The Scotsman

Ela Orleans/apostille

- FIONA SHEPHERD

CCA, Glasgow

Polish-born, Glasgow-based composer Ela Orleans writes self-styled “movies for ears”, which is such a judicious descriptio­n of her aural collage of cool looped vocals, lofi keyboards, guitar, samples and effects that she has named her new retrospect­ive compilatio­n thus.

From her modest sedentary set-up at this album launch gig, Orleans conjured diverse soundworld­s, complement­ed by her own cut-and-paste visuals, featuring Orleans in slow motion or suspended animation, or immersive archive film stock.

Her echoey vocals over a synthetic syncopated beat evoked Come Dancing (the non-celebrity version) meets haunted dancehall by the hall of mirrors at the end of the pier. A groovy go-go number was followed by a beatific lamentatio­n and then a limber motoric rhythm.

This was a hypnotic sensory feast without overloadin­g the synapses. There was also space for a true retrospect­ive treat – the first song Orleans ever wrote. “It’s long,” she cautioned, though the rudimentar­y but engaging track did not outstay its welcome.

There was entertaini­ng support from Apostille, aka her label boss at Night School Records, Michael Kasparis of Franz Ferdinand “come and dance with me Michael” celebrity. Kasparis certainly knows how to cut a rug with unfettered style, coming across like Future Islands’ flailing frontman Samuel T Herring with a far more agreeable soundtrack of playful analogue electronic­a and an impressive malleable vocal, which he deftly switched from a croon to a scream during impish a capella portions where his absent bass player would normally fill in.

 ??  ?? Orleans was a hypnotic sensory feast without overloadin­g
Orleans was a hypnotic sensory feast without overloadin­g

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