Fran and Flora: Precious Collection review – strings, shimmer and siren song whip up a desirous mood

(Hidden Notes)
This spirited adventure in the avant garde is as experimental as it is accessible, delving into hot-blooded Sirba and Transylvanian epics

Yiddish, klezmer and eastern European traditional music are the energetic inspirations for Fran and Flora’s second album together, their first on Stroud-based new music label Hidden Notes. Cellist Francesca Ter-Berg and violinist Flora Curzon also compose with voices and electronics, and their album’s opening track, Nudity, announces their ambitious intentions. Plucked strings whip up a hot-blooded Sirba (a Romanian/Jewish 6/8 rhythm) against a high violin drone and a skittering vocal of the Meredith Monk school. A delirious, desirous mood ensues.

It’s a strangely accessible record. Wordless harmonies create immediate, even poppy effects on the Nign and Hold Me Close, which should interest fans of shimmery, alternative groups like Blonde Redhead and Stealing Sheep; they’re even Radio 2-friendly on the gorgeous Fishelekh Gefinen – To Catch a Fish, by Yiddish poet Aliza Greenblatt. Layers of sound are built up like a modern dance track before the drums, played by Snapped Ankles’ Ursula Russell, arrive with the heft of a hip-hop break.

The duo’s love of archival recordings and recovered manuscripts is clear across the variety of their song choices, from the beautifully tentative Feygele – Little Bird, adapted from a popular Russian song, to the twisted epic majesty of Flowers for Innocence, based on the Transylvanian Gyöngyvirágos. Ter-Berg and Curzon never smother the folk origins of their influences but explore them kaleidoscopically, exploding the potential of their colours and patterns through their instruments’ long bows, plucks and scrapes.

Other highlights include the ecstatically joyful Greek folk tune Kick Up In 9 and a terror-inducing Yikhes – Lineage, in which they somehow make a violin sound like the soft wail of a distant ship’s siren. This 12-song set time-travels brilliantly between solid folk origins and avant garde play with a surprise at every corner.

Also out this month

Toby Hay’s mid-Wales cottage industry of gorgeous, largely instrumental folk music reaches its highest peak yet with After a Pause (Cambrian), a record he made himself over three summer days with double bassist Aidan Thorne. Tracks like Bard flow like warm waterfalls, Hay’s cascading arpeggios landing on the soft supportive bedrock provided by Thorne’s supple strings. David Murphy’s Cuimhne Ghlinn: Explorations in Irish Music for Pedal Steel Guitar (Rollercoaster) is an intriguing proposition, recasting ancient Irish slow airs and harp tunes in ambient electronic arrangements. Coming across like a 21st-century child of Mark Knopfler’s Local Hero soundtrack, it’s occasionally very moving, at times oddly Balearic, the Hawaiian roots of his warm pitch-shifting instrument spangling through. Thrill Jockey’s occasional forays into excellent American folk continue with a new release, Needlefall, by Magic Tuber Stringband, blending field recordings of birds and forests, Appalachian and Greek folk traditions and free improvisation on clarinets and saxophones.

Contributor

Jude Rogers

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Sam Lee: Old Wow review – Britain's nature crisis in gnarly song
Lee’s twee-free third album, produced by Bernard Butler and featuring Liz Fraser, is a stark reminder of this country’s environmental concerns

Jude Rogers

31, Jan, 2020 @8:30 AM

Article image
Various artists: A Collection of Songs in the Traditional & Sean-Nós Style | Folk album of the month
Recorded in pubs, kitchens and community halls, these old Irish songs are a thrilling reminder that the voice needs no technology to move us deeply

Jude Rogers

07, Jul, 2023 @7:30 AM

Article image
Various artists: In the Echo – Field Recordings from Earlsfort Terrace review | Jude Rogers's folk album of the month
Recording for the 150th anniversary of Dublin’s National Concert Hall, a stellar roster of Irish musicians turn out treasures old and new

Jude Rogers

01, Oct, 2021 @7:30 AM

Article image
Sally Anne Morgan: Carrying review | Jude Rogers' folk album of the month
The North Carolinian’s poetic lyrics, blissful vocals and thrumming banjo and fiddle combine on an album full of warmth and feeling

Jude Rogers

29, Sep, 2023 @8:00 AM

Article image
ØXN: CYRM review | Jude Rogers' folk album of the month
Featuring grisly trad tales, striking vocals, two members of Lankum and shades of PJ Harvey, this is a compelling record from Claddagh’s first signing for nearly two decades

Jude Rogers

27, Oct, 2023 @8:00 AM

Article image
Gwenifer Raymond: Strange Lights Over Garth Mountain review | Jude Rogers's folk album of the month
Raymond’s accomplished guitar playing, inspired on her second album by her Welsh upbringing, makes for horror-tinged blues full of atmosphere

Jude Rogers

06, Nov, 2020 @8:30 AM

Article image
House and Land: Across the Field review – a magical recasting of music history
Electronic experimentalism duels with classic banjo sounds for this ambient, affecting new twist on American folk music

Jude Rogers

28, Jun, 2019 @9:00 AM

Article image
Oki: Tonkori in the Moonlight review – joyous celebration of a dying art form
The Ainu maestro curates a collection that gives his people’s endangered ancient sound a modern lease of life – with dub, harmony and dazzling percussion

Jude Rogers

11, Feb, 2022 @9:00 AM

Article image
Alula Down: Postcards from Godley Moor review | Jude Rogers's folk album of the month
Kate Gathercole and Mark Waters mark the shape-shifting effects of Covid in rural Britain, mixing traditional music with post-rock and ambience

Jude Rogers

14, Aug, 2020 @7:30 AM

Article image
Burd Ellen: Says the Never Beyond review | Jude Rogers's folk album of the month
Debbie Armour and Gayle Brogan harmonise beautifully and add unnerving sounds to British seasonal songs

Jude Rogers

04, Dec, 2020 @8:30 AM