Wish to fill your life with good music rather than constant abberation? New post time!

Warm greetings to you! I’m Jacob Braybrooke, a Cambridgeshire-based music lover and radio presenter, and I’m very grateful that you decided to join me for another post on One Track At A Time as we broaden our horizons when it comes to active music discovery. It was previously my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day before adulthood got in the way, so now I post sporadically about something special. I’ve got music to share from Modern Silent Cinema today, which is the moniker of Brooklyn-based independent musician Cullen Gallagher. His music encompasses elements of Lo-Fi, Instrumental Rock and Post-Rock developed by a variety of Electro-Acoustic instrumentation and Experimental guitar melodies. This year, he is celebrating a whole two decades of activity with a frequent string of six releases that evoke the history and impact of his alias. Half of these releases are comprised of fresh material while the other half of his issues are compilations of unreleased archival content. Three of these have been released including January’s ‘Passages X-XXI’ (a collection of relaxing solo piano recordings), March’s ‘The Cinema Detective’ (A dystopic sci-fi meets film theory detective study inspired by an essay from Baltimore-based clever clogs Matt Berry) and May’s ‘The Cabinet Of Modern Silent Cinema’, a rich album boasting a 13-track voyage through tracks that went astray over the years only to be revitalised by guitar duets with his brother, unearthed demo tapes and micro-cassette sketches. The next release to drop is July’s ‘Anemic Music’ – out on July 5th – which collates more tracks that are finally seeing the light of day. Give the opener ‘A Life Of Constant Abberation’ a whirl below.
All of these albums have been mastered by Caleb Mulkerin (of Big Blood notability) and Gallagher, under the instrumental guise of Modern Silent Cinema, has recently received airtime on radio stations like WRUW FM91.1 (Cleveland, Ohio) and WFMU (Jersey City, New Jersey) who have all showcased the Bad Channels Records label founder’s innate ability to play a strong diversity of instruments including the piano, lap steel, trombone, trumpet and the drums. “Sometimes there is a feeling this is a lost Fahey or Basho recording, low-fi and a wanderer of tempos and styles“, compliments Lost In A Sea Of Sound about his work. It’s not tricky to see how the comparison has been made since, on the above track, ‘A Life Of Constant Abberation‘, he playfully navigates a consistent set of instrumentation with an edged Rock ‘N’ Roll influence polished with warped Americana vibes and shaded Folk mastery. He creates a vague narrative with elements of rock opera through curved genre constructs modified by instrumental sounds alone. ‘A Life Of Constant Abberation‘ begins with a pure, 7-note guitar riff that is unphased by delay effects or auto-tuned procession with a rumbling sound that feels weighty. The volume is not overly loud, but the evident echo mixed with the simplicity of the guitar skills makes for a dramatic combo, a journey that suggests turmoil and difficulty with no spoken lyrics. The drums are equally steady but robust, this punchy combo being a second verse addition to the thumping guitar melodies. Together, the recoiling drums and the harsh lead guitar hook build up an expansive level of tension heading into the rich chorus that makes it easier for the listeners to fill in the gaps with their own stories that are open to interpretation as the strained moods continue to develop. The settled, yet uneasy groove changes when we reach a fever pitch – an agitated crescendo forms as Gallagher doubles down on the drums and puts some extra activeness on the harsh guitar melodies. However, it all gradually fades into a more calming combination of level-headed Drums marked by some lenient shredding on the bass in the later stages of the song. This dynamism between the heavy push and the retracting pull keeps things interesting, whereby it’s clear that stress is overwhelming our narrator at one point before he starts to see a more serene state of mind further afield. To conclude, ‘A Life Of Constant Abberation’ is not quite as sombre as you may be led to believe in the opening because, as the world often does, the circumstances change around our narrator and a light sense of tranqulity is up ahead with production beautifully built to enhance yet not contradict.

That’s all I’ve got for now! I want to say a huge thank you for giving me your time and attention today and thank you for giving me hope rather than constant abberation for doing so. Join me in the subsequent weeks on One Track At A Time for more new posts about the music that’s getting my creative soul flowing including tunes by bold, emerging artists like Julia-Sophie, Bad With Phones, Ebbb, Lip Filler and some others.
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