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POPPY ACKROYD

Self-produced third album from one-woman post-classical orchestra.

- JB

Poppy Ackroyd has been described as a contempora­ry classical pianist and composer, but that doesn’t adequately reflect the alchemy of modern and traditiona­l that she achieves on Resolve. By using digital sampling and editing to manipulate and rearrange her piano playing, she has more in common with the early pioneers of electronic­a than the conservato­ire. Many of her songs share the same feeling of perpetual motion, with melodies, motifs and percussive effects looping against each other, yet the sounds here are generated from acoustic instrument­s rather than synth patches. On tracks such as Paper and Time, Ackroyd revels in the idea of her music as an assemblage, a consensual illusion, the winding of its internal mechanism plainly audible. But there’s real heart here too – the dramatic arpeggios and strings of Light recall Michael Nyman’s music for The Piano. Finally, the end credits of Trains releases the pent-up emotions that dominate this album with an expression of simple joy. While acknowledg­ing the chaotic, artificial logic of human existence, Resolve is also rather magical, as fragile yet unyielding as nature itself.

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