Circulate Susanna
Released: September 2018
- Sofia Jernberg – voice
- Daniel Lippel – detuned acoustic guitar, electronics
- Cory Smythe – piano, autoharp, electronics
Tracks:
- Susanna soil flutter
- Circulate to mole
- Ladies load the telegraph
- Weave the ring
- Circulate Susanna
- (Bullgine / lectric fluid magnified)
- Heads gather the stars
- Ladies horserun
- Twirl the bell, bullgine
- Heads circulate to mole
- (Double star thru magnified)
- Reverse soil flutter
- To gather the wind
- David Breskin – producer
- Ryan Streber – engineer
- Ron Saint Germain – engineer
Circulate Susanna
Released: September 28, 2018
- Sofia Jernberg – voice
- Daniel Lippel – detuned acoustic guitar, electronics
- Cory Smythe – piano, autoharp, electronics
Tracks:
- Susanna soil flutter
- Circulate to mole
- Ladies load the telegraph
- Weave the ring
- Circulate Susanna
- (Bullgine / lectric fluid magnified)
- Heads gather the stars
- Ladies horserun
- Twirl the bell, bullgine
- Heads circulate to mole
- (Double star thru magnified)
- Reverse soil flutter
- To gather the wind
Pyroclastic Records – All About Jazz – Mark Corroto
January 7, 2023As listeners we so often typecast musicians and music labels. Artists are pigeonholed into silos: classical, jazz, rock, blues, pop, etc.. Go into any record store (if you can find a brick & mortar one) and this segregation, a forced …
Circulate Susanna – All About Jazz – Karl Ackerman
November 13, 2018Cory Smythe tells stories. About stories. Specifically, a father’s tales in the rural heartland of America; ingredients that a listener might assume had shaped Smythe’s imagination in ways that go far beyond music.
Circulate Susanna – The Free Jazz Collective – Stuart Broomer
November 9, 2018Pianist Cory Smythe is emerging as a significant pianist in free improvisation and new music circles. He has appeared on recordings such as Planktonic Finales with Stephan Crump and Ingrid Laubrock, as a member of Tyshawn Sorey’s trio and with …
Heads gather the stars
Video: Twyla Snide
Music: Cory Smythe with Sofia Jernberg & Dan Lippel
Heads gather the stars
Even now, very children
Twirl the bell, bullgine
Else Alabama wheatsleep
Turn to mole, darlin
(horserun)
Don’t Susanna rain all night
Dreamin’ magnified and fluid?
Crested industry, wake now
Snorting citizens, bullgine
Fall upon the ground
To gather the wind…
And at the root
In the southern breeze
From the poplar
Pastoral scene
The gallant south
Scent of magnolias,
Sweet and fresh
Here for the crows
For the rain to gather the wind
For the sun, for the trees
His stories always took place on a faraway fictional moon, with amber wind and waves not unlike ours, but peopled by damp, strange organisms. Instead of blood, their bodies literally coursed with music and, as a result, they were gifted a fearsome ability to sing and twirl each other into — and out of — existence. In our world, of course, music has far less power. At best, it might be said to participate in the cycle of life and death, as with the 500 souls envisaged and executed in the haunting second verse of Foster’s “Oh! Susanna” or the death-denying excision, nowadays fashionable, of all the memorials to murder in Abel Meeropel’s “Strange Fruit,” a custom which the band and I uphold in the closing track here.
The Foster and Dixon tunes that undergirded Father’s stories, arriving to us as they did via wilted vinyl, windspun and re-tuned by the filtering fibers of the cotton ceiling and the coarse earth, made it easy to imagine the kind of harmonies that might bend, burble, and howl in the distant world of his invention. It was only much later in life, when I began recounting these same stories to my own children (all of us tucked safely in the soil), that I came to understand the significance of not just the alien country melodies — in these speculative, musical rites of creation and destruction — but also their cleverly contrived, inhumanly serene silences.
I feel then, that I’ve not so much written the songs presented here as transcribed them from the vivid yet half-remembered repertoire of those distant summer days, gathered with family in the warm, sunken embrace of a bygone America.
-Cory Smythe
All songs written by Cory Smythe, Pluripotent Publishing (BMI) except 11: improvisation by Jernberg/Lippel and 13: based on “Strange Fruit” by Lewis Allan (Abel Meeropel), Music Sales Corp. (ASCAP)
Recorded by Ryan Streber in October, 2017 at Oktaven Audio (Mt. Vernon, NY)
Mixed by Ron Saint Germain in December, 2017 at Saint’s Place (Kinnelon, NJ)
Mastered by Liberty Ellman in June, 2018 at 4D Studios (Brooklyn, NY)
Album design by Spottswood Erving
Layout by July Creek
I’m so grateful for the immeasurable contributions of Daniel Lippel and Sofia Jernberg. The written music here draws heavily on Sofia’s work, in particular, and could not have existed without her sophisticated and personal repertoire of vocal techniques. Thanks also to Ryan Streber, Ron Saint Germain, and Liberty Ellman for their expertise and artistry; to David Breskin for his illuminating counsel and poetic album design; to Kris Davis; Isabel Breskin; Yesim Tosuner; and to Chelsea Hadley and The Shifting Foundation for making all of this possible. Liz, we don’t ever have to talk about this album again — thank you and I love you. – CS