HARVESTMAN, the psych/ambient project of Neurosisâ Steve Von Till, continues unveiling its most exploratory and ambitious works to date with the three-album series titled Triptych, with each installment coordinated for release on specifically chosen full moons this year. Triptych: Part Two will be released on Von Tillâs own Neurot Recordings with the rising of the Buck Moon on July 21st.
Triptych: Part Two was recorded and mixed at The Crowâs Nest in North Idaho by Steve Von Till who creates the movements with guitars, bass, synths, percussion, loops, filters, and more. The record features guest contributions from Dave French (Yob) who acts as frequency consultant and performs drums on âThe Hag Of Beara vs The Poetâ and stock tank percussion on âGalvanized And Torn Open,â bass from Al Cisneros (Sleep, OM) on âThe Hag Of Beara vs The Poetâ and the âForest Dubâ counterpart version of the song, and John Goff (Cascadia Bagpiper) who plays bagpipes on âThe Unjust Incarceration.â Live assistance from Sanford Parker was implemented on âDamascus,â and the narration on âThe Lake Of Innisfreeâ was read by W. B. Yeats. The album was mastered by James Plotkin (Khanate, KK Null, Earth) and completed with artwork and layout by Henry Hablak.
With the lead single, Von Till writes, âThis is âDamascus.â Both a steel forged of different layers and a city of ancient origin. And it was the result of fortunate serendipity. The track was born of my first experiments with software utilizing loop-based composition. After years of using the same linear process as analog recording, I wanted to branch out into being able to manipulate rhythms, analog phrases, delay and modulation effects to a set tempo. I invited my friend, Sanford Parker, over to coach me through my entry into that world. While this began as a tutorial of sampling, cutting and syncing percussion loops, it quickly led to him guiding me through looping my fuzzed-out guitar improvisations with it. We moved on and walked away from it. It might have become a throwaway work sample had something in those beats and fuzz guitars not peaked my imagination later. After several months, out of curiosity, I opened the session and revisited the piece. I was immediately drawn into the vibe, put down a solid bass groove, synths, and found an organic sequence of the loops that gave it life and flow while still maintaining the loop-based nature of the foundational tracks.â
Watch HARVESTMANâs visualizer for âDamascus,â created by Steve Von Till, now at THIS LOCATION, and find the song streaming everywhere HERE.
Triptych: Part Two will be released on Transparent Ruby Red + Black Galaxy Effect vinyl as well as CD and all digital platforms on the Buck Moon, July 21st. There will be a limited edition 11â x 11â exclusive risograph art print of the original cover art by Henry Hablak. Preorders including bundles can now be placed through Neurot Recordings HERE.
Watch for additional visualizers and more to post shortly.
Triptych: Part 2 Track Listing:
1. The Hag Of Beara vs The Poet
2. The Falconer
3. Damascus
4. The Hag Of Beara vs The Poet (Forest Dub)
5. Vapour Phase
6. Galvanized And Torn Open
7. The Unjust Incarceration
At its heart, music has always been a questioning of inheritance â a dialogue with predecessors and forebears, the forging of oneâs own perspective in relation to what has come before, and for some, a plunge into the boundless realms between. For Steve Von Till, that process has always taken on an added dimension to become the most sacred of tasks. Whether through the apocalyptic uprising of Neurosis, the sonic deconstructions of their sister project, Tribes Of Neurot, the invocatory intimacy of his eponymous solo albums or his instrumental psychedelic reveries in the guise of HARVESTMAN, that dialogue has never just been with musical influences, but with what underpins them: the primordial, elemental forces now banished to the peripheries of our contemporary consciousness, yet still broadcasting a signal for all who will listen.
Released periodically on three of 2024âs full moons â April 23rdâs Pink Moon, July 21stâs Buck Moon, and October 17thâs Hunter Moon â the three-album cycle, Triptych, is HARVESTMANâs most ambitious undertaking yet. But itâs also the distillation of a unique approach that finds a continuity amongst the fragmented, treating all its myriad musical sources and reference points not as building bricks, but as tuning forks for a collective ancestral resonance, residing in that liminal space between the fundamental and the imaginary, the intrinsic and the speculative.
Drawn to the megaliths, ruins, and ancient sites mapped out along the British and European mainlandâs geographical and psychic landscapes, the folklore and apocrypha forever resurfacing as portals from a rational world, Triptych is a meditation forged from traces and residues, and a hallucinatory recollection of artists who have tapped into that enduring otherworldliness embedded within us all. Itâs a dream diary narrating a passage through Summer Isle where Flying Saucer Attack are wafting out of a window, a distant Fairport Convention are being remixed by dub master Adrian Sherwood, celestial scanners Tangerine Dream are trying to drown out Bert Jansch and Hawkwind are playing Steeleye Span covers, all prised out of time yet bound to its singularity.
Woven together from home studio recordings that span two decades, this latest outing as HARVESTMAN finds parallels with natureâs cycles not just in its release dates but in the repeated structure that binds each album, like an imprint refracted through three separate strata. As with Aprilâs Part One and the forthcoming Part Three, Part Two starts on a collaboration with Om bassist and long-term friend of Steveâs, Al Cisneros, with a dub take opening the B-Side. Here, the opening track, âThe Hag Of Beara Vs The Poet,â the languid, tribal groove expands into a chromatic wash, like an endless drip of oil spreading out under a midsummer haze.
A filtering of the alpha-state travelogues of its predecessor, Part Two reaches even deeper into primal yet pristine states. It journeys from the undulating drone and slow-thawing wonder of âThe Falconer,â as if the Myst soundtrack were being broadcast from outer space, through the perpetual-motion of âDamascus,â dreamtime bazaar and the âVapour Phaseâ seismograph frequencies measuring supernatural tremors to âThe Unjust Incarcerationâ and its distorted bagpipes, sounding a noise-frayed lament.
If Triptych is a multi- and extra-sensory experience, it extends to the remarkable glyph-style artwork of Henry Hablak, a map of correspondences from a long-forgotten ancient and advanced civilization. As with Triptych itself, itâs an echo from another time, an act of binding, a guide to be endlessly reinterpreted, and a signpost to the sacred that might not indicate where to look, but how.
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The post HARVESTMAN: Psych Project Of Neurosisâ Steve Von Till To Release Triptych: Part Two Through Neurot Recordings On July 21st; âDamascusâ Visualizer/Single And Preorders Posted first appeared on Earsplit Compound.