Prog

JANE WEAVER

Establishe­d as the First Lady of modern UK space rock, Jane Weaver travels further out into the cosmos on a magical mix album. Join her club, and may the drone be with you…

- Words: Joe Banks Illustrati­on: Leona Beth

Jane Weaver’s latest transmissi­on from the void is a journey both back through time and into the future, featuring songs from her previous albums The Silver Globe and Modern Kosmology remixed and reimagined into a seamless whole. The inspiratio­n for it comes from a series of shows she did last year where she set herself the challenge of performing sans band using just drones, tape loops, custombuil­t vinyl discs and her voice. As the sole creator of the music she makes in the studio, she wanted to assert her authorial vision in a live setting as well, lest anybody think she was merely the frontwoman for other’s ideas.

This was entirely in-keeping with the modus operandi she’s followed for over 20 years now as a solo artist, eschewing the path of least resistance to pursue her own muse, honing her melodic instincts and gradually immersing herself in the arcana of psychedeli­c folk, electronic exotica and Eastern European film soundtrack­s. All these influences bubbled over, along with a previously hidden love for the interstell­ar chug of Hawkwind, on 2010’s The Fallen By Watchbird, the album which kickstarte­d the trajectory she’s been on ever since.

Yet if The Silver Globe and Modern Kosmology displayed Weaver’s skill at taking space rock’s sonic template and alchemisin­g it into something new and exciting, then Loops In

The Secret Society distils these base materials even further, often stripping the songs back to just their vocal melodies and words before swathing them in swirling cosmotroni­ca, as though freshly forged from inside the

Big Bang.

Opening track Element rides in like a voyager from the depths of space, conjuring images of glowing nebula and dust clouds at the dawn of creation as Weaver’s heavily reverbed voice coos in approval. Propulsion gradually emerges, as looped synth arpeggios and then the pulse-racing bass and snares of the motorik beat fade up, the krautrock ur-rhythm that never gets old. Groups such

as Can and Neu! became popular again during the time of rave because their music induced the same feelings of transcende­nce and loss of self as acid house and techno, something that Weaver also understand­s and builds on here. The noise and beat draw you in, while her voice comes through in waves, a guiding presence in the cosmic darkness. But what’s clear from the outset is that this is a longform trip you must surrender to in order to fully appreciate.

Throughout the album, songs melt into each other, connected by a series of ambient synthscape­s so that the power of the drone is ever-present, like background radiation from an exploded star. Perhaps Weaver is trying to break down the way we subconscio­usly hear music as basic mathematic­al formulae, and instead encourage us to experience it on a level more akin to the loops and spirals of fractal equations. As with all great kosmische, there’s the sense of boundaries dissolving and new channels opening, music as an access vehicle to a different state of consciousn­ess.

That’s not to say the listener is completely cast adrift. One of the side-effects of deconstruc­ting and simplifyin­g the design of Weaver’s songs is that her words come to the foreground in a way they sometimes didn’t in their original setting, revealing an artist struggling with big, existentia­l questions.

The fast, nervy heartbeat of H>A>K> is like a journey through the inner space of a body, rushing through blood vessels and arteries. Weaver murmurs, ‘I can’t tell you where you’re going,’ but hints that there are clues everywhere if you just look, ‘disparate lines, cords into connection­s.’ Perhaps the album’s key lyric comes on the glorious reverb-laden future pop of Did You See Butterflie­s?, where she sings, ‘I’ve been trying to find another map,’ one that doesn’t just show the workaday reality we often find ourselves in, but offers a route to somewhere more meaningful.

Sometimes there are hints of a beautiful but icy fatalism creeping in. The minimalise­d Slow Motion is still achingly poignant, and the line, ‘Stop listening to people whose agenda doesn’t feel good,’ could be a call for us to come to our senses and reject the worldview of post-truth demagogues and online trolls. But she follows it with the quietly devastatin­g, ‘Sometimes everything’s amazing, then the silence reminds us we are lost.’ And on the pagan invocation of Ravenspoin­t, all hand drums, sitar and high strings, Weaver bluntly declares that, ‘We’re on our way to dust.’

Yet that’s not the over-riding vibe of this ecstatic, celestial album. Instead, it’s about the soft radicalism of explorator­y music, the positing of a stranger, better world – the ‘secret society’ we could all be a part of if we wanted. As the psychology of the modern era becomes ever more oppressive, it’s a message that’s worth holding onto.

Swirling cosmotroni­ca, forged from inside the Big Bang…

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom