It is not every month that Kairos opens with a song I know, better, have in my possession, twice. In the Dutch, original version by Broeder Dieleman and on that beautiful 7" record that Snowstar Records released on Record Store Day. Bonnie 'Prince' Billy sings Tonnie Dieleman's 'Gloria' in English. I have written enough on that release and refer you to it by this link: http://wonomagazine.blogspot.nl/2015/04/three-glorias-bonnie-prince-billy-and.html. Still a wonder of beauty this recording, including the cover of this single.

The mood changes to something more dark with 'She tells her love while half asleep'. This dark, brooding singing and playing isn't to my taste. Undoubtedly it is technically well sung and played by Polyphony, led by Jaqueline Shave; the Britten Sinfonia; Stephen Layton, conducting, but it just doesn't get to me. More the other way around. During the end of Morten Lauridsen's composition, with lyrics by Robert Graves, and the beginning of the next composition a poem by Anita Frenks comes by. A variation on the prince and his horse. It doesn't end well for one of them I can tell. The new composition is George Crumb's ‘Canticle for the holy night’. What to make of this? And the next? Peter Andersson's 'Death in the body but made alive by the spirit' could have been the same composition if the text sheet of Kairos hadn't told me something different. Both compositions are more sound experiments, embedded in musical shapes that more resemble music than "are" music. No head, no tail, no chorus, no verse or all verse? There just isn't much for me to hold on to. There is a faint hint of a choir of voices in the electric sound mist. As if I pass a church in the fog, I can hear faint singing, but can't for the life of me figure out where it's coming from, let alone that I can discern a church or other building in the total, misty, moist darkness.

'Lion' by Chris Rose is so much more down to earth compared to 'Svefn-g-englar' that the contrast is huge. Still, .No's ears have not fooled him. The two songs really go together well (and just wait until the composition with the bass gamba starts. .No had me there again. When is Rose coming back, I kept thinking.) With just a guitar Chris Rose comes close to the effect of a whole Sigur Ros. The guitar style comes close to Jeff Buckley's. Sorry, Chris, the singing doesn't get close though. 'Lion' is a song that becomes typical because of the alternated low and high voice of Chris Rose; a trick that reminds me of some of the work of Alt-J.
Listening again, I did hear the change between 'Lions' and Bart Peters' 'Improvisatie met basgamba'. Not the first time though. I was surprised not hearing the guitar any more, but that was all. When are the guitar and voice returning, I kept thinking, until I knew .No had me again. I realised that I was listening to a home recording, unreleased. Again dark and brooding, but of clear and instant beauty again. How can it be that no one is able or willing to release this music, I wonder, hearing some of the things that I've heard before on this month's Kairos? Peters' composition touches me and has this mysteriousness that makes me want to explore his composition. It really stands out in this month's Kairos.

The speed goes up somewhat next. Almost to non-Kairos speed. I'd say. 'Sans peau', a composition from the album 'SWOD' (Stephan Wöhrmann & Oliver Doerell) is upbeat, with the bass, when present, coming straight out of Air's 'Moon Safari'. That's where the comparison stops. SWOD is much more experimental. Tapes and strange noises come with the territory, but I definitely like this. There's a song, a melody sounding through the other things they are doing. So quite okay.
The mood goes down again with 'Hamningberg' a composition by Rune Lindbaek en Cato Farstad. The sun is switched off again here or might be trying to get up, but not winning just yet. The spirits of the night still have the upper hand here. 'Hamningberg' could almost have been on a Pink Floyd album. Something more bombastic would have happened sooner or later, probably the first, but I like what I'm hearing and .No variates to the next song right in time for me. Still, the central melody is appealing and makes me delve deeper in all the other things going on around it.


Wo.
You can listen to this Kairos here:
http://www.concertzender.nl/wp-content/themes/cz-theme/swfplayer/newplayer.php?theme=16&rod=kairos&mode=rod&provider=cz&program=rod&date=20150507&hour=23&pid=77968
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