necessary and it became a sort of celebration of that kind of musical contact – something that’s way deeper than what I have with my very close friends when we are talking. I have been collaborating a lot. It has always been present, but I never really knew why it is I look for certain musicians to do something. Now I know.”

In the song “Back Against the Wall” the narrator looks at a relationship (or a world?) where the reliable signs and signifiers have dissolved:

“Disappearing thoughts - How did we get lost? - Over ages in time we took these steps - To think that we progressed.”

But she doesn’t give in to the instability. She crafts small everyday rituals to quiet the anxiety and doubt.

“Touch the wooded skin - Feel the warmth within - That I needed the most to stay calm - And I suppose less lost.”

It is a song for the moment we find ourselves in and “Saturday Moon” is filled with such treasures.

Searches for hope. Call outs to our better selves. WTF steps into a hazy future.

Warm wooded skins for us to touch and hold on to.

--- Chris Eckman / Ljubljana / January 2021

Bill Frisell: "Thank goodness for music. I was so happy when my friend Chantal invited me to play on this beautiful album. Music never let’s us down.Music is true. Music is like magic. I’m here and you are there, but we are connected. We are together."



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