Harold Budd & Clive Wright

A Song for Lost Blossoms

(Darla)

US release date: 23 September 2008

UK release date: 7 October 2008

by Ian Mathers

Harold Budd has come a long way since his seminal collaborations with Briano Eno (The Plateau of Mirror and The Pearl, the latter also including Daniel Lanois). Of course, since he’s a proponent of starkly minimal ambient, that’s another way of saying he hasn’t changed much at all. His newest work, a seventy-five minute album with Clive Wright from Cock Robin (of all places), would test your patience if it ever called that much attention to itself. It opens with the half-hour and change of “Pensive Aphrodite”, great glacial drifts of beauty piled up beneath Wright’s guitar (flaring intermittently like a more polite Fripp circa No Pussyfooting). 

The problem, though, is that Budd works in (and largely invented, let’s not forget) a genre where a certain kind of restrained beauty isn’t a goal so much as an entrance requirement, and “Pensive Aphrodite” doesn’t do much more than fulfill it. It’s pleasurable, perhaps useful, but in the same way as a million other neo-ambient excursions. The shorter tracks here tend to work better, whether it’s the title track which hosts a poetry reading, the restrained cymbal(?) hiss throughout “Of Many Mirrors,” the almost voices curling through “The Saint of Whispers” or even just Budd’s piano acting up a bit on the closing “Blind Flowers”. Lovely, impressive in its monolithic bulk, but for serious fans of the genre or composer only.

Harold Budd & Clive Wright - Pensive Aphrodite (Part One)
— 7 October 2008

TODAY ON POPMATTERS
Events | recent | archive
:. David Byrne — 26.October.08: Chicago, IL
Books | recent | archive
:. 2666 by Roberto Bolaño
:. Best New American Voices 2009 by Mary Gatskill, John Kulka, Natalie Danford, eds.
RECENT MUSIC

In bold are PopMatters Picks, the best in new music.