Prog

ANNA VON HAUSSWOLFF

Dead Magic CITY SLANG

- NATASHA SCHARF

Bright sounds from a dark heart.

Anna von Hausswolff is one of the most underrated young musicians around today. Like her father, the controvers­ial sound artist Carl Michael von Hausswolff, this Swedish organist and singer has little regard for rules and prefers to create experiment­al sounds that are immersive but accessible. Since her 2010 debut Singing From The Grave, she’s embraced art pop, drone and post-metal, yet her fourth studio album is a juxtaposit­ion of dark and bright.

Whereas 2015’s predecesso­r, The Miraculous, regaled in gothic splendour, Dead Magic skips along to a brighter, poppier beat, guided by the sonic limitation­s of her choice of organ: a mid-20th-century instrument housed in Denmark’s Marble Church. And the listener is transporte­d to that hallowed space mere moments into the spine-tingling opener The Truth, The Glow, The Fall. The 12-minute three-parter begins with simplistic chords and effervesce­nt melodies that wash over the listener and capture the rich atmosphere of this sacred building. The addition of discordant strings provide an uneasy feeling that’s quickly replaced by an almost The Velvet Undergroun­d & Nico-esque dirge, although von Hausswolff’s vocals are higher-pitched and more innocent than the German chanteuse’s knowing timbre. The track then floats off into a magical sparkling kingdom before exploding into a synth-driven extravagan­za.

She’s been placed alongside post-metal musicians Myrkur and Chelsea Wolfe, but von Hausswolff’s sound is far brighter and purer, as lead track The Mysterious Vanishing Of Electra shows. This is a post-shoegaze gem that could have been in 4AD’s back catalogue. Vocally inspired by Peruvian soprano Yma Sumac, her oral gymnastics beg comparison­s to Kate Bush and Bat For Lashes, but her minimal lyrics are reflective of the turbulent emotions that drove her to write this album.

Ugly And Vengeful’s industrial soundscape makes the most of the church’s acoustics with reverb-heavy vocals reminiscen­t of A Kiss In The Dreamhouse-era Siouxsie Sioux.

Sunn O))) producer Randall Dunn crafts von Hausswolff’s haunting sound so it captivates as much as her live shows – each note fizzes and rushes straight to the amygdala. She adds further depth with influences from the world of Krautrock, along with nuances of Einstürzen­de Neubauten and Swans.

The album’s shortest track, the majestic instrument­al

The Marble Eye, honours the glorious organ with whispers of Tubular Bells as it segues into elegant closer Källans Återuppståndelse and rekindles those Kate Bush comparison­s.

It might only contain five tracks, but Dead Magic is a remarkable journey through one woman’s subconscio­us.

CAPTIVATIN­G – EACH NOTE RUSHES STRAIGHT TO THE AMYGDALA.

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