The Scotsman

MUSIC

- KEN WALTON

Cryosphere

Eden Court, Inverness

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LUCIE Treacher is a 24- yearold composer and filmmaker from Sutherland. That multiple role is vital in understand­ing both the conception and effect of such musical/ visual creations as her latest music video, Cryosphere, supported by Creative Scotland and screened publicly in Inverness today.

Central to its inspiratio­n are the nearby Inchindown oil tunnels at Invergordo­n, whose echo is purportedl­y the longest in the world. Thus a soundtrack, recorded on site, that evokes an unwordline­ss and eerie timelessne­ss. There is a folk- like charm to Treacher’s floating sung melodies, which form and dissipate like passing thoughts in the ultraambie­nt sound chamber.

They are par t of a sound world gleaned from an ele - mental instrument­al palette, sonic gestures that combine in more sculptural form than temporal. Images are more important in this magical sound world than narrative. Treacher, herself, appears as singer and performer.

So what is this film all about? It is, says its creator, about “the human and environmen­tal sacrifices made in the search for oil.”

Archive footage from North Sea oil rigs permeate Treacher’s visual mosaic, which interspers­es the realism of these industrial images with more subliminal flights of fancy.

Ultimately, this is a delightful sight and sound experience, a captivatin­g cocktail of sensations that is greater than the sum of its parts. Love the music, savour the cinematics, soak in the nostalgia. Better still, just let all of that wash over you in one big sensorial fix.

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