I think Áine O'Dwyer must be one of those multi-instrumentalists you hear about. I first became aware of her at the Hunters Moon festival in 2011, where she
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I bought this at the Hunters Moon festival in 2012 and have never listened to it. Yes, readers, that is right - I have never listened to the record I bought at the festival, because it is a cassette and I am too lazy to turn on the cassette players on my stereo. But I have listened to the free download that a code with the cassette entitled me to, but only on my iPod. I am so cassette-phobic that I have contemplated burning the tracks to a CD-R so that I could listen to them on my stereo, but that would be a bit mental.
What does the record sound like? Well, it is improvised organ pieces played in a church while people wander in and out. That's what it sounds like. Like all organ music, it reminds me a bit of the recording I have of Paul Ayres playing organ arrangements of happy hardcore tunes - for all the improvised nature of this, it all sounded like it could easily be a reworked version of a track by Scooby, DJ Baz or The Mister Men. That said, the tracks are generally on the slower side, so if they were arrangements of something you might hear a happy hardcore DJ play they would have to be from the bits were it all slows down and everyone has a Moment.
I think the best improvised music sounds like its creator was not actually making it up as they went along. This is like that.
Links:
A review of Paul Ayres playing organ arrangements of happy hardcore tunes
image source (and information on how you too can acquire a copy of this record).
Fort Evil Fruit (the cassette label who released the record)
An inuit panda production
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