‘I Is One (M10)’ by Ruth Goller | New Album ‘Skylla’

Uncategorized June 7, 2021
Array

‘I Is One (M10)’ by Ruth Goller | New Album ‘Skylla’

Exclusive video premiere of ‘I Is One (M10)’ taken from the upcoming album ‘Skylla’, out 9th July 2021.


Ruth Goller’s ‘Skylla’ shines a long-awaited light on one of the most important musicians to have driven and revolutionised the UK jazz and improv scenes over the last 16 years. The bassist, vocalist, composer, environmentalist and now solo artist, draws inspiration from deep within to create a stunningly original and beautiful piece of work.

‘Skylla’ takes inspirations from Bulgarian folk song, via free jazz, ‘Joyce’, and the Italian Alps from where Ruth hails – with bewitching compositions featuring bass guitar harmonics in different tuning systems sparkling underneath other-worldly polyphonic songs.

Words from Ruth Goller:
‘I is One (M10)’ is the last one of the series of compositions. I have been playing around with microtuning and enjoying the tension it adds. The slow pace adds to this tension, it’s eerie, more like a journey than a tune. I wanted to write something I’ve not heard before. There is some horror in it, fears you can’t face, sadness so sad it becomes comforting, but beauty all the way through. This tune is a lone wolf.

Goller helped lay the foundation for the UK’s jazz renaissance whilst playing in many of its most influential and popular bands, from her years on stage with Acoustic Ladyland and Melt Yourself Down, to more recently Let Spin and Vula Viel, whilst performing and recording with the likes of Shabaka Hutchings, Mercury-Award nominee Kit Downes, Sam Amidon, Bojan Z, Marc Ribot, Rokia Traoré, and Paul McCartney.

On ‘Skylla’, Goller in some ways returns to the pure untaught instincts that drove her as a teen punk musician. Working with different tunings for each song, Goller composes instinctively based on what she hears in every moment. As Goller puts it, “at that point muscle memory doesn’t work anymore so I have to trust my ear completely”.

Coming from the border region between Italy and Austria, Goller grew up fascinated by the differences and similarities in the intentions behind speech. This ear for words has influenced her approach to vocals; improvising them through streams of consciousness around her bass playing, focusing on the sound and feeling, and almost inventing a new language through abstraction. As Goller puts it, “Music is a language and I always want to learn as much as I can about it”.

Initially Goller recorded all vocals alone, before inviting accomplished and celebrated vocalists Lauren Kinsella and Alice Grant to lend their additional voices to particular pieces; with the knowledge they would rise to the challenge of singing words free of language to irregular tunings. The final contribution came from Kit Downes, who produced and mixed the album.

Ruth Goller by Paula Rae Gibson

Intimate voice and bass guitar entwine in improvised tandem on Goller’s debut album, exhibiting a confidence that reflects her experience at the vanguard of the European jazz scene. A work of uncanny and original beauty on which Goller has reached deep within to find pure honesty and musical originality.


Ruth Goller Official Website / Facebook / Instagram / Twitter
Vula Viel Records Facebook / Instagram / Twitter / Bandcamp

Headline photo: Photo: Paula Rae Gibson | Design: Pedro Velasco

Array
Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *