VA - The Black Hill, The Glass Sky (2026)

  • 08 Feb, 09:51
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Artist:
Title: The Black Hill, The Glass Sky
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Somewhere Press
Genre: Ambient, Folk, Dream Pop, Experimental
Quality: 16bit-44,1kHz FLAC
Total Time: 44:20
Total Size: 193 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist
1. The Dengie Hundred with Gemma Blackshaw – AVIIR (05:16)
2. Alliyah Enyo – Choir The Hours (05:10)
3. Dylan Kerr – The Cruel Mother (04:55)
4. Alexandra Gruebler – Embers (02:38)
5. Hannah Archambault – Eyaheomi (03:47)
6. ARBORE – Caverne Fredonne (05:42)
7. Matt Robin & Princessa Mangione III – QUERLS (04:40)
8. doris dana – Gone For Hours (03:20)
9. Teresa Winter – Long Waves Inverted (02:08)
10. Mary Hurrell – Roses the Whole Place (03:00)
11. Dania – Weave & Bury (03:44)


The Black Hill, The Glass Sky takes shape as a collective response to a text by art historian Eloise Bennett, rooted in ritual, voice, and myth and written in dialogue with Scottish folklore and the starkness of its terrain. Moving through imagery of ancient stone monuments and weather-worn landscapes, these works form their own mythology, tracing rituals half-remembered and gestures carried by land.

Voice runs strongly through the album, often unsettled, as language loosens and drifts like weather. Voices masked by drone and tape noise, warped through vocoder, or reduced to bare resonance, gradually erode the sense of fixed narration. Instead, they appear in passing, more atmosphere than presence. Borrowing quietly from Virginia Woolf, voices surface as states of being; luminous, heavy, restless, or calm, shaping mood rather than meaning.

Elsewhere, the work turns toward traditional and archaic instrumentation. Bells, whistles, zither, harp, and cello ground the music in older forms, their timbres carrying a sense of inherited presence. Electronic elements appear sparingly, used to thicken air and space, conjuring fog, expansive terrain, and the dream-like movement of light across water.

What emerges is a slow, open, and haunted landscape, where sound acts less as narration than as echo and residue, marked as much by absence as by presence.


  • whiskers
  •  13:28
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