UPC: 617026026824
Format: CD
Release Date: Apr 24, 2012
Regular price
$18.95 USD
Regular price
Sale price
$18.95 USD
Unit price
per
Couldn't load pickup availability
FREE SHIPPING
This item is currently out of stock and may be on backorder.

Personnel: Steve Roach (ocarina, didjeridu, synthesizer); Byron Metcalf (vocals, drums, frame drum, percussion, wind).
Audio Mixer: Byron Metcalf.
Recording information: The Lair, Prescott, Arizona; The Timeroom, Southern Arizona.
The second of Byron Metcalf's The Shaman's Heart series -- like the first volume, done with the assistance of regular collaborator Steve Roach -- is, again like its predecessor, focused around a continuous "heartbeat" pace, around which the two performers stretch out and explore a variety of instrumental and textural possibilities. Unlike the first volume, every piece is part of a larger whole divided into ten untitled tracks, but by no means is it simply a steady progression that doesn't change at all. If anything, the album is one lengthy slow crest, as extra percussion and instrumental and vocal touches build and combine. By the seventh part of the piece, the drumming has become noticeably louder and more up-front, with everything suddenly climaxing in the sudden ending of the eighth track. It leaves the final two parts as a steady falling away from that dramatic silence, with gentler distant beats again taking the lead before everything concludes in a slowly rising and falling shimmer. ~ Ned Raggett
Audio Mixer: Byron Metcalf.
Recording information: The Lair, Prescott, Arizona; The Timeroom, Southern Arizona.
The second of Byron Metcalf's The Shaman's Heart series -- like the first volume, done with the assistance of regular collaborator Steve Roach -- is, again like its predecessor, focused around a continuous "heartbeat" pace, around which the two performers stretch out and explore a variety of instrumental and textural possibilities. Unlike the first volume, every piece is part of a larger whole divided into ten untitled tracks, but by no means is it simply a steady progression that doesn't change at all. If anything, the album is one lengthy slow crest, as extra percussion and instrumental and vocal touches build and combine. By the seventh part of the piece, the drumming has become noticeably louder and more up-front, with everything suddenly climaxing in the sudden ending of the eighth track. It leaves the final two parts as a steady falling away from that dramatic silence, with gentler distant beats again taking the lead before everything concludes in a slowly rising and falling shimmer. ~ Ned Raggett
Tracks:
1 - [Untitled]
2 - [Untitled]
3 - [Untitled]
4 - [Untitled]
5 - [Untitled]
6 - [Untitled]
7 - [Untitled]
8 - [Untitled]
9 - [Untitled]
10 - [Untitled]
2 - [Untitled]
3 - [Untitled]
4 - [Untitled]
5 - [Untitled]
6 - [Untitled]
7 - [Untitled]
8 - [Untitled]
9 - [Untitled]
10 - [Untitled]