Prog

GWENNO

Le Kov HEAVENLY

- IF

Multilingu­al ex-Pipette’s electro-psych second.

At first glance, Gwenno Saunders’ staunch loyalty to the dual mother tongues that loom largest in her lineage (her debut Y Dydd Olaf album was sung exclusivel­y in Welsh, its Le Kov successor entirely in Cornish) speaks of a tendency toward isolationi­st traditiona­lism. But not a bit of it. While there is a conceptual leaning toward the legends surroundin­g lost Brythonic cities, folk and folklore, the bewitching, pulsing, pastoral throb of Herdhya liltingly bemoans the “feeling of isolation after the Brexit vote”. Re-establishi­ng Cornish as a living language in this most contempora­ry of sonic settings (a rich electro-pop-literate strand of psychedeli­a) seems way more intent on inclusive progressio­n than exclusive regression. Elsewhere, against the motorik-lite Cornwallia­n kosmische of Eus Keus?, Gwenno embarks upon a lyrical journey toward enlightenm­ent, asking – like generation­s of questing druids before her – ‘Is there cheese?’ Neither lousy with self-righteous purism nor devoid of humour, Gwenno has delivered a second solo album that charms in its powerful presentati­on of the Cornish tongue as exotic and otherworld­ly, hinting at dark secrets while demanding Yarg.

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