| For our 10th release….is that possible?….TRS
is extremely pleased to be bringing you a very special full length
from Wil Bolton. This release is a paeon to both Wil’s love
of field recording ambiance, and to both his interest in the industrial
revolution in England and the importance these locales played in that
movement and in particular with the textile industry of the times.
Quarry Bank Mill, in Cheshire, was one of the largest
and most important of the cotton mills in England. Founded in the
late 1700's, it was a working mill for well over 150 years, and
has now been rehabilitated and refurbished, and is again a functioning
mill, as part of the UK National Trust.
Wil has gone to the mill on numerous occasions and surreptitiously
made recordings of the working machineries and environs. He has
overlayed these field recordings with some extremely beautiful musicianship,
and created here, a homage of sorts to the mill, to the people that
worked in it (the majority of which were unpayed and indentured
child laborers,) and to the regions around.
This release will be available in mid Nov., 2011, and will
come in the usual bespoke limited edition of 100 copies. The packaging
will include threads and fabrics made at the mill, and will be both
a testament to Wil’s talents as a musician, and our mutual
interests in history and folklore.
Each of the deluxe limited edition comes in a hand made 6"
square cloth bag made of heavy, raw, unfinished cotton fabric, from
the Quarry Bank Mill in Cheshire, UK. Each of these bags is hand
stamped and distressed with a hand worked and numbered tag wired
to the back. Tangled in the tag is thread from the mill as well.
In the bag is a unique, hand printed and hand worked 20+ page booklet
with sewn binding. Also in the bag is a beautiful digipak containing
a thermal printed high quality CDr.
Released 26 November 2011
Written and produced by Wil Bolton, July-August 2011, using acoustic
guitar, classical guitar, zither, music boxes, chime bars, chord
organ, violin, analogue synthesizer, effects pedals, laptop, and
field recordings made at Quarry Bank Mill, Wilmslow, Cheshire, UK.
Design by Colin Herrick
Time Released Sound TRS-10
www.timereleasedsound.com
"Women pouring through an open doorway, most seemingly in
a hurry. One pauses, clutching a satchel, until a large skinny dog
appears and barks at her, causing her to flee. The dog is chased
away by a man on a bicycle. The second man to appear in the steady
stream of frocks also has a bicycle; a third waves his handkerchief
frantically as if to rid himself of a bothersome fly or wasp. The
dog saunters by once more, as behind the last few stragglers two
horses appear pulling a carriage.
Perhaps a few of the departing workers would have had their curiosity
aroused by the smallish black box the factory proprietors had set
up opposite the entrance – “what new toy are they conjuring
up now?” – though they could hardly have guessed at
what was taking place. They knew that it was late afternoon, maybe
just after five, on a workday, and that for them meant home time.
But the little black box was busy transforming this time into an
altogether different temporal form, the rules of which were radically
different from anything that had so far been discerned or articulated
by anyone, including the maverick inventors themselves. A perfectly
normal everyday occurrence – that of workers leaving the Lumière
factory on the outskirts of Lyon in 1895 – was being transposed
from the time of the phenomenon to that of the cinema.
It could be argued that a similar transposition occurs in all ambient
and drone music, but the effect seems particularly pronounced in
the work of Wil Bolton. It is fitting, then, to find him inside
what could be thought of as a giant version of the Lumière
Brothers’ camera: the Quarry Bank mill in Cheshire, now a
museum. The mill has been repaired and refurbished in order to return
it to its appearance as it was in the nineteenth century, when it
was one of the largest cotton mills in the United Kingdom. The mill
is thus preserved within cinematic time, an amber that never properly
sets, but forever repeats. Bolton recorded the sounds of the mill’s
antique machinery and water wheels, and used their creaking, clanking
and gushing as the basis for dense, dreamlike drones. Dreamlike
in the sense of disorientating, hazy, possessing a weight and a
heaviness yet not quite resolving into anything solid. The resulting
music, like the mill itself and the stream of homebound workers,
seems to exist inside a different kind of time, one that on the
one hand never stops moving, yet on the other seems congealed into
a single affective moment. I found it very difficult to work out
how much time had passed as I was listening to “Quarry Bank”
– it could have been a whole day, a year, a second, or no
time at all.
Given all these transpositions of time, it is perfectly fitting
that this music should appear on Time Released Sound: the label
is renowned for its lovingly handcrafted packaging that recalls
the Arts and Crafts Movement, an aesthetics and ideology that gained
popularity during Quarry Bank’s heyday. “Quarry Bank”
is a sensitive and absorbing investigation into the persistence
of moments in time, bewilderingly beautiful in the way it disrupts
empirical concepts of temporality, just as the masterpieces of early
cinema do. Rather than reassuring the listener with a slice of safe
nostalgia, Bolton demonstrates experimental music’s ability
to alter and unsettle our perceptions, opening up new possibilities
for the imagination." - Fluid
Radio
"Release number ten from local label Time Released Sound,
a one man operation that produces some of THEE most extravagantly
packaged micro releases we have ever laid eyes on, with every element
of every release meticulously assembled by hand, or built, or drawn,
or collaged, or whatever it takes to realize these miniature works
of art. Which is precisely what these are, they are records obviously,
and the music is fantastic, but that steep price tag is because
this music is paired with the perfect packaging, that both represent
the sounds within, the unique and ephemeral nature of sound and
of music, and these works of art offer a visual analogue to the
music, thematically linked in a way that's not always super obvious.
Needless to say, every release is fantastic, sonically, visually
and aesthetically, and we're lucky to even get any of these considering
how ultra limited they are.
Which brings us to this, the latest piece of musical art from Time
Released Sound, which comes to us from musician / field recordist
Wil Bolton, who here indulges in his interest in the industrial
revolution in the UK, by setting his miniature epics in the Quarry
Bank Mill, one of the largest and most important textile mills in
the UK, and is again an actual functioning mill. Bolton made repeated
trips to the mill to capture the sounds of manufacture, of looms
and machines, all manner of industrial whir and clatter, rumble
and hum, around which he weaves lush and lovely drones and drifty
bits of soft focus psychedelic folk. We're reminded a bit of Rameses
III, a sort of pastoral folk, but performed on the floor of some
old functioning factory.
Little bits of acoustic guitar shimmer, shards of melodic filigree,
looped and fragmented, layered and woven into the sounds of machinery,
Bolton's own drones deftly blurred into those of the mill, until
it's impossible to tell what is field recording and what is music,
until the music gradually fades leaving just the sound of the mill,
which is surprisingly musical on its own. A deft application of
effects, and of manipulate samples, sound reversed and layered,
truncated and stretched out, creating these darkly delicate lullabies,
rife with music box tinkles and folky flutter, laid out in dreamlike
swells, and draped over the sounds of that aged mill. So lovely.
And as always, the packaging is top notch, a printed, hand distressed,
6" square cloth bag, made from raw unfinished cotton, at the
actual Quarry Bank Mill, there's also a hand distressed, printed
and numbered tag, while inside, the disc is in a full color digipak,
and is accompanied by a hand worked and sewn textured paper booklet,
with liner notes, as well as images from and photos of the mill.
So fantastic, and SO LIMITED. JUST 100 COPIES. We have a dozen and
will most likely not be able to get more." -
Aquarius
Records
"Here’s another lush CD on the
Time Released Sound label!! These things are about the most amazingly
packaged things you’ll ever see! There’s 2 editions
o’ this one...a standard CD version or a mega limited (100
only) CD in a hand stitched bag (built with fabrics and thread made
at the mill) with tags and what-nots and sitting inside the bag
along the CD is a hand assembled book of amazingness. It looks brilliant!!
Musically Wil explores his love of the industrial revolution and
the textile industry conveyed by the magic of sound. You get some
nice pastoral sounding electronica not a million miles away from
the likes of the recent Epic 45 side projects (El Heath, Charles
Vaughan & Toy Library). It’s gorgeous too...atmospheric
drones and acoustic guitar are accompanied by samples of machinery
(amongst other things) to create a unique sounding album drenched
in emotional hiss and fuzz. This could be my new favourite thing
on the label. Excellent indeed!! Fans of the electro acoustic stylings
of the 12K label should get on the bus as well!!"
- Norman
Records
"L'hiver dernier, Wil Bolton nous apprenait
qu'il n'était pas seulement la moitié fondatrice du
label Boltfish (spécialisé dans l'electronica bien
organique) où il officie d'ailleurs sous le joli nom exotique
de Cheju. Son magnifique album Time Lapse (ici), paru sur la souvent
excellente maison Hibernate Recordings, avait dévoilé
une facette bien différente. Plus "musicienne",
plus abstraite aussi, lorgnant vers le drone et les compositions
électro-acoustiques. Si les productions de Boltfish ont quelque
peu perdu en qualité cette année, Wil a lui poussé
ses expérimentations et ses field recordings vers une qualité
remarquable. Quarry Bank, dont il est aujourd'hui question, en est
le parfait exemple. Il est paru il y a peu, sur le label de Colin
Herrick : Time Released Sound.
Quarry Bank, bled pas si paumé des West Midlands, est un
symbole. De l'industrie textile britannique, mais aussi un symbole
de la révolution industrielle. En curieux, Wil a même
plusieurs fois visité les lieux. On dit que le site a perdu
de sa superbe depuis que la bibliothèque de l'usine a fermé
et qu'un centre commercial imposant s'est installé non loin
de là. C'est avec beaucoup d'affection et de nostalgie que
Bolton pose sa guitare et ses machines sur cet album hommage. Un
hommage historique et culturel, qui peut laisser dubitatifs les
français que nous sommes, nous qui avons eu l'intelligence
(ironie inside) de complètement désindustrialiser
notre beau pays. Notre génération ne fut pas témoin
des révolutions qu'ont connu l'Allemagne ou l'Angleterre.
Mais l'oeuvre est avant tout un objet d'écoute. Enveloppons
donc cette humble chronique d'un soupçon de pragmatisme.
La qualité pure des field recordings est ici remarquable.
C'en est presque troublant. Les cordes, graciles et magnétiques,
accompagnent les enregistrements des machines à traiter le
coton. Les drones sont parfois abruptes , mais dégagent des
ondes pénétrantes et vibrantes qui procurent presque
des sensations régénérantes (Calico). Mais
le plus intéressant réside dans le caractère
mélancolique et plein d'affection des textures. Comme si
les morceaux venaient dépoussiérer des photos jaunies
par le temps, pour redonner vie à des instants passés.
C'est sans doute aussi ça, le soundscaping. Cette magie de
l'instant ou du paysage, capturée et illustrée en
musique. Le titre Jacquard est littéralement à pleurer.
Tout à l'air si simple, si essentiel.
On dit que le témoin du passé qui meurt est comparable
à une bibliothèque qui brûle. Les anciens le
savent, malheureusement mieux que nous. The Long Decline est semblable
à une magnifique fresque. Celle d'un ouvrier vieillissant
retiré dans sa chaumière, recouvert d'une couverture
pourpre aux motifs champêtres, contemplant ce qui reste de
ce qui fut son environnement. Les gouttes perlent contre sa vitre,
son sourire se fait plus cynique face aux dérèglements
du grand progrès. La théière a sifflé,
il est désormais temps de rendre un dernier souffle et de
rejoindre la pleine liberté des feuilles mortes éprises
d'un dernier voyage. Le temps a passé.
Quarry Bank est une belle oeuvre courte suintant l'humilité.
Elle est aussi parfaitement idéale, de par sa facilité
d'accès, pour ceux qui souhaiteraient placer un premier pied
vers les field recordings. Pressé à un nombre plus
que confidentiel (100 exemplaires), cet album est emballé
dans un packaging plus qu'attrayant. Le peu d'élus qui auront
la chance de l'acquérir ne le regretteront pas. Les nouvelles
trajectoires prises par Wil Bolton sont passionnantes. Qu'on se
le dise." - Chroniques
Electroniques
"Why would we tell you about a sold-out release? That’s
just rude, right? We have two reasons: first, this release is worth
the press; and second, we care about you and we don’t want
this to happen again. For this reason, we are telling you to click
the link at the bottom of this article and to get on the Time Released
Sound mailing list right now. Don’t even read the rest of
this article! (You can come back here later.) Colin Herrick’s
handmade work and attention to detail, his ear for talent and his
obvious love for his artists made Time Released Sound the best new
label of 2011, and we expect even greater things in 2012. No pressure,
Colin!
So let’s start with the packaging. Quarry Bank‘s form
is similar to that of the limited edition of Paper Relics’
Over Exposure (also sold out, sorry!). The booklet is a tiny scrapbook
of Quarry Bank Mill photography and art, a loving tribute to time
and place. Various ephemera are bound together: wallpaper, handwritten
notes, instructional guides. The Mill winds its way into the music
as well: stream and machine are woven into a tapestry of music boxes,
bells, organ, violin and guitar. The fact that Bolton himself recorded
the locational sounds is an additional bonus. This makes the entire
package a unique creation: no one else, no where else, could have
made a recording such as this and surrounded it with so much fitting
adornment. This is cloudy, busy ambient music in the Wixel vein,
most apparent on the title track but present throughout: an homage
that mixes past and present in an original and beguiling fashion."
- A
Closer Listen
"Wil Bolton has been producing ambient-IDM electronic music
since 2004 (as Cheju), as well as creating a good number of site-specific
commissions that focus on the resonance of the spaces, their history,
and the overall atmosphere of the location. This alias change is
not a trivial one: the beats of Cheju left and an interest for field
recording as source material arose. This inclusion, as is evident
here, has been crucial in Bolton artist development, as well as
his status as an artist to watch. His current sound and musical
ideology is a sort of a half-way point between the “academically-minded”
Alva Noto or Fennesz and a rawer approach to the ambient music.
Quarry Bank is built from a series of field recordings of the machines
and the environment of the Quarry Bank Mill in Cheshire, England.
The mill was originally built in the late 1700s, but it has since
been rehabilitated and turned into a museum. There is an implicit
idea that arises from this album's inspiration – England’s
Industrial Revolution – and the question of why Bolton chooses
to represent the remains of such an era as a peaceful thing if neither
the epoch nor the future it brought were particularly quiet and
pleasant. There is a possible quick answer – that the field
recordings are of a museum and not a working industrial complex,
hence it is a peaceful experience – but we must dig deeper
for a better answer, because there is certainly much to consider
here.
One of the most influential books of the Industrial era, The Wealth
of Nations is often quoted by followers of classical, conservative,
and economic liberalism to explain the benefits of free market.
What many do not know is that they just reference the book's encouraging
start and thus omit the rest of the book. What's worse is that they
omit the rest of Adam Smith’s work, which is what definitely
settles the author’s academic relevance as a social philosopher
with inputs into sociology and economics. Smith actually explains
that even if the market’s growth and division of labor are
good to society’s overall material progress, moral progress
does not necessarily follow that; rather, the opposite can occur:
“routine crushes solidarity,” in the words of Richard
Sennett. In relation to that idea, Quarry Bank appears to be pointing
to Smith’s reflexivity more than reflecting on the Industrial
Revolution era itself, which was presumably much louder and unsettled
than what this album can evoke with its ambient sounds. This music
is the perfect background to think about the progress the Western
world achieved in that era.
There is an interesting discourse between and within the songs,
whose titles try to guide the listener through industry's rise and
fall: “Quarry Bank,” “Water frame,” “A
Black Mist,” “Jacquard,” “Calico,”
“The Long Decline,” and “Moss & Rust.”
In the opening track, field recordings fully develop as the background
layer, soft violins blend with it to give a warmer shape, and acoustic
guitar drives the melody while the zither and chime bars tinkle
at the top, bringing Mountains to mind. This style and mixture is
similar during the rest of the album, which could be viewed as a
negative, as it is repetitive, but Bolton's method delivers in the
end due to the album's stellar coherence and concise format (forty-seven
minutes in length).. “Water frame” follows up as a darker
piece, but when the white noise of the processed field recording
is over, the chime bars sound like Brian Eno’s in Music for
Airports.
Throughout the album, many tiny elements can be spotted: the small
glitches on the field recordings of Fennesz, the tinkering strings
of Four Tet, and even small hi-hat and snare kicks. This attention
that Bolton puts to the details never distracts the audience from
the main focus, which is not a single instrument or layer but a
serious, well engaged combination of sounds. There are hints of
brightness and even songs that could be considered lively and optimistic
(“Jacquard” and “Calico”), but the record
does generally paints a blurry, polluted atmosphere. To top it all,
Quarry Bank is published on one of the most delicious new labels
out there, Time Released Sound, who reached with this album a total
of ten physical releases in its first year, all of them having special,
individually handmade artworks for a limited edition release. In
this case, the fortunate album owners received a 6” bag made
of raw cotton fabric from the Quarry Bank with thread of the mill
on it." - The
Silent Ballet
"Time Released Sound has enjoyed an incredible debut year,
as you'll likely read on many an end of year list. Most recently,
concluding this ground breaking year, Wil Bolton's Quarry Bank hit
the shops. I've already seen it getting plenty of deserved praise
since its release, and as you can see, it has left a lasting impression
on me too...
After initially hearing the mp3 files first, in an advance promo,
it reminded me of Marcus Fischer's terrific 'Monocoastal' from last
year.
Musically, 'Quarry Bank' has all the quality to it that might easily
have got it signed to 12k - encased in a would be sleek looking
minimalist digi-pack. Instead, Bolton's choice in label ended up
being a crucial choice in ensuring the incredibly successful portrayal
of the album's concept. Quarry Bank was put together as a homage
to a disused cotton mill in Cheshire, UK." - Audio
Gourmet
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