Hannah Peel & Paraorchestra: The Unfolding review – where’s the big bang?

(Real World)
This overly orthodox classical-electronic crossover only occasionally captures the spirit of natural and cosmic forces

Making music about natural processes or cosmic events is no easy task. Fluttering violins and shimmering percussion are a kneejerk stand-in for awe on many a nature documentary. Electronic music, ambient jazz and Björk, meanwhile, offer up more in the way of crustacean clicks and fissile atemporality.

On The Unfolding, Mercury-nominated composer Hannah Peel joins forces with Charles Hazlewood’s Paraorchestra, who combine disabled and non-disabled players on conventional and assisted instruments. They tackle the mineralisation of bones, the geological timescales of Robert Macfarlane’s Underland, and pre-big bang times. Peel’s intentions are sound, the results are very pretty and the live shows will be great, but what ensues is still a modern classical-electronic crossover that relies too much on orthodox musicality to truly do its subjects justice.

The presence of a soaring soprano is almost laughably anthropocentric on a track called The Universe Before Matter. The usual tickboxes are out in full: bird calls, or their flute approximations, on Wild Animal and “ah”-ing choirs on Part Cloud. Every so often, though, Peel and Paraorchestra achieve wonderment: Passage is full of delicious atonal hovering, while If After Weeks of Early Sun offers arpeggiations, banging beats and joyous string stabs.

Watch the video for The Unfolding.

Contributor

Kitty Empire

The GuardianTramp

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