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Loadbang - A Garden Adorned (2025) Hi-Res

Loadbang - A Garden Adorned (2025) Hi-Res

BAND/ARTIST: Loadbang

  • Title: A Garden Adorned
  • Year Of Release: 2025
  • Label: New Focus Recordings
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC 16/24 Bit (96 KHz / tracks+booklet)
  • Total Time: 61:36 min
  • Total Size: 230 / 964 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. I Am a Garden Adorned
02. Reckoning
03. In a Rug of Water
04. Liminal Songs: No. 1, This Delicious Rain
05. Liminal Songs: No. 2, Ancient History
06. Liminal Songs: No. 3, A Prayer
07. Liminal Songs: No. 4, Not Quite
08. Liminal Songs: No. 5, (Dis)illusionment
09. Breath of Cinder, Depth of Moss


In the liner notes for A Garden Adorned, loadbang vocalist Ty Bouque identifies a fascinating duality at the heart of the garden; it is an attempt at organizing and controlling nature while nevertheless being subject to the rules of the natural world. The album presents works by Oscar Bettison, Raven Chacon, Yotam Haber, Christina J. George, and Laura Cetilia that are curated around this concept. Composition engages with a similar dichotomy, fashioning sounds and silence in a temporal container whose materials are governed by fundamental principles. In the case of works for loadbang, an ensemble of baritone voice, trumpet, clarinet, and trombone, many of those governing principles relate to breath and the nature of sound production on wind instruments. Characteristic of loadbang’s recordings, A Garden Adorned covers rich and varied aesthetic territory, and prompts insights about ideas beyond the sounds themselves.

Oscar Bettison’s I am a Garden Adorned is inspired by the famous Moorish temple in Granada, Spain, the Alhambra. Struck by its enduring symbolism of an era of peaceful coexistence and fruitful progress, Bettison adapted Arabic text inscribed on the walls of the Alhambra by the 14th century Muslim poet Ibn Zamrak as the basis for the text in his piece. We hear texts in Spanish and English, creating a metaphor for the translation process of a region with a complex history as well as the filtering of musical ideas from composer to performer to listener. The piece unfolds patiently in obscure, mystical gestures and incantations, evoking the spiritual power of its site of inspiration. Extensive use of mutes on the brass instruments, a battery of vocal techniques, and developing variation of motivic material creates an extended sound vocabulary of textured reverence.

Raven Chacon’s Reckoning opens with a chorus of growling, multi-timbral techniques across the ensemble that echo throat-singing practices, evoking the Chihuahuan Desert that was the site of its rehearsal. Chacon’s work often centers the Indigenous American experience, cultivated here through timbrally driven, ritualistic masses of sound. Chacon pushes the ensemble to the edges of conventional sound color and expression, evoking visceral, human responses to sound.

Yotam Haber sets a text by Thomas Bernhard (translated by James Reidel) in In a Rug of Water, a work for triple quartet in which the loadbang musicians are heard in a kind of musical house of mirrors. The enhanced forces facilitate voice chorales, exuberant brass fanfares, and a quantity and density of sound that is a contrast to the often delicate, tactile focus of much of the ensemble’s repertoire. Swelled figures act as connective tissue across the stereo footprint of the ensemble, as Haber grinds up against closely spaced intervals.

Christina J. George’s >>liminal songs>> is a five part setting of her own poetry, an examination of in-between states for their own unique experiential qualities. This self-reflective work takes a turn towards lyricism and more conventional text setting and expressive presentation, featuring Bouque’s baritone with the ensemble providing coloristic accompaniment and shading. “This delicious rain” revels in lush harmonies and poignant melodic phrases. “ancient h i s t o r y” is taut with inquisitive anxiety, as short fragmentary phrases explore the ineffable: “There is a pattern here, and I am in it.” “A Prayer:” is based on a lilting, meditative repeating figure that ascends and supports a plaintive wordless vocal line. Percolating ensemble figures shape “Not Quite” as the voice sings repeated fragments of texts, alternating between joining the group texture and singing from the fore. The final movement, “(dis)illusionment” is a somber, bittersweet ballad, with growing markers of liminal disorientation manifesting themselves in an arc through stasis, restlessness, and repose.

Laura Cetilia’s breath of cinder, depth of moss is the only piece on the album that includes electronics, consisting of white noise, sine tones, and manipulated samples of a vinyl record player. The environmental electronics provide the background for gentle exhalations of sonority that coalesce over the piece’s duration into luminous harmonic gems. The piece closes the album with eternal serenity.

loadbang's evolution as an ensemble represents significant contributions to the repertoire for their unique instrumentation as well as the development of new techniques in instrumental playing and ensemble hybrids. As notable and impressive however is their curatorial prowess; with each new album the ensemble demonstrates its capacity to not only commission some of the most influential composers active in contemporary music, but to do so in a manner that engages with the cutting edge of new music aesthetics while marshaling music’s unique capacity to speak to our most profound human experiences. A Garden Adorned is only the most recent fruit of the group’s efforts, and succeeds once again in its endeavor to be an album length statement in its own right alongside a documentation of several landmark new compositions.

–Dan Lippel


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