Genre | Ambient |
---|---|
Date (CEST) | 2022-04-13 03:07:36 |
Group | SHGZ |
Size | 64 MB |
Files | 9 |
M3U / SFV / NFO |
Virginia_Astley-From_Gardens_Where_We_Feel_Secure-PROPER-Reissue_Ltd_Edition_Digipak-CD-2021-SHGZ
Infos
Similar Releases
- Newhalf-My_Blue_Heaven-(GN-064)-Limited_Edition-3INCH_CDREP-2018-SHGZ
- An_Occasion_For_Balloons-Havent_You_Already-(b214)-3INCH_CDREP-2014-SHGZ
- Trauma_Ray-Chameleon-(DAIS233CD)-Digipak-CD-2024-SHGZ
- Hater-Siesta-(FIRECD529)-CD-2018-SHGZ
- Fan_Fiction_Soundtrack-Hanover-(TD-04)-3INCH_CDREP-2019-SHGZ
- Lorelle_Meets_The_Obsolete-Balance-(SCR115)-CD-2016-SHGZ
- Planning_For_Burial-Below_The_House-(FR75)-CD-2017-SHGZ
- Jefre_Cantu-Ledesma-On_The_Echoing_Green-(MEX_212)-CD-2017-SHGZ
- Aldous_Harding-Party-(4AD0008CD)-CD-2017-SHGZ
- The_Lassie_Foundation-The_Lassie_Foundation-PROMO-CD-200X-SHGZ
Tracklist (M3U)
# | Filename | Artist | Songname | Bitrate | BPM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 01-virginia_astley-with_my_eyes_wide_open_im_dreaming.mp3 | Virginia Astley | With My Eyes Wide Open I'm Dreaming | 235 | Unknown |
2 | 02-virginia_astley-a_summer_long_since_passed.mp3 | Virginia Astley | A Summer Long Since Passed | 230 | Unknown |
3 | 03-virginia_astley-from_gardens_where_we_feel_secure.mp3 | Virginia Astley | From Gardens Where We Feel Secure | 230 | Unknown |
4 | 04-virginia_astley-hiding_in_the_ha-ha.mp3 | Virginia Astley | Hiding In The Ha-Ha | 234 | Unknown |
5 | 05-virginia_astley-out_on_the_lawn_i_lie_in_bed.mp3 | Virginia Astley | Out On The Lawn I Lie In Bed | 240 | Unknown |
6 | 06-virginia_astley-too_bright_for_peacocks.mp3 | Virginia Astley | Too Bright For Peacocks | 234 | Unknown |
7 | 07-virginia_astley-summer_of_their_dreams.mp3 | Virginia Astley | Summer Of Their Dreams | 247 | Unknown |
8 | 08-virginia_astley-when_the_fields_were_on_fire.mp3 | Virginia Astley | When The Fields Were On Fire | 247 | Unknown |
9 | 09-virginia_astley-its_too_hot_to_sleep.mp3 | Virginia Astley | It's Too Hot To Sleep | 234 | Unknown |
NFO
-=- SHGZ -=-
* Shoegaze * Indie * Post-Rock * Grunge * Dream Pop * Psych-Rock * Ethereal *
ARTIST..: Virginia Astley
ALBUM...: From Gardens Where We Feel Secure
GENRE...: Ambient
STYLE...: Indie-Classical, Dream Pop, Acoustic
STYLE...: Indie Folk, Left Field Classical, Electronic
YEAR....: 2021
LABEL...: Not on Label / Self-Released
COUNTRY.: United Kingdom
PLACE...: Garston, Hertfordshire
ENCODER.: LAME 3.100 -V0
BITRATE.: 236 kbps avg
QUALITY.: 44.1kHz / Joint Stereo
SOURCE..: CD
TRACKS..: 9
SIZE....: 64.15 MB
URL..: https://www.virginiaastley.com/disc/albums/html/gardens.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/From_Gardens_Where_We_Feel_Secure
- TRACKLIST
* Morning *
1 With My Eyes Wide Open I'm Dreaming 5:43
2 A Summer Long Since Passed 4:37
3 From Gardens Where We Feel Secure 3:59
4 Hiding In The Ha-Ha 3:55
* Afternoon *
5 Out On the Lawn I Lie In Bed 5:09
6 Too Bright For Peacocks 2:30
7 Summer Of Their Dreams 3:21
8 When The Fields Were On Fire 3:15
9 It's Too Hot To Sleep 5:18
Total Playtime: 37:47
PROPER of Virginia_Astley-In_Gardens_Where_We_Feel_Secure-2003-pH
This was originally planned as a SHGZ_INT but a closer look at
the previous release reveals numerous tagging/naming errors. (Bad Pack?)
1. Mislabelled Album Title - There is no commercial release of this album
starting with the word "In"
2. Misnamed Track Titles:
The album is divided into 2 sections on the cover - Morning and Afternoon.
The previous release mistakenly used these section names as the track titles for Tracks 1 & 6.
By having done this all the tracks (in order) are misnamed/mistagged.
This also has the consequence that the correct titles for tracks 8+9 are missing.
The proofs for both releases show that the tracklists should be identical.
01. Morning
02. With My Eyes Wide Open Im Dreaming
03. A Summer Long Suice Parosed
04. Frams Gardens Where We Fell Secure
05. Hiding In The Ha Ha
06. Afternoon
07. Out On The Lawn I Lie In Bed
08. Too Bridget For Peacocks
09. Summer Of There Dreams
3. Numerous misspellings - Not relevant as the tracks are all misnamed,
but for the sake of information:
"A Summer Long Suice Parosed" should be "A Summer Long Since Passed"
"Frams Gardens Where We Fell Secure" should be "From Gardens Where We Fell Secure"
"Too Bridget For Peacocks" should be "Too Bright For Peacocks"
"Summer Of There Dreams" should be "Summer Of Their Dreams"
2003 - https://www.discogs.com/release/14779736-Virginia-Astley-From-Gardens-Where-We-Feel-Secure
2021 - https://www.discogs.com/release/19636393-Virginia-Astley-From-Gardens-Where-We-Feel-Secure
*
Finally the manifestation of the cult classic 'From Gardens Where We Feel
Secure'.
Every household should have this record, every age and every culture.
It is one of the most unique and visionary recordings ever to be released.
Quintessential English and pioneering New Age.
This is why Gini ended up working with high level artists, because she too is
high level, and a true artist.
Artists such as Dave Sylvian, Midge Ure, Ryuichi Sakamota, Pete Townsend,
Kate St John and too many to mention.
This is one of Gini's best.
*
Virginia Astely featured on Bandcamp Daily:
https://daily.bandcamp.com/lists/virginia-astley-discography
*
Each Sunday, Pitchfork takes an in-depth look at a significant album from the
past, and any record not in our archives is eligible. Today, we revisit a
bucolic cult classic from 1983, one that taps into a centuries-old tradition
of pastoralism in British culture.
The mid-'80s were a peculiar time for alternative music in the UK. Around
1983, the surging momentum of the post-punk era dissipated into a confused
clutter of trends and revivals. People who'd begun their musical journey in
roughly the same spot-the Sex Pistols, the Clash-were now making sounds
unrelated to each other and a long distance from their starting point.
Even though it came out on the archetypal post-punk independent label Rough
Trade, few records could have been further from the filth and fury of 1977
than the pastoral ambient music of Virginia Astley's 1983 album From Gardens
Where We Feel Secure. She had been a punk fellow traveler as a teenager in
the late '70s, going to rowdy gigs and playing in pubs herself as keyboardist
in the new wave group Victims of Pleasure. By training and temperament,
though, Astley did not fit the standard profile of a post-punk musician. That
movement teemed with art-school students who approached music-making
conceptually. Astley attended music college and arrived on the scene armed
with craft and technique. She drew inspiration not from political theory but
poetry and literature.
Still, as her post-punk contemporaries expanded their sound, Astley found her
services in demand. She did the string arrangements on Siouxsie and the
Banshees' tempestuous single "Fireworks." After working on an album track by
the Scottish new wave band Skids, she collaborated with singer Richard Jobson
on The Ballad of Etiquette, an album of poetry and spoken word set to music.
Astley also formed a romantic and creative partnership with Skids bassist
Russell Webb, with whom she would co-produce From Gardens Where We Feel
Secure.
Before starting her solo career, Astley briefly belonged to Ravishing
Beauties, an all-female trio of classically trained musicians whose tiny
clutch of recordings includes a poignant setting of "Futility" by First World
War poet Wilfred Owen. The allusion to early 20th-century English literature,
along with the genteel quaintness of the expression "ravishing
beauties"-imagine it uttered in debonair Downton Abbey tones-set the stage
for Astley's first recordings: not so much a case of "like punk never
happened" as "like rock never happened".
Judging by her speaking voice, which can be heard on a 1983 interview for
Greenwich Sound Radio, Astley was not particularly posh. But her singing
tones are as demure and pure as the choir soloist at an all-girls boarding
school. Even her name seemed to hail from another time, evoking (via Virginia
Woolf) the Bloomsbury Group, or perhaps a character in an Evelyn Waugh novel
(his Brideshead Revisited, adapted for TV in 1981, had plunged half the
nation into nostalgia for a lost aristocratic England). There's even a
phonetic echo of Laura Ashley, the popular clothing designer whose floral
patterns and natural fabrics harked back to the country-house world of the
19th century. Astley herself favored Fair Isle sweaters and flowing,
loose-fit garments. Appearing on the cover of NME in autumn 1983, clasping a
bunch of wildflowers and with a scarf masking her face, Astley looked like a
cross between a botanist and a bandit.
Although no one else on the UK indie scene at that time made a record as
beguilingly bucolic as Gardens, Astley had company in other ways. She fit
into a mini-phenomenon I call "wide-brimmed hat music." Astley sported one
herself on the cover of her 1986 album Hope in a Darkened Heart. In the
mid-'80s, the independent charts and music papers were full of hat-wearing
groups like the Woodentops and Martin Stephenson and the Daintees. The
headgear had nothing to with dashingly masculine hats like those worn by the
Clash. These were more like the hat a pale English girl would wear to ward
off freckles while being punted along the lazy rivers of Oxford or Cambridge.
Seven years on from punk, the British rock scene's obsession with street
credibility suddenly evaporated. For the first time since Kevin Ayers in the
early '70s, a spate of UK performers no longer hid their well-spoken accents
by adopting a downwardly mobile drone. Sonically, too, there was a kind of
rebellion against rebellion, with artists like Everything But the Girl, Vic
Godard, Weekend, and the Style Council embracing light music and
middle-of-the-road sounds: Cole Porter, Astrud Gilberto, French chansonniers.
In an echo of the proggy early '70s, another moment when rock grew
comfortable with being middle-class, non-rock instruments like strings and
woodwinds became chic accoutrements. Kate St. John, formerly one of Ravishing
Beauties, played oboe and cor anglais in the Dream Academy, whose
trans-Atlantic smash "Life in a Northern Town" became the wide-brimmed
moment's mainstream breakthrough.
Astley's 1982 debut EP Love's a Lonely Place to Be includes songs with
lyrics, but there is a foretaste of Gardens' almost completely instrumental
direction in the form of "It's Too Hot to Sleep" and "A Summer Long Since
Passed," both of which would reappear on the album. The EP's title track's
chirruping vocal riff uncannily anticipates Enya's "Orinoco Flow"; the
inspiration probably came from Laurie Anderson's voice-pulse on "O Superman"
or the fluttery "systems music" of composer Michael Nyman. Both were among
the artists that Astley played on the 1983 radio show, which took place while
Gardens was still a work-in-progress. She also mentioned Brian Eno as an
admired ancestor. Astley's account of what she's trying to do with the album
is very close to Eno's definition of ambient as music that must be as
ignorable as it is interesting: "Whoever's listening could lie down and put
it on, and not really listen to it that much," Astley suggested during the
radio chat. "Just have it on in the background."
Featuring nature sounds recorded in and around the village of
Moulsford-on-Thames, From Gardens Where We Feel Secure taps into a
centuries-old tradition of rhapsodic pastoralism in British culture. Both the
countryside and the household garden figure as places where Nature's wild
beauty is domesticated and made into a safe space for dream and play, reverie
and revelry. Increasingly it was the ever-expanding city that came to seem
like dangerous wilderness, a place whose depravity and deprivation bred both
vice and radicalism. Illness and unrest alike could be inoculated, urban
planners hoped, by the creation of public parks. Inspired by similar social
anxieties, the garden city movement of the early 20th century created new
towns that incorporated large areas of greenery, while another social
initiative provided allotments of land for nominal rental fees so that
ordinary townsfolk could grow their own produce and recover their inner
peasant.
Gardens recreates a single summer day from dawn to dusk: The first side of
the original vinyl covers the morning, while the second is dedicated to the
afternoon. "I was just trying to capture that feeling you get on one of the
first really hot days of summer," Astley told NME later in 1983. "The
timeless feel of the beginning of summer." "With My Eyes Wide Open I'm
Dreaming" starts with the bright dawn chatter of birdsong, gradually
interlacing piano, flute, and acoustic guitar. Although there are no drums,
the track is more melodically sprightly than what we tend to consider
"ambient" these days. But the repetitiousness of the patterns and the absence
of gaps between tracks create a feeling of suspension from time.
Like a cinematic dissolve, the elegiac title "A Summer Long Since Past"
establishes the idyll faraway in time, associating it with childhood or even
the pre-industrial past. Astley's wordless "la-la-la" vocal is mixed further
back than on the EP version: It seems to reach your ear across distance, like
a girl singing happily to herself while walking down the road on the other
side of your garden wall. A descending piano figure gently cascades in a haze
of sustain-pedal. On the title track, church bells peal in a continuous loop,
suggesting that these are not chimes marking the hours of an ordinary day but
an exceptional cause for communal rejoicing: a Royal Wedding, the coming of
peace at the close of World War II.
The back cover of the 2003 CD reissue of Gardens features a photograph of a
thatched cottage and a small, fair-haired girl who looks like Astley and
which most likely stems from a brief period in her otherwise suburban
childhood when she lived in the countryside. Like the hauntology of Boards of
Canada and the Ghost Box label, Astley's music taps into that zone where
idyllic personal memory bleeds into collective nostalgia: mythic notions of
England as Arcadia.
The atmosphere of a halcyon long-lost summer intensifies on the "Afternoon"
side of the album. The rusty squeak of a gate between fields forms an
irritable loop through "Out on the Lawn I Lie in Bed," contrasting tartly
with pretty xylophone chimes and piano trills in the higher octaves like
rippling water rushing over rocks. "Too Bright for Peacocks" is an intriguing
title, leaving you to wonder whether it's the birds' plumage that's so
radiant in the mid-afternoon sun it makes you squint, or if it's the peacocks
themselves who need shades. Staccato piano thrumming like rays pounding on
your back, the track captures that heat-baked peak of the day when a
wide-brimmed hat would really come in handy.
Despite the largely acoustic palette, subtle touches of studio trickery
surface every so often, most notably on "When the Fields Were on Fire," where
a high-pitched drone on loan from Nurse With Wound's Soliloquy for Lilith
wavers throughout the track. Living up to the title, the piece conjures that
golden hour when a certain slant of dying sunshine sets the wheatfields
eerily aglow. Nominally identified as "afternoon," "It's Too Hot to Sleep"
really belongs to the night, as the tu-whit tu-whoo of a tawny owl signals.
The title flashes me back to the English '80s-when air conditioning was
virtually unknown in the UK-but the piece itself doesn't evoke restless limbs
tangled in a single sweat-soaked sheet but rather blissful drowsiness.
In June 1983, as Astley finished work on Gardens, Margaret Thatcher won
reelection: a historic landslide buoyed by the jingoistic swagger that
followed the nation's victory in the Falklands War, and an electoral triumph
achieved despite the mass unemployment and social discord caused by her
conservative economic policies. Nine months later, Thatcher went to war
again, not with foes overseas but with the "enemy within"-striking miners,
the toughest and most defiant organization within what remained of Britain's
industrial proletariat. During Thatcher's rule, the country's alternative
musicians hurled out protest songs: Crass' "How Does It Feel? (to Be the
Mother of a Thousand Dead)?," Robert Wyatt's oblique and melancholy
"Shipbuilding," Test Dept's collaboration with a Welsh miners' choir.
It would be a stretch to describe Astley's album as a response to or even a
commentary on its times. But the summertime idyll so lovingly recreated is
shadowed by the political crises of the early '80s, not least because the
notion of England as a green and pleasant land is entangled with the
nostalgic conservatism of the Thatcher era. Both the album title and "Out on
the Lawn I Lie in Bed" come from W.H. Auden's 1933 poem "A Summer Night," a
mystical vision of companionship and erotic tenderness set in a country
garden in the Malvern Hills. But shadows of the coming conflict in Europe
pass across Auden's poem, as well as a sense of the privilege that supports
such comfortable seclusion: "Nor ask what doubtful act allows/Our freedom in
this English house/Our picnics in the sun." It's not a huge leap to connect
that guilty awareness with the imperial flashback of summer 1982, when Great
Britain flexed its naval might in the South Atlantic. Could it be that the
album's overt subject, pastoral peace, carries a pacifist subtext?
Support for such a reading comes from the EP that preceded Gardens, 1982's A
Bao A Qu, run through with themes of untimely mortality and anti-war
sentiment. There are borrowings from the German poet Friedrich Rⁿckert's
Kindertotenlieder (poems inspired by the death of children), W. B. Yeats' "An
Irish Airman Foresees His Death," and Benjamin Britten's War Requiem.
Consider also the Ravishing Beauties' interpretation of Wilfred Owen's bitter
poem about slain young soldiers, with its references to "the kind old sun"
and "fatuous sunbeams." While the British people basked in an unexpected
burst of hot weather in early June 1982, their young men were slaughtering
and being slaughtered at Bluff Cove on East Falkland.
From Gardens Where We Feel Secure came out just over a year later, via an
imprint through Rough Trade especially established for its release. The
sub-label's name, Happy Valley, is probably a reference to Samuel Johnson's
novel Rasselas, which contains an ambivalent portrait of a rustic idyll. It's
music that lends a fragrant tint to the home atmosphere, defusing stress as
it infuses the living space. Particularly in these restricted times, Gardens
works as a surrogate for a day trip to the country
-=- SHGZ -=-
-=-=-==-=-=-
Shoegaze
is a genre of alternative rock that
originated in the late 80s. The genre is very
difficult to define, and it is even more difficult to evaluate music
within it. Generally, the genre is characterized by its
shimmering vocals, reverberating guitars, and
textural distortion that create
a tranquil, opaque
feeling.
---==--==---