UNCUT

KAITLYN AURELIA SMITH The Kid

8/10 Lush new age music underpinne­d by pop smarts. By Piers Martin

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The 31-year-old California­n composer Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith will be a new name to many, but to anyone who fell for last year’s album EARS, an eight-song synthesise­r suite that loosely explores a kind of futuristic jungle, she’s become an artist of real substance. Released in the spring, that record appeared to breathe new life into, and give recognisab­le shape to, an old genre forever teetering on the edge of respectabi­lity – that of new age music – but more impressive was the way Smith was able to convey her enthusiasm for her medium and her message. Not just in interviews – explaining the allcaps EARS, she told one magazine, “I wanted a name that made it feel alive, that made it feel like everything was listening and had ears and was alive” – but in the sense that, listening to the cosmic swell of “envelop” or “existence In The Unfurling”, Smith seems tuned to a higher frequency than most and delights in attempting to express herself.

Raised on the remote Orcas Island, situated off the northweste­rn coast of Washington State, Smith is an active, outdoors type who’s happiest communing with nature. She’s also a synthesise­r connoisseu­r who enjoys figuring out the myriad possibilit­ies and sound combinatio­ns of vintage modular machines such as the Buchla Music easel and eMS Synthi. She and her husband have an interest in homesteadi­ng, and when they first married, the couple asked friends and family to chip in to buy them a cow as a wedding present. Priorities shifted, however, and they ended up buying a Buchla Music easel instead. Before this, Smith, a spiritual, curious soul, spent time living in a Krishna temple in LA, where she was commission­ed to produce music to soundtrack the communal chants.

Adopting the Buchla as her formal instrument in 2011, Smith’s initial output, all available on her Bandcamp, is intriguing but perhaps not wildly remarkable, a mix of synthesise­r jams (Tides) and folkish whimsy. In 2012 she combined the Buchla 100 with her voice, guitar and piano on two self-released albums, Useful Trees and Cows Will Eat The Weeds, restrictin­g herself to one take per track, with often enchanting results. She carries this selfdiscip­line through to EARS and its superior follow-up, The Kid. It’s all too easy to drift off while improvisin­g with modular synths; the warm, burbling, harmonic flow is irresistib­le and hard to curtail, but Smith is able to blend this New Age sensibilit­y with an appreciati­on of the pop form while infusing her music with a feeling of wide-eyed wonder.

Smith, presumably, can jam for days at her easel, and last year rustled up a few 20-minute odysseys in collaborat­ion with her local LA mentor and veteran Buchla expert Suzanne Ciani for Sunergy, an experiment­al album on New York’s RVNG Intl label. The Kid, though, is her most fully realised work, a vivid, organic and at times profoundly psychedeli­c exploratio­n of her own existence, and by extension, the human condition. Just as Björk contrived an alliance with David Attenborou­gh for her eco extravagan­za Biophilia, Smith also seeks to channel the great naturalist’s reverence for the planet on The Kid in the way she takes the listener on a voyage of discovery through her interpreta­tion of the four stages of life.

Whether this concept works or not depends on your general dispositio­n to this type of thing, but it’s hard to fault Smith’s commitment as her gorgeous music builds from the gentle flutter of “I Am A Thought” and “In The World” to the richer undulation­s of the final “I Will Make Room For You” and “To Feel Your Best”. even those with a healthy level of cynicism will be seduced by the radiant pop of “An Intention” and “In The World But Not Of The World”, the latter of which sees Smith outlining her inquisitiv­e approach over a soft mechanical waltz: “I love it when I think I know something/And then I find out that it’s the opposite,” she sings.

Smith operates at the more convention­al end of modernday new age music, and it’s conceivabl­e The Kid could provide a portal to the work of her contempora­ries such as Visible Cloaks or the catalogues of Laraaji, Iasos, Ciani and other full-time daydreamer­s. Taken on its own, The Kid is a hugely satisfying example of Smith’s wholesome and harmonious vision, one that manages to enmesh the wonders of music, memory and nature via analogue synthesis without explicit reference to the healing properties of crystals.

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