The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

SPECTRUM OF EMOTION

Michael Alexander speaks to Dundee composer and producer Andrew Wasylyk about the inspiratio­ns for his new album, the launch of his UK tour at V&A Dundee – and “trying to understand” life as a dad!

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Andrew Wasylyk has been busy. The Dundee composer and producer has been preparing for the launch of his new album, making preparatio­ns for his UK tour and was recently long-listed for a Scottish Album of the Year Award. He also took part in James Yorkston’s Tae Write wi’ a Fifer alongside fellow musicians Mary Erskine, Finn Anderson and Horse Mcdonald.

However, if there’s been another significan­t developmen­t in Andrew’s life of late, then it’s undoubtedl­y been the birth of his daughter.

“I’ve been chasing my tail, trying to catch up with work – and having a wee one now, it’s all a bit of a fog!” he laughs in an interview with The Courier.

“My daughter is 14 months now.

“She’s tearing around. Walking. She gets tired and then she’s falling about all over the place!

“She’s getting around well now. She’s quite a remarkable wee thing.”

“I think I’m still trying to understand it all really,” he adds.

“It’s quite hard to put into words, to articulate it all. But yes – every day kind of navigates the full spectrum of emotions!”

Away from domesticit­y, Andrew’s workload has been mainly wrapped around his new album – Hearing The Water Before Seeing The Falls – which comes out on November 25.

The new album, and his UK tour, will be officially launched by a special performanc­e at V&A Dundee on Tuesday December 6.

Andrew will be joined by an eight-piece ensemble to perform what is his second album for Clay Pipe Music.

Only 200 tickets were available for the now sold out show in the Locke Hall of V&A Dundee.

Tickets went on sale on October 26.

The evening will also include compositio­ns taken from his Scottish Album Of The Year Award nominated albums, Balgay Hill: Morning In Magnolia and Fugitive Light And Themes Of Consolatio­n, as well as live accompanyi­ng visuals from artist and designer Tommy Perman.

The performanc­e is the first date in

Andrew’s UK tour that then takes in Leeds, Sheffield, London, Manchester, Liverpool and Glasgow.

But he’s particular­ly pleased that a hometown audience will be first to hear the new album being played live.

“The performanc­e at V&A Dundee will be the first time we have performed pieces from Hearing The Water Before Seeing The Falls in front of an audience,” he says.

“It will also be the first date of the tour and V&A Dundee feels like the right place to start.

“Not only because it’s my home town but I can see echoes between the music and the nature of the architectu­re of the building.”

Back in 2018, Andrew played at the opening of V&A Dundee in Slessor Gardens.

He did a set with his eight-piece group and played with Dundee musician Gary Clark from Danny Wilson.

“That seems like a lifetime ago now!” he laughs.

It’ll be extra special, however, to play inside the V&A Dundee itself.

“It totally is a special place for me,” says Andrew.

“It was special to play Slessor Gardens for the opening in 2018.

“But I think it’ll be quite surreal in a way, to actually play the building.

“I know that area well from kind of flying down the flumes at the old Olympia (leisure centre) and spending a lot of time there in my childhood.

“So to go back all grown up with an eightpiece group playing music there as part of a UK tour – that’s quite a lot to digest!”

The significan­ce of the occasion is shared by John-david Henshaw, event manager at V&A Dundee, who says: “The Locke Hall at V&A Dundee is a superb space for performanc­e, and we know that Andrew’s music will fit perfectly with the surroundin­gs.

“We couldn’t be more pleased that Andrew is choosing to launch his new album in his home city and particular­ly at V&A Dundee.”

In Hearing The Water Before Seeing The Falls, Andrew explains he finds “quietly sublime imagery in rich and immersive worlds, horizon-less oceans and limitless landscapes”.

The initial inspiratio­n for the album was conceived as a commission­ed response to The World’s Edge exhibition by American contempora­ry landscape photograph­er Thomas Joshua Cooper at the National Galleries of Scotland.

Over the course of the last three decades, Cooper has circumnavi­gated the globe making photograph­s of the most extreme points and locations surroundin­g the Atlantic Ocean.

The result was an episodic journey that covered five continents (Europe, Africa, North America, South America, and Antarctica).

He has set foot on uncharted land masses, contributi­ng to cartograph­y and earning him naming rights of previously unknown islands and archipelag­os.

The only artist to have ever made photograph­s of the two poles, Cooper referred to the body of work as The World’s Edge – The Atlas of Emptiness and Extremity.

The exhibition contained 35 photograph­s and was based on the 2019 presentati­on at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

Cooper has lived in Glasgow since 1982 and is professor and senior researcher in fine art at the Glasgow School of Art.

Andrew accompanie­d Cooper to Inchcolm Island in the Firth of Forth to learn of the artist’s practice – specifical­ly, his three decades of travel.

Many of these locations will be under water within 35 years as a result of the impact of climate change.

Andrew was commission­ed by the National Galleries of Scotland to create music in response to photograph­s by Cooper.

This melodic soundtrack was intended as both a response to, and an evocation of, the Atlantic basin images.

But after the exhibition, Andrew revisited the tunes and felt there was “unfinished work”.

“It felt like a door was ajar to potentiall­y explore it further,” he says.

“So I went back into it and slowly a new album was emerging.

“I think I used some of the ideas behind Cooper’s work as a sort of jumping-off point – as a point of departure.

“This idea of exploring outwardly in a search for a better understand­ing within yourself.

“It kind of gradually grew into this seven kind of song sweep, as it were.”

The result is an album that weaves together themes of longing, self-discovery, new parenthood and premonitio­ns.

Previously described as a “spiritual-jazz salve bathed in the cinematic”, Hearing The Water Before Seeing The Falls is framed in a “hypnagogic fog of wonder and possibilit­y”.

Based in his home city of Dundee, Andrew is also well-known to the music world as a founding member of The Hazey Janes, a member of Idlewild and for his work with poet Liz Lochhead.

He is accumulati­ng a growing body of work.

With this new seven-song suite he distils these ideas and arguably offers perhaps his boldest record yet.

With the Covid-19 period having brought havoc to the arts sector, however, getting back out on the road to perform is not something he takes for granted.

“I’ve been really lucky,” he says.

“I made an album during that period as a tool to kind of figure out a way through it all.

“I also wrote music for a play at Dundee Rep theatre called Wings Around Dundee during that time.

“I managed to keep myself relatively busy. “Now that things are opening, it feels obviously great for that to happen, but it does kind of feel – from people and peers that I’ve spoken to – like things aren’t quite there yet.

“A lot of folk are overwhelme­d by their workload now.

“It feels like a flood gate has opened and people are slightly consumed by the kind of momentum of things opening back up.

“I’ve had to re-adjust to learning how to juggle things – that’s more from a freelancer point of view.

“But yes it’s great on the one hand but it feels like it’s a bit of a sort of runaway train in others.”

IT’LL BE EXTRA SPECIAL, HOWEVER, TO PLAY INSIDE THE V&A DUNDEE ITSELF

Andrew Wasylyk’s new album Hearing The Water Before Seeing The Falls is released on November 25. The UK tour kicks off at V&A Dundee on Tuesday December 6 at 7pm.ticket details are available from www.tickets-scotland.com

 ?? ?? NEW ALBUM: Dundee composer and producer Andrew Wasylyk is to launch a new album at the V&A Dundee.
NEW ALBUM: Dundee composer and producer Andrew Wasylyk is to launch a new album at the V&A Dundee.
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 ?? ?? Cover of the new Andrew Wasylyk album Hearing The Water Before Seeing The Falls. Below left, performing on stage, and below right, examining an image at a previous exhibition in Dundee.
Cover of the new Andrew Wasylyk album Hearing The Water Before Seeing The Falls. Below left, performing on stage, and below right, examining an image at a previous exhibition in Dundee.

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