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a member of the U.K.'s Volcano the Bear since 1995, Daniel Padden has been involved
in the creation of some of the most compelling and challenging music in recent
memory. Drawing on the work of Robert Wyatt, Faust, This Heat, and the like, Volcano
the Bear quickly developed a strong and devoted following and released record
on such notable labels as United
Dairies, Misra,
Beta-Lactam Ring.
All of this, however, cannot prepare one for the revelation that is Padden's other
project, The One Ensemble of Daniel Padden. While there are obvious connections
with his Volcano the Bear work (and VTB members make appearances from time to
time), The One Ensemble of Daniel Padden, is really in a universe all its
own, strange and beautiful and unique. As an album, The One
Ensemble is pretty difficult to pin down. In much the same way as Richard
Youngs and Simon Wickham-Smith, or the early Third Ear Band, Padden uses traditional
folk structures as the basis for much of songs here. But other, even more esoteric,
influences are at work here as well: Southeast Asian traditional musics, acoustic
jazz flourishes, perhaps even the mystical minimalism of Terry Riley. So what
does all this mean for the listener? A strange and beautiful amalgam of (mostly)
wordless vocals, stumbling piano, scurrying cello, mournful kazoo interludes,
deranged waltzes, and stuff that's totally unidentifiable combined into Padden's
skewed and wayward outsider music. What's most important about
The One Ensemble of Daniel Padden at least to these ears
is the truly epic mournfulness that permeates it all. This is about mood, folks,
and Padden emotes like few can. This song cycle plays at times like a funeral
dirge, at others like a carnivalesque choir of gypsies, but whatever the mood,
this music is intimate, beautiful, and deeply-felt. Edition of
500 copies in handmade silkscreened digipaks.
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Daniel
Padden Volcano
the Bear |