The Drift

The Drift

by Scott Walker
The Drift

The Drift

by Scott Walker

Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record)

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Overview

There were intermittent soundtrack and score contributions of varying magnitudes, as well as a couple other low-key projects, but The Drift is Scott Walker's proper follow-up to 1995's Tilt, an album that also happened to trail its predecessor by 11 years. If 1984's Climate of Hunter put the MOR in morose, Tilt avoided the road completely and went straight toward the fractured, fraught images inside Walker's nightmares. It was entirely removed from anything that could've been classified as contemporary. The Drift isn't an equally severe leap from Tilt, but it is darker, less arranged, alternately more and less dense, and ultimately more frightening. Maybe it'll make your body temperature drop a few degrees. Working with what Walker has referred to as "blocks of sound," only a few of the album's 68 minutes have any connection to rock music, and many of those minutes are part of a harrowing 9/11 song that also obliquely references "Jailhouse Rock" as Elvis Presley cries out ("I'm the only one left alive!") to his stillborn twin brother. The songs swing from hovering drones to crushing jolts. The blocks that make them, then, differ tremendously in weight, from one that could be pushed by an index finger to one that could only be hauled by a forklift. Whenever a vast shaft of space opens up, it is eventually stuffed with drastic, horrific dissonance. While a song might contain a constant element or two, they're all in a constant state of unease and flux. Walker's voice matches the activity levels of the sounds, providing a kind of paranoid croon one minute and then, during another, casting almost demonic projections that are nearly as rattling as the accompaniment. From the outset, the album seems impossibly insular and impenetrable, especially if you've been led to believe that Scott Walker's name is synonymous with recluse, but it has everything to do with real lives (or, more accurately, real deaths). Walker is acutely aware of what's going on with the world outside his supposed candle-lit bunker; he's only finding very unique (OK, bloody minded) ways to bring them up. Any mystique behind the recordings is laid to waste by one scene from a documentary, titled 30 Century Man, which shows Walker -- a baseball hat-wearing sixty-something man from Ohio -- instructing another man on how to thump a slab of meat. It looks and sounds absurd, of course (the participants seem to be aware of this), but then again, the results are used in a song inspired by the public executions of Benito Mussolini and his mistress. Broken spells aside, how much more bleak could this album be? None more bleak. ~ Andy Kellman

Product Details

Release Date: 07/10/2012
Label: 4Ad
UPC: 0652637260311
Rank: 41583

Tracks

Disc 1

  1. Cossacks Are
  2. Clara
  3. Jesse
  4. Jolson and Jones

Disc 2

  1. Cue
  2. Hand Me Ups
  3. Buzzers
  4. Psoriatic
  5. The Escape
  6. A Lover Loves

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Scott Walker   Primary Artist
Alasdair Malloy   Drums,Percussion
Joely Koos   Cello
Andrew Cronshaw   Shawm,Concertina,Bamboo Flute
Steve Pearce   Bass
Andrew Fuller   Cello
Thomas Bowes   Violin
Brian Gascoigne   Keyboards
James Stevenson   Guitar,Arp Echoplex
John Giblin   Bass
Derek Watkins   Flugelhorn
Hugh Burns   Guitar (Acoustic),Guitar (Baritone),Guitar (Electric),Guitar (Electric Baritone)
Mark Warman   Ocarina,Keyboards,Percussion,Vox Continental,String Conductor
Michael Davis   Violin
Deborah Widdup   Violin
Robert Salter   Violin
Amanda Smith   Violin
Clare Tyack   Bass
Celia Sheen   Violin
Clare Hoffman   Violin
Pete Long   Sax (Baritone),Wind Instruments
Nick Roberts   Cello
Sophie Barber   Violin
Jane Fenton   Cello
Robert Max   Cello
Ofer Falk   Violin
Julian Tear   Violin
Janice Graham   Violin
Paul Willey   Violin
Jonathan Williams   Cello
Matthew Scrivener   Violin
Tamsy Kaner   Cello
Roger Linley   Bass
Alison Kelly   Violin
John Tunnell   Cello
Judith Herbert   Cello
Philip Sheppard   Cello,Electric Cello,String Conductor
Clive Dobbins   Violin
Charles Stewart   Violin
Karin Leishman   Violin
Rohan Onraet   Clapping,Percussion
Peter Walsh   Sitar
Ben Buckton   Violin
Steve Morris   Violin
Simon Smith   Violin
Ian Thomas   Drums

Technical Credits

Scott Walker   Audio Production,Composer
Peter Walsh   Audio Production,Mixing,Engineer,Producer,Performer,Sound Treatment
Chris Barrett   Assistant
Brian Gascoigne   Sound Treatment
Geoff Foster   Engineer
Iain Gore   Assistant
Richard Wilkinson   Assistant
Mark Warman   Orchestration,Sound Treatment
Richard Nelson   Orchestra Contractor
Adrian Hall   Assistant
Neil Tucker   Assistant
Matt Paul   Assistant
Chris Bigg   Design Assistant
Vaughan Oliver   Design
Marco Atkins   Photography
Tim Painter   Construction
Philip Sheppard   Orchestration
Dom Morely   Assistant
Grant Gee   Portraits
Rohan Onraet   Assistant
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