Through the reviews I've shared of the first three singles from the album ("Ginkgo Biloba", "The Earth Spirit" and "Privileged Animals"), I hope your awareness of what Ieere's new album 'Sad Moon, Sleepy Heads' would be about.
Now however it's crunch time as I have my review copy and the launch event is on Friday 12th June, at The Pen Factory at 13, Hope Street in Liverpool. Should you be round that way.
Like all the most intense artistic manifestations, such moments are capable of simultaneously provoking almost diametrically opposing feelings in a reviewer. One set are vividly positive as I contemplate the breadth & depth of what I'm looking at right now, the other is near despair at doing it justice.
I'd better start with the factual as that's the easy first steps. Apart from the singles, you'll be hearing a dozen more tracks: "Clock", "Himmelsduft", "Measuring Time", "For All You Wanderers", "Das Alter", "Talismans", "Blooming", "Tender Empiricism", "Magic Man", "Sad Moon, Sleepy Heads", "On The Lake" and "(Sixty Years)". Which I think is possibly the most tracks I've encountered on an album for quite some time.
And who's made them? Well I can tell you that fairly confidently too: it's Simon Monaghan (vocals, spoken word, guitars), Claire Glasbey (vocals & handclaps), Dominic Hanway (vocals, bass, guitars, keyboards and handclaps), Jonathan Fisher (horns and spoken word), Chloë Mullet (piano & flute), John Kinane (backing vocals and spoken word) and reflections & quotations are performed by Vicki, Emmi, Felicitas and Peter.
The involvement of course of Claire and of Andie Thomson at Gighouse Studio (where it was mixed and mastered in addition to some of the recording and programming) bring it into the catchment of this magazine.
When you receive your hard copy, the first impression will probably be of the really high production values: I'm looking at a beautifully designed case plus an accompanying lyrics/quotations/philosophies booklet. This whole artefact shouts out "class".
And so it should: as you already know, Ieere have set out to "examine some of the poetry and the thought of Goethe with reference to his concern for the nourishing power and the healing presence of nature".
If your starting point is the work of one of the most admired poets of history then you can imagine the pressures on the musicians to do justice. However, the obvious starting point for anyone setting Goethe might reasonably be classical & in particular something along the lines of Beethoven who was roughly contemporary, German and a fellow participant in the Romantic movement. That sort of thing would fit surely?
Well if you've read the three previous reviews, you'll already know that this is not Ieere's approach at all. Instead, they've sought to make his work accessible in our contemporary world.
The potential traps here are pretty substantial: the thought of someone trying to get "down with the kids", "translating" Goethe into what they think is contemporary street slang or rap form and other egregious and patronising behaviour sends a shudder down the spine.
But you know already that that's not what they've done. Ieere balance between the preciousness of period settings and dumbing down of the over demotic in a way which most of us might liken to tightrope walking: except they sound so confident in performing in each of the various styles they've chosen that the marriages of words to tunes comes across as totally natural (which in itself speaks to the aim of ‘Sad Moon, Sleepy Heads'). Ultimately, it may be this factor which forms the basis of authenticity and accessibility which really ensures that it succeeds.
For many of us, eighteenth century German culture can be quite intimidating. I confess that I have always considered Goethe "heavy". But then all I knew were "The Sorrows of Young Werther". I thank Ieere for teaching me a lot about his work & I've completely altered my opinion as a result. OK the only work I knew is admittedly pretty heavy but the work this album covers certainly is a different kettle of fish and as such responds really effectively to the lightness of touch which Ieere seem to be aiming for whenever possible. Forget Sturm und Drang.
As each of the fifteen songs has its own carefully crafted, customised arrangement, each stands well on its own: hence the number of plausible singles. However this is not a compilation, it's a very thoughtfully constructed album which needs to be considered as a whole. It's conceptual, so it's arguably a concept album and I could get bogged down into analogies with song cycles and considering each track to be a movement in a longer work. That would be both pretentious and I'm sure inaccurate.
However, even if you've arrived at ‘Sad Moon, Sleepy Heads' via the individual singles as I have, it's important I believe to play the whole through at least once to grasp its holistic effect: and I do think holistics are part of what Goethe & Ieere have in mind.
The fine art of sequencing is a craft which hasn't been used as much in a world of singles, EPs and streaming and I am sure that the order in which these songs are presented has been given much thought. I think that hitting ‘shuffle', though it's the listener's prerogative to do so, may be in this case to depart from something designed to maximise meaning.
But please don't interpret this as implying a series of ultra smooth transitions. The natural world of Goethe & Ieere is that of Rousseau and not Le Nôtre: wild and unpredictable, not sanitised & enslaved. Hence you get surprises as one song succeeds another and that I think is just fine. This is a record to promote thought, not to coddle.
If you don't like singing interspersed with the spoken word (including in German), or jazz followed by soul and thence New Wave into a classical piece, and straight from that into punk ("Das Alter"), then this record may be too radical for you. I think that at this point, if you've ever listened to a ‘Hot Music Live Presents' compilation or attended one of our shows, you can work out an attraction of ‘Sad Moon, Sleepy Heads' with its rampant eclecticism and playful juxtapositions.
In fact, to emphasise the continuity in question, I'd like now to quote from an interview Claire recently gave in which she spoke about Goethe's writing and "….the rawness and truth in it. His writing feels unapologetic and honest. It was so far ahead of its time, especially considering the era he was writing in—people simply weren't ready for those kinds of truths then. And if I'm honest, I don't think we're fully ready for them now either."
And I totally agree. I often feel that contemporary society is spoonfed huge amounts of quasi-cultural content, large dollops of which are manufactured to confirm & reinforce prejudices. Goethe revolted against that, Ieere are of similar mind & this resonates with me also.
Claire expresses her own connection to the album as ".. an ode to spirituality. A gentle invitation to reconnect—with ourselves, with beauty, and with truth." I'd like to add "fun" to her list. There is so much beauty, humanity and wisdom on the record, emanating from the poet but I feel that Ieere in the settings they have devised have added that quality & surely, if one is to enjoy life as recommended, it's an essential ingredient isn't it?
Frankly anyone who can take something called "Tender Empiricism" and make such a catchy song out of it deserves some sort of medal. Of course every song is a jewel containing nuggets not just of wisdom but of deeply humane wisdom. Each has a different sound and in all my admiration for the material, I must not end this article without expressing my admiration of the band: not just for its taste in devising this project and in setting the words, but in the skill they possess in being able to play so many different ways with such a lightness of touch. As I've said, Ieere have kindly devised much in the way of supplementary materials, but despite the many words and the artwork, the concentration is on the ideas and they do not bang their own drum much at all (there is no band photo for example). Given their admirable modesty and service to the music, I think I ought to end by urging you to consider the quality of minds & hearts which wrought ‘Sad Moon, Sleepy Heads'.