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    <title>Manafon</title>
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    <updated>2010-06-18T10:34:58Z</updated>
    
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<entry>
    <title>Editions</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.manafon.com/#000798" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.davidsylvian.com/movabletype/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=14/entry_id=798" title="Editions" />
    <id>tag:www.manafon.com,2009://14.798</id>
    
    <published>2009-04-10T10:57:45Z</published>
    <updated>2010-06-18T10:34:58Z</updated>
    
    <summary><![CDATA[Standard Edition: Standard Audio CD. Presented in a 6 panel digipak featuring artwork by Ruud Van Empel, art direction by David Sylvian, designed by Chris Bigg. The standard edition CD comes with a Credit Sheet folded and inserted into the digipak itself. Available from the Samadhisound store. &nbsp; Vinyl Edition: This two-disc deluxe vinyl version of Manafon is produced to the highest standards in a heavy, rigid card gatefold sleeve with design by Chris Bigg and featuring artwork by Ruud Van Empel and Atsushi Fukui. This release is limited to a one time pressing of 1200 units, and will be priced at $40.00 (US) Both vinyl discs are manufactured in the UK using 180gm heavyweight vinyl, the album was mastered at Metropolis Mastering, London. Each disc comes in a printed card slip-case, and the entire package was manufactured by the same team that produced the Deluxe Manafon edition. &nbsp; Spread over four sides, the album comes with a bonus track, a remix of “Random Acts of Senseless Violence” by acclaimed contemporary classical composer Dai Fujikura, which was previously unavailable outside of Japan. Available from the Samadhisound store. &nbsp; Deluxe Edition (sold out): CD and DVD containing: i) the new feature length documentary “Amplified Gesture”. Executive Producer - David Sylvian. ii) 5.1 surround sound (Dolby & DTS), and PCM stereo versions of ‘Manafon’. Two (18.7cm X 24.1cm) Hard Back books inserted into a rigid slip case. An accompanying (18.5cm x 23.5cm) black on white high quality print of a portrait of...]]></summary>
    <author>
        <name>PhilipMarshall</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="editions" />
    
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        <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.samadhisound.com/shop/product_info.php?products_id=37" target="new">Standard Edition:</a></p>

<p><a href="http://www.davidsylvian.com/images09/discography/david_sylvian_manafon.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="http://www.davidsylvian.com/images09/discography/david_sylvian_manafon.jpg" width="200px" /></span></a><p>Standard Audio CD.</p>

<p>Presented in a 6 panel digipak featuring artwork by Ruud Van Empel, art direction by David Sylvian, designed by Chris Bigg. The standard edition CD comes with a Credit Sheet folded and inserted into the digipak itself.</p>

<p>Available from the <a href="http://www.samadhisound.com/shop/product_info.php?products_id=37" target="new">Samadhisound store</a>.</p>

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<p><br />
<i><b>Vinyl Edition:</b></i></p>

<p><a href="http://www.samadhisound.com/shop/images/products/soundlp002.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="http://www.samadhisound.com/shop/images/products/soundlp002.jpg" width="200px" /></span></a><p>This two-disc deluxe vinyl version of Manafon is produced to the highest standards in a heavy, rigid card gatefold sleeve with design by Chris Bigg and featuring artwork by Ruud Van Empel and Atsushi Fukui. This release is limited to a one time pressing of 1200 units, and will be priced at $40.00 (US)</p>

<p>Both vinyl discs are manufactured in the UK using 180gm heavyweight vinyl, the album was mastered at Metropolis Mastering, London. Each disc comes in a printed card slip-case, and the entire package was manufactured by the same team that produced the Deluxe Manafon edition.</p>

<p><a href="vinyl-packshot-2b.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="vinyl-packshot-2.jpg" width="235px" /></span></a> <a href="vinyl-packshotb.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="vinyl-packshot.jpg" width="235px" /></span></a></p>

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<p>Spread over four sides, the album comes with a bonus track, a remix of “Random Acts of Senseless Violence” by acclaimed contemporary classical composer Dai Fujikura, which was previously unavailable outside of Japan.</p>

<p>Available from the <a href="http://www.samadhisound.com/shop/product_info.php?products_id=57" target="new">Samadhisound store</a>.</p>

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<p><br />
<i><b>Deluxe Edition (sold out):</b></i></p>

<p><a href="images/manafondl.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="images/manafondl.jpg" width="200px" /></span></a><p>CD and DVD containing:</p>

<p>i) the new feature length documentary “Amplified Gesture”. Executive Producer - David Sylvian. <br />
ii) 5.1 surround sound (Dolby & DTS), and PCM stereo versions of ‘Manafon’. </p>

<p>Two (18.7cm X 24.1cm) Hard Back books inserted into a rigid slip case. An accompanying (18.5cm x 23.5cm) black on white high quality print of a portrait of David Sylvian by Atsushi Fukui, each individually signed by the artist and David Sylvian (only the first 2000 copies carry signed editions of the print).</p>

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<p><a href="images/manafonoutside1.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="images/manafonoutside1.jpg" width="235px" /></span></a> <a href="images/manafonoutside2.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="images/manafonoutside2.jpg" width="235px" /></span></a><br />
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<p>This two-disc box set comes in two separate hard back, cloth-bound volumes which are themselves inserted into a cloth-bound rigid slip case. Each of the three cloth-bound items feature gold embossed lettering.</p>

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<p>Volume One: a 40 page full colour printed, perfect bound book to accompany ‘Manafon’, featuring the complete lyrics from ‘Manafon’, accompanied by artwork from the artists Atsushi Fukui and Ruud Van Empel. The CD is the standard version of Manafon.</p>

<p><br />
<a href="images/book-1-a.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="images/book-1-a.jpg" width="235px" /></span></a> <a href="images/book-1-b.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="images/book-1-b.jpg" width="235px" /></span></a> <a href="images/book-1-c.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="images/book-1-c.jpg" width="235px" /></span></a> <a href="images/book-1-d.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="images/book-1-d.jpg" width="235px" /></span></a><br />
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<p>Volume Two: a 24 page full colour printed, perfect bound book to accompany the documentary “Amplified Gesture”. With a foreword by Clive Bell, this book contains photos and biographies of all of the contributors to the documentary. </p>

<p><br />
<a href="images/book-2-a.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="images/book-2-a.jpg" width="235px" /></span></a> <a href="images/book-2-b.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="images/book-2-b.jpg" width="235px" /></span></a> <a href="images/book-2-c.jpg"><span class="discogimgsm"><img src="images/book-2-c.jpg" width="235px" /></span></a><br />
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<p>The DVD is an NTSC Region 0 disc that contains: “Amplified Gesture” - a documentary (duration 55 mins approx). A trailer for the documentary may be viewed <a href="http://www.manafon.com/amplified_gesture">here</a>.</p>

<p>The Deluxe edition of Manafon is now sold out.</p>

<p><br />
Manafon Audio:</p>

<p>5.1 dts surround sound mixed by David Sylvian<br />
5.1 dolby surround sound mixed by David Sylvian<br />
PCM Stereo (48 kHz, 24 bit)</p>

<p>Mastered by Tony Cousins @ Metropolis.</p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Small Metal Gods</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.manafon.com/#000797" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.davidsylvian.com/movabletype/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=14/entry_id=797" title="Small Metal Gods" />
    <id>tag:www.manafon.com,2009://14.797</id>
    
    <published>2009-04-09T01:58:09Z</published>
    <updated>2009-04-09T02:18:07Z</updated>
    
    <summary></summary>
    <author>
        <name>PhilipMarshall</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="small metal gods" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.manafon.com/">
        
        <![CDATA[<p>Video directed by Hiraki Sawa.</p>

<p>Hiraki Sawa was born in Ishikawa, Japan. He currently lives and works in London. Sawa is best known for films suffused with subtle smatterings of lyrical fabrication, commonly set in his own home. He takes us on fantastic journeys “through domestic interiors that come alive with animated features, oddities of scale, and logical impossibilities: toy airplanes that fly above spotters standing on a kitchen counter; camels that traverse the tattered bindings of an Encyclopedia Britannica.” With Small Metals Gods he revisits the interior air traffic congestion of his first film 'Dwelling' which, whilst somewhat soothing to watch, is not without an underlying sense of unease or anxiety. </p>

<p>Since 2002, Sawa has had solo exhibitions at institutions and museums the world over including Chisenhale Gallery, London, UK, the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia, and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C. He has taken part in numerous group shows and international art festivals including the Lyon Biennial 2003, France, the Yokohama Triennial 2005, Japan, Ars Electronica 2007 in Linz, Austria and Busan Biennial 2008, Korea. He is represented by James Cohan Gallery, New York and Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo. </p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Amplified Gesture credits</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.manafon.com/#000795" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.davidsylvian.com/movabletype/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=14/entry_id=795" title="Amplified Gesture credits" />
    <id>tag:www.manafon.com,2009://14.795</id>
    
    <published>2009-04-08T20:09:16Z</published>
    <updated>2009-04-09T00:46:27Z</updated>
    
    <summary></summary>
    <author>
        <name>PhilipMarshall</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="amplified gesture" />
    
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        <![CDATA[<p>Samadhisound presents: <a href="http://www.manafon.com/editions">Amplified Gesture</a>, an introduction to free improvisation: practitioners and their philosophy.</p>

<p>A trailer for <a href="http://www.manafon.com/editions">Amplified Gesture</a> can be viewed on this page. The full length feature documentary is available as a part of the <a href="http://www.manafon.com/editions">Manafon deluxe edition</a>.</p>

<p>Directed and edited by: Phil Hopkins. With: Otomo Yoshihide, Toshimaru Nakamura, Christian Fennesz, Keith Rowe, Eddie Prévost, Sachiko M., Evan Parker, John Tilbury, Werner Dafeldecker, Michael Moser and John Butcher.</p>

<p>Produced by: Adrian Molloy for Opium (Arts) Ltd. Executive Producer: David Sylvian. Music: Excerpts from Manafon by David Sylvian, © 2009 Samadhisound llc. <br />
All rights reserved.</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>On the subject of Manafon. An exchange between David Sylvian and Marcus Boon</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.manafon.com/#000794" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.davidsylvian.com/movabletype/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=14/entry_id=794" title="On the subject of Manafon. An exchange between David Sylvian and Marcus Boon" />
    <id>tag:www.manafon.com,2009://14.794</id>
    
    <published>2009-04-07T21:43:39Z</published>
    <updated>2009-06-12T09:30:47Z</updated>
    
    <summary>On the subject of Manafon. An exchange between David Sylvian and Marcus Boon. “How much can you take away and still have a song?” This is the only note I have left on what was supposed to be a list of questions for David Sylvian. It reminds me of the beautiful moment in Leonard Cohen&apos;s “Tower of Song” where “I said to Hank Williams/How lonely does it get/Hank Williams hasn&apos;t answered me yet/but I hear him…” I didn&apos;t ask David “how lonely does it get?”, but he answered me anyway, if you read between the lines, and carry on reading, or better still, listening… – Marcus Boon MB: I just listened to Manafon. I wish I&apos;d listened to it a week ago because I&apos;ve been sort of at my wit’s end, and the first track on the disc in particular spoke to something I&apos;ve been feeling rather intensely without being able to articulate it, or knowing anyone else who was able to do so. As with Blemish and some of your other recordings, I&apos;m very thankful to have that experience of something obscure reflected back to me in a way that I am able to recognize. DS: Can&apos;t ask for more than that really. MB: I&apos;ve been thinking a lot about “deflation” recently, and the bubble not only in the financial markets, but in values, practices, activities, ideas in general. And the sense that all of these bubbles are bursting or deflating. I think it&apos;s true in music, and the...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>PhilipMarshall</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="a conversation" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.manafon.com/">
        <![CDATA[<p>On the subject of Manafon. An exchange between <span class="notit">David Sylvian</span> and <span class="notit">Marcus Boon</span>.</p>

<p>“How much can you take away and still have a song?” This is the only note I have left on what was supposed to be a list of questions for David Sylvian. It reminds me of the beautiful moment in Leonard Cohen's “Tower of Song” where “I said to Hank Williams/How lonely does it get/Hank Williams hasn't answered me yet/but I hear him…” I didn't ask David “how lonely does it get?”, but he answered me anyway, if you read between the lines, and carry on reading, or better still, listening… – Marcus Boon</p>

<p><span class="notit">MB:</span> I just listened to Manafon. I wish I'd listened to it a week ago because I've been sort of at my wit’s end, and the first track on the disc in particular spoke to something I've been feeling rather intensely without being able to articulate it, or knowing anyone else who was able to do so. As with Blemish and some of your other recordings, I'm very thankful to have that experience of something obscure reflected back to me in a way that I am able to recognize.</p>

<p><span class="notit">DS:</span> Can't ask for more than that really.</p>

<p><span class="notit">MB:</span> I've been thinking a lot about “deflation” recently, and the bubble not only in the financial markets, but in values, practices, activities, ideas in general. And the sense that all of these bubbles are bursting or deflating. I think it's true in music, and the turn you took with Blemish is a rare thoughtful response to this problem… that melody, song, noise etc. themselves have become sites of a bubble that makes it almost impossible to listen to them, since all one hears is their “importance”, their value as capital, as gesture in a marketplace saturated with gestures. If Manafon reminds me of anything it's Cage's Indeterminacy, another beautiful meditation on the question of form…</p>

<p><span class="notit">DS:</span> Oddly, the subject of “indeterminacy” has come up a lot lately both related to this and current work. I'm also familiar with the Cage work of that title and fascinated, as many composers over the years have been, by what can be done some place between overly determined composition and its opposite and how to bring the two closer together. Not exactly a new problem but relatively new to the area of songwriting, at least in this context. After all, all writing is an act of improvisation on some level. And the emphasis here is in the compositional process rather than the notion of repeat performance. That old chestnut of the fixity of the recorded performance…</p>

<p><span class="notit">MB:</span> It's very low-key, but moving too. If there's a danger, it's in your voice, where I can feel the temptation to sing “beautifully” (this being one of your gifts), and the further temptation to refuse that gift by speech-singing or extreme lack of affectation. It lends the disk a strange sense of drama though, since in the end so much depends on very small decisions about intonation. And in the end this is part of the music's power, that sense of struggle at the level of your voice.</p>

<p><span class="notit">DS:</span> Of course these decisions are core for most singers in any context but they do become magnified under such circumstances. Some might feel there's an estrangement between singer and context which is part of the work's attraction for me. In some instances there'd be little difference in taking a field recording of say, sounds in a cafeteria, isolating 6 minutes and approaching this as a workable context for vocal composition… and indeed, that's how some of these ideas came together for me.</p>

<p><span class="notit">MB:</span> I don't imagine this was an easy disk to make, and the time right now makes it almost impossible to move forward, but you've found a way, and that's really something.</p>

<p><span class="notit">DS:</span> In terms of responding to the material to hand it wasn't a difficult album to make. The difficulties came in finding the raw material I was looking for. You don't walk into a roomful of free improvisers and say “this is what I want you do to”. At least I didn't. The skill is in choosing the right constellation of players for each set up and then gently nudging the session in the direction you feel might prove the more fruitful. With each session I had some vague parameters that helped me locate what it was I was after (and at the later sessions we had the benefit of listening to some of the earlier for guidance). In every session some amazing material surfaced but it wasn't always of the kind that best served my interests or allowed room for the voice. Bit like hunting I guess… sitting patiently, waiting for the right species to show itself. Fascinating really.</p>

<p><span class="notit">MB:</span> So how did you go about the hunting here? Are you writing the songs in response to the improvisations?</p>

<p><span class="notit">DS:</span> I am as road tested on the Bailey tracks on Blemish. It comes down to making the right choices regarding who to work with in what constellation. If you get that combination right something is bound to come out of the sessions that'll be close to anticipated… as far as that is possible. Gentle nudging, guidance, shifting of focus, pairing off performers, taking this one out of the picture, adding this… it's a fascinating way of digging for a particular kind of gold.</p>

<p>The first sessions in Vienna lasted for eight days. I started with Polwechsel, Hautzinger and Fennesz, later came Noël Akchoté (didn't make it onto the final album), then Keith Rowe joined us. Most of the material used came from the last two days with Keith, Christian, and Michael and Werner of Polwechsel. It took time for me to find what it was I was looking for but once the right combination was hit upon I knew I'd unearthed this, for want of a better term, modern chamber music I was after. Tokyo was a one day session. There was greater clarity and sense of purpose as a result of the time constraint but by that time I also had a clearer idea what it was I was after and how to find it. The only real specification made prior to the session was that Otomo use turntables with vinyl that featured chamber or modern string quartet music of some sort. The final session in London was also a one day affair. Again, I felt confident that I could find what I needed in that time frame with this incredible line up. I'd previously been given a session of improvised piano by John Tilbury which I'd managed to 'track' into the earlier sessions but this was the first time we worked together in person. Philipp Wachsmann was also a part of the London line up but again, didn't make the final cut.</p>

<p><span class="notit">MB:</span> But I still don't understand how the recordings relate to the sessions, whether you're using them as material and then dubbing vocals after editing and structuring in Pro-Tools… or are you literally improvising the song during the improv session and the recording is the same as the session? Or…?</p>

<p><span class="notit">DS:</span> I take the sessions and work on them at a later time. I attempt to 'improvise' lyrics and melodies as I go, writing and recording all in a matter of hours. The basic tracks themselves undergo little or no editing as such. The structure pretty much remains as given from the original sessions. I might add an introduction or overdub other elements onto the original take. Here's a couple of examples: “Senseless Violence”: Recorded in Vienna with Rowe/Polwechsel/Fennesz. I added guitar parts then layered Tilbury's piano into the track then added the vocal and an introduction. “Greatest Living Englishman”: Initial take suggested acoustic guitar overdubs which I requested of Otomo and Tetuzi on the spot. I later cut and pasted some interesting turntable activity from an alternate take onto this track. I also added an introduction by cutting and pasting elements from an earlier take. Tilbury was added to the coda. Melody and vocal added. “Rabbit Skinner”: no editing. added acoustic guitar myself then vocals.</p>

<p><span class="notit">MB:</span> Why the title “Manafon”? I google it and I get a Welsh village… I know “why?” is always a bad question…</p>

<p><span class="notit">DS:</span> The question …why Manafon” leads me on a journey that reveals something of the nature of the entire project. This is a good thing for me because I had to back off from the work, spend some time away from it, as I’d begun to lose perspective. If someone had asked the seemingly simple question; “So, what’s this album about” I’m not sure I’d have had a ready answer.</p>

<p>If we start with the track “Manafon” we’re looking at a description of a man, a man of faith, who struggles with that faith, who imposes an order on the external world in the hope of finding it internally. A man who embraces the morals and values of his faith and lives by them but who also struggles with the silence that burns inside his own heart and mind. God’s silence. He’s a man out of time who begins to look, on the surface, more like some tragicomic figure as time passes. While he seems to be an insufferable individual in many ways* there’s a quixotic element in his quest for knowledge, for upholding morals and values that even he struggles with when it comes to believing in their efficacy.</p>

<p>Each verse is a description of minor aspects of the life of the poet R.S Thomas. The last two lines that end the piece are my own commentary. It spells out the sense of disillusionment and disorientation that the album starts with in “Small Metal Gods.”  Therein lies one of the central themes behind the album. The title “Manafon” alludes to another. Manafon is indeed a village in Wales, a village in which Thomas lived for sometime and served as rector to the parish. In this small village Thomas had trouble filling the pews of a Sunday but in a sense it was something of an idyllic spot in which to raise a child (a strict, taciturn and somewhat indifferent parent), master his profession and write his poetry. So the physically real village became for me a metaphor for the poetic imagination. A resource that’s called upon to unearth meaning, lend comprehension, provide motivation, a source of inspiration. It often plays a similar role in life for some as faith does for many. I came to feel that, in a sense, Thomas’ faith in, and need of, his outlet through poetry was more important than the faith that inspired it. They were uniquely, it seemed to me, bound to one another. Not as in the religious poetry of his and other faiths which generally speak of the ecstasy. He writes of the working poor and the landscape but it’s an austere world with little hope of comfort and so, by contrast, we are encouraged to concentrate on the fate of our souls etc.(yes, he wrote his own sermons too) But, alongside a kind of negation of many facets of his modern world (although, he was an odd mix of the recluse and the public figure even going so far as to lead CND marches and was very outspoken in favour of the bombing of English owed holiday homes in Wales), there’s also this underlying doubt and struggle with his belief, an uncertainty of the existence of the other (religious devotees are warned that this is a most dangerous period in their evolution, a time of suicides and renunciations).</p>

<p>I wasn’t sure I wanted to put a name, a source to the title track because my interpretation of Thomas’ life and work might be more a product of my own projections rather than detailing the facts of his life and work although, as I said, the particulars described in the piece are real enough. A man who exhorted Welsh poets to write in their own tongue when this was something he was unable to do (he did write an autobiography in welsh but it’s my understanding than his poetry was exclusively written in English as this was his mother tongue). He moved further and further west throughout his life until it was possible to move no further within the country he believed should be independent. But these facts are of only passing importance. As a source Thomas might only be of importance to me. The ambiguity of the lyric might work in its favour?</p>

<p><span class="notit">MB:</span> Did you ever meet Thomas?</p>

<p><span class="notit">DS:</span> No… I'm not sure I would've wished to at the time although I'd be very curious at this stage in life.</p>

<p><span class="notit">MB:</span> Why does his story resonate for you now?</p>

<p><span class="notit">DS:</span> I've read Thomas since the 1980's. There was something about his austere vision of the world which, as I said, belonged to another time. He was of the generation that lived through world wars I and II, that rejected the easy comforts of modern life, that in a sense wanted more to be asked of them by society and in turn wanted society to rise out of its weak minded ambivalence and desires for basic pleasures and aim for higher goals, a more noble sense of itself and its destiny. Thomas seemed in search of a deeper, more profound connection with the natural and spiritual world whilst appearing to battle against inner demons which show familiar signs of being born of repression. Very British in that respect.</p>

<p>What interests me is how individuals, in pursuit of “truth”, to fulfill a life's promise by living it with a sense of dignity and purpose, can find themselves derailed, disillusioned. I'm not saying that's what happened to Thomas but I can't help feel that his wasn't a happy existence or that the life he chose to live bore significant fruit or at least that which didn't have a slightly bitter aftertaste. He appears to have been profoundly single minded, inflexible, proud, disparaging. All qualities we think of today as standing in the way of our development. But there's still a part of me that applauds the effort, the adherence to a path, a devotion to a life's cause. For all its apparent bitterness and tragicomic contradictions there's something beautiful about the man's dogged devotion to writing, to poetry. Like the character in Tarkovsky's The Sacrifice who everyday waters the dead tree in the belief that one day it'll return to life. This is the work of faith isn't it? Thomas' path was complicated by the seeming expression of doubt in God's existence although when asked the answer was a matter of fact 'of course I believe in God'.<br />
Who or what we chose to believe in or deny is very telling isn't it? Maybe I'm attracted to the stories of individuals who search for meaning on their own terms. I'm increasingly wary of hierarchies and societal norms and traditions… of “givens”. But what I'm fascinated by is the devotion to a creative discipline. The meaning with which the work imbues the life regardless of its reception and, to a certain extent, its importance.</p>

<p><span class="notit">MB:</span> Manafon is a dark record, and the music often evokes a feeling of fear, a kind of creepy post 9/11 feeling, unsettled in a very quiet way – but the singing is a counterpoint to this, facing it, telling a story that passes through the zone of fear, responds to it…</p>

<p><span class="notit">DS:</span> There are many subtle and not so subtle references to the creative imagination throughout the album. Allusions, quotations etc. Each piece seems to deal with the twin subject matter of inspiration/imagination and disillusionment in its own way. “Random Acts…” looks at what it means to be disillusioned with the ways and means with which societal values are protected and defended and a possible scenario to come as the tightening strictures of law and order become too unreasonably repressive and spontaneous acts of terrorism, not based in ideology but in anger and frustration and the desire for a liberation from the overbearing guidelines of the state, erupt. Minor acts of destruction as a creative act. This is something that seems inevitable as reasoned argument, protest, and related acts become increasingly inhibited under law.</p>

<p><span class="notit">MB:</span> You've been one of the few singers, especially with “World Citizen”, but also some of the tracks here, who's responded directly to the political situation in America and Europe after 9/11. I know a lot of people who think of you as a singer of “spiritual” or maybe existential songs about inner struggle are surprised at this. Where did the directness of your response to what's been going on come from???</p>

<p><span class="notit">DS:</span> Actually, I think there may've been more responses to 9/11 and the post 9/11 environment than it may appear.</p>

<p>Working with Ryuichi on a couple of projects that he instigated pushed me into writing overtly political pieces but I never felt very comfortable with this approach. The soap box numbers which resulted leave little room for individual interpretation. It was interesting to touch upon that style of writing, a somewhat prosaic approach to lyric writing and if you're going to write an openly political piece for a specific cause there's no point in being the least bit indirect in your approach. But I tend to think of it as the antithesis of the kind of material that I'm personally interested in and a perversion of the innate power of music which has a potentially political element to it at all times, as to affect or stimulate change in one individual is a political act as far as I'm concerned. Having walked down that road on a couple of projects with Ryuichi I began writing material that appeared more grounded in current events or making references to contemporary events but in the context of narrative, as reference, as possible catalyst. This was because there was no remit, I was free to deal with the subject matter as I chose. The first piece that I felt happy with in this respect was “Atom and Cell”. It was written some time before “World Citizen (I Won't be Disappointed)”, which is a piece I'm also happy with, but released at a later date. “Wonderful World” also deals with similar subject matter.</p>

<p>Living in the United States has also made me more politically aware because I feel there's so much work to be done here in terms of equality, liberty, the raising of awareness on numerous issues, the fight against the oppressive nature of the Christian right and the power of multinational corporations, the lobbyists etc. The US, for all its eccentricity, is powerfully conservative. I guess I tend to find that conservatism somewhat oppressive and so certain issues have begun appearing in the work which mightn't be there otherwise. Also, I have serious doubts that there's such a thing as a free press in the US. More often than not the media seems to act as mouthpiece to the politicians mainly for fear of losing access to them. The politicians certainly aren't thoroughly examined by the media by any stretch of the imagination. Scrutiny of the Bush administration pre and post war was almost wholly absent. All voices of dissent were suppressed or eradicated which made it all the more important to add one's voice in the hope of something, anything, breaking through.</p>

<p><span class="notit">MB:</span> It's striking how English things sound on Manafon.  Not just the lyrical concerns, but even your own intonation and the choice of phrases…</p>

<p><span class="notit">DS:</span> There was a desire to create a work that had a definitively British or, possibly more specifically, English quality about it. Even with many nationalities involved in its making that's something I hope I've managed to maintain in the finished work. Why take that route? Most of the decisions made in this respect are initially of an intuitive nature.  An intuitive understanding of the nature of the work which presents itself during the gestation period between prior to conception and realisation. It's a map against which every step taken on the road to realisation is measured and quantified. It helps when making very elementary decisions about the nature of the work such as the instrumentation (what is or isn't excluded e. g. no percussion) as well as the over all tone, feel, and real content of the compositions. 'Blemish' also wore its Englishness on its sleeve (think of pieces such as 'the only daughter' with lines such as 'do us a favour, your one and only warning, please be gone by morning), in that sense and many others “Manafon” is a companion piece. Maybe this “Britishness” is a product of trying to speak with a true voice? To give voice to something that exists within me as memory, lived experience, or knowledge. To place its roots in specific soil… and I'm not speaking of musical roots which is something I've always fought against in a way, but in a specificity bought about through circumstances of birth, in my case, London from the late 1950's (write of what you know). To find voices to give voice to that experience. I found it easier to write in the third person in that respect. Project my own concerns onto these characters. I guess it's a bit like living in the States and reflecting on that British character once removed. Distance helps. It allows you to speak some home truths via slight of hand. But there's absolutely no nostalgia in this examination of character. It's a self examination and by extension an examination of certain aspects of the British character and human nature in general although, I have to say, I'm not really an 'everyman' in that respect and maybe that's one reason why my work's failed to find a bigger audience. Hard for me to tell. I only know what it's like to have lived inside my own skin.</p>

<p><span class="notit">MB:</span> To me something that resonates in the record is an odd sense of disillusionment with spiritual paths.  I'm not sure whether disillusion is the right sense for it, but just skepticism about the community, the motives, the shiny images of deities that I know were made in a sweat-shop in Mumbai… to the point where I wonder what's left aside from something transcendental, that I have very strong feelings for and a deep attraction to, but which I've now subtracted all human links to, because I can't believe in the links any more.  In a way, the "path" becomes truly open, but often I don't see any path at all. So maybe the whole universe becomes “improv” at that point?</p>

<p><span class="notit">DS:</span> This is an interesting development though isn't it? I've read, as I'm sure you have, that some teachers have recommended a thorough detox in professional analysis before ever approaching a path or discipline. I'm not sure that's a cure all but it's pretty difficult for us to see past our own deficiencies, our neuroses, and so see what clearly motivates us in our search. No doubt there something primal in us that sets us on one journey or another but that's coloured or tempered by all manner of other needs and desires and it's here that we possibly come undone, use a distorting lens to enable us to see what it is we wish to see?</p>

<p>It does become increasingly difficult to believe in the testimony of others… the links and lineage… there's so much self delusion, politics, power grabbing and maintenance etc. Once you've been through the wringer a few times, more than a few times, you begin to only believe in the voice inside yourself which rings true*. Personal experience before you've time to (re)interpret it… epiphanies, unanticipated, sustaining.</p>

<p>I find the whole process fraught with difficulty but fascinating. Letting go of ambition seems to be part of the process too. Ambition for personal progress. Yes, improv or winging it. I like the state of hopelessness. Hope really does tend to get in the way. It takes you out of the present towards an ideal. To live without hope but without a loss of love for life… that's a great starting place it seems to me.</p>

<p>*I don't believe in magic,<br />
I don't believe in I-ching,<br />
I don't believe in bible,<br />
I don't believe in tarot,<br />
I don't believe in Hitler,<br />
I don't believe in Jesus,<br />
I don't believe in Kennedy,<br />
I don't believe in Buddha,<br />
I don't believe in mantra,<br />
I don't believe in Gita,<br />
I don't believe in yoga,<br />
I don't believe in kings,<br />
I don't believe in Elvis,<br />
I don't believe in Zimmerman,<br />
I don't believe in Beatles,<br />
I just believe in me,<br />
Yoko and me,<br />
And that's reality.</p>

<p>God. John Lennon</p>

<p>(or alternately… delusion… all of it… and there's relief in that).</p>

<p>And there is no maker<br />
just inexhaustible indifference<br />
and there's comfort in that<br />
so you feel unafraid</p>

<p>Snow White in Appalachia. David Sylvian</p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Biography</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.manafon.com/#000793" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.davidsylvian.com/movabletype/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=14/entry_id=793" title="Biography" />
    <id>tag:www.manafon.com,2009://14.793</id>
    
    <published>2009-04-07T21:36:16Z</published>
    <updated>2009-04-07T21:41:18Z</updated>
    
    <summary>The David Sylvian that fronted new wave pop band Japan wore luminescent hair and glam make-up; on the cover of his solo debut, 1984&apos;s Brilliant Trees, he was stylish and refined, a gentleman popster. But the illustration that introduces 2003&apos;s Blemish sends a different message: he&apos;s bedraggled and unshaven, his far-off expression turned haunted. The new millennium has seen a more serious Sylvian, several steps further along on his musical journey and seeking new sounds to explain new traumas. While Japan started off as one of many &apos;70s New Romantic bands, they made an unpredictable break with their hit &quot;Ghosts&quot; – a searching and evocative single where spare rhythms and fleeting electronic sounds lay under Sylvian&apos;s smouldering tenor. &quot;Writing &apos;Ghosts&apos; was a turning point for me,&quot; Sylvian recalls. &quot;So much of what we created with Japan was built upon artifice. With that song I&apos;d felt I&apos;d had the breakthrough I was looking for. I&apos;d touched upon something true to myself and expressed it in a way that didn&apos;t leave me feeling overly vulnerable. In the coming years I&apos;d forget about all notions of vulnerability, opening up the material to a greater emotional intensity. I knew that I had to find my own voice, both figuratively and literally.&quot; On his solo records of the &apos;80s, Sylvian&apos;s explorations in music took him from the pop-funk, stylish jazz and windswept exotica of 1984&apos;s Brilliant Trees; the ambient landscapes and epic ballads of 1985&apos;s Gone to Earth; and the romantic orchestrations of 1987&apos;s Secrets...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>PhilipMarshall</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="everything and nothing" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.manafon.com/">
        <![CDATA[<p>The David Sylvian that fronted new wave pop band Japan wore luminescent hair and glam make-up; on the cover of his solo debut, 1984's Brilliant Trees, he was stylish and refined, a gentleman popster. But the illustration that introduces 2003's Blemish sends a different message: he's bedraggled and unshaven, his far-off expression turned haunted. The new millennium has seen a more serious Sylvian, several steps further along on his musical journey and seeking new sounds to explain new traumas.</p>

<p>While Japan started off as one of many '70s New Romantic bands, they made an unpredictable break with their hit "Ghosts" – a searching and evocative single where spare rhythms and fleeting electronic sounds lay under Sylvian's smouldering tenor. "Writing 'Ghosts' was a turning point for me," Sylvian recalls. "So much of what we created with Japan was built upon artifice. With that song I'd felt I'd had the breakthrough I was looking for. I'd touched upon something true to myself and expressed it in a way that didn't leave me feeling overly vulnerable. In the coming years I'd forget about all notions of vulnerability, opening up the material to a greater emotional intensity. I knew that I had to find my own voice, both figuratively and literally."</p>

<p>On his solo records of the '80s, Sylvian's explorations in music took him from the pop-funk, stylish jazz and windswept exotica of 1984's Brilliant Trees; the ambient landscapes and epic ballads of 1985's Gone to Earth; and the romantic orchestrations of 1987's Secrets of the Beehive. His collaborators included leaders of progressive music, from jazzmen such as Mark Isham, John Taylor and Kenny Wheeler to the rock and fusion guitarists Robert Fripp, Bill Nelson, and David Torn. All three albums married strong melodies to intricate atmospheres.<br />
 <br />
"The details are what always interested me. And so I just began to spend more and more time on those details, until they came to the forefront of the material-textures and atmospherics. I began to elaborate on those more and more and push the rhythmic element a little bit further back."</p>

<p>Other projects from that period included ambient works with trumpeter Jon Hassell and Can alumnus Holger Czukay, as well as a collection of photographic collages titled Perspectives, whose exhibition in Tokyo sparked the documentary video, Preparations For a Journey. Regular collaborations with composer and Yellow Magic Orchestra star Ryuichi Sakamoto yielded Sylvian's first international hit, "Forbidden Colours." </p>

<p>In the early '90s, Sylvian embarked on a series of acclaimed tours with Robert Fripp, leading to their 1993 studio release 'The First Day' as well as their 1994 multi-media installation 'Redemption – Approaching Silence' in Tokyo's P3 gallery. This followed Sylvian's first foray into the world of art installations in 1990, when in collaboration with Russell Mills, Sylvian created the installation entitled 'Ember Glance (the permanence of memory)' also held in Tokyo. And 1991 saw the release of Rain Tree Crow, a Japan reunion under a different name. But Sylvian grew less prolific as the decade wore on, enjoying his new marriage to Ingrid Chavez and taking four years to finish 1999's Dead Bees on a Cake. As seductive yet eclectic as any of his prior work, Dead Bees included the hit single "I Surrender," where Sylvian crafts an eye-openingly beautiful vessel around his spiritual journey. Immediately following Dead Bees on a Cake, Sylvian also released a retrospective of his work titled Everything and Nothing, a re-arrangement and re-evaluation of his career dating back to Japan. </p>

<p>Sylvian's work with his spiritual teachers has led him through a rigorous process of study and self-examination. Says Sylvian, "I've never come across anything that is as pinpoint accurate as the message you get through the guru. You go through this process with other people who have common goals, you see them confronting their fears, the tests that they're put through, and you look at the manner in which they're tested and think, 'I could handle that.' But when the opportunity for you to learn from your fears comes along, it's like, 'Jesus Christ, give me any other lesson you choose, but not that one.'" </p>

<p>His determination to confront his vulnerabilities led to arguably his most powerful album to date, 2003's Blemish. Recorded in his home studio in six weeks, with contributions received via the Internet from improv legend Derek Bailey and electronica artist Christian Fennesz, Blemish captured Sylvian in the process of breaking up with his wife. "I wanted to get into those difficult emotions, and penetrate them as deeply as I felt I was capable of doing, in the security of that working space. So although there were elements of my life that were bringing all these negative emotions to the fore, what I was doing in the studio was taking them further – whereas in life we try to restrain them, we hold them back. We don't allow ourselves to go too far with it because they feel dangerous, they feel threatening," says Sylvian. "Living through these emotions was very difficult, but finding a voice for them was so cathartic. After that six-week period, I'd felt I'd worked through some very difficult emotions. I felt an enormous amount of release."</p>

<p>Blemish also marked the debut of his own independent label, SamadhiSound. "I think of [SamadhiSound] as being global, and not necessarily based in the States. It's stretched between the States, Europe, and Japan. I think nowadays it doesn't really matter where we are physically located. We create our own culture around us to a large extent, whether it's what we're listening to, what we're watching, what we're reading – it can have very little to do with one's immediate cultural environment. We are in a global culture in that respect." Samadhi has featured artists from around the world, including new releases by Sweet Billy Pilgrim, Harold Budd, Thomas Feiner, and David Toop, and the last studio recordings by Derek Bailey. This reach is also borne out in a remix album, The Only Daughter, where pieces from Blemish are reinterpreted by artists including Burnt Friedman, Sweet Billy Pilgrim, and Jan Bang and Erik Honoré.</p>

<p>Most of the pieces on Blemish depart from traditional pop song forms, a process that began all the way back with "Ghosts" and that continues in his solo work. More recently, he has also released Snow Borne Sorrow and Money for All, an LP and EP from the band Nine Horses. Nine Horses is a trio that includes his brother and regular collaborator Steve Jansen and electronica artist Burnt Friedman, as well as contributions from singer Stina Nordenstem, trumpeter Arve Henriksen, and Ryuichi Sakamoto on piano. Alluring and urbane, the project's trip-hop textures belie its troubled lyrics, inspired by both personal affairs and world concerns. His single with Sakamoto, "World Citizen" – recently featured on the soundtrack to the film Babel – bluntly captures his concerns as a global artist living in post-9/11 America. "It wasn't my natural inclination to get into writing protest songs. But it was a request from Ryuichi to give it a bash. And I felt that there was very little dissent being vocalized in the States," says Sylvian. "I feel furious at what's being done in the name of the American people."</p>

<p>In 2009, the project that began in Blemish continues with Manafon, an album that assembles the world’s leading free improvisers, including Evan Parker, Keith Rowe, Fennesz, Sachiko M, Otomo Yoshihide, and John Tilbury, among several others.  In small ensembles, the improvisers create backdrops for the skeletal songs, and challenge the relationship between improvisation and composition, ensembles and lead voices, and intimacy and solitude. Lyrically challenging, it is also one of the most astonishingly and unpredictably beautiful works Sylvian has produced. </p>

<p>Most recently Sylvian revisited the presentation of his music in forms beyond the CD. 'When loud weather buffeted Naoshima' was commissioned by the Naoshima Fukutake Art Museum Foundation on the island of Naoshima, Japan, as part of the NAOSHIMA STANDARD 2 exhibition which ran from Oct 2006 to April 2007. The composition was site specific. In fact, Sylvian has said that the work isn't really complete until the sounds of the town Honmura are incorporated into the listening experience. The piece has since been added to the foundation’s permanent collection. In 2009, Sylvian collaborated with composer Dai Fujikura and a small ensemble on the audio installation “When we return you won’t recognize us,” located on Gran Canaria of the Canary Islands. The work was inspired by a 2003 genetics research article focusing on the Canary Islands, which discovered that despite Spanish colonization and the slave trade, fully half to three-quarters of the population retains its aboriginal genetic lineage.  As Sylvian writes, “My interest lay in the connection between the physical or scientific reality of our biological make-up, the links to lineage (genetic genealogy), location and, to move beyond the realm of science into intuitive logic, the interior life of a community or people.  An implied cultural heritage.”</p>

<p>With the release of Manafon, Sylvian continues to confront the challenges, both personal and global, that have enriched his work for three decades. And he continues to follow this path – with patience, perseverance, and beauty. </p>

<p><span class="notit">By Chris Dahlen</span></p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Manafon</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.manafon.com/#000791" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.davidsylvian.com/movabletype/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=14/entry_id=791" title="Manafon" />
    <id>tag:www.manafon.com,2009://14.791</id>
    
    <published>2009-04-07T21:19:49Z</published>
    <updated>2009-04-07T21:20:21Z</updated>
    
    <summary>David Sylvian is a man apart. In a thirty-year career that spans the New Romantic movement, ambient works and progressive rock, and mature and esoteric pop, Sylvian has tested popular styles and bent them to his own vision. But the ‘00s have seen a more extreme side of his work. While 2003’s Blemish startled long-time fans with its emotional rigour, Sylvian has taken the next step with Manafon – a work of nuance and stern musicality, that is also intriguing, suspenseful, and horribly beautiful. On Manafon, Sylvian pursues “a completely modern kind of chamber music. Intimate, dynamic, emotive, democratic, economical.” In sessions in London, Vienna, and Tokyo, Sylvian assembled the world’s leading improvisers and innovators, artists who explore free improvisation, space-specific performance, and live electronics. From Evan Parker and Keith Rowe, to Fennesz and members of Polwechsel, to Sachiko M and Otomo Yoshihide, the musicians provide both a backdrop and a counterweight to his own vocal performances – which, minus one instrumental, are nakedly the center of each piece. Sylvian’s voice has never been so dominant or so striking, and his resonant tenor and deliberate vibrato captivate the listener from the start of “Small Metal Gods.” Its prominence would come off as egotistical – except that each performance is an exercise in self-exposure, and each character study is written in the third-person, to allow the maximum detachment. “It’s like a one-man monologue in which every change of light and backdrop is crucial to the carrying of the central performance. It’s...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>PhilipMarshall</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="manafon" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.manafon.com/">
        <![CDATA[<p>David Sylvian is a man apart.  In a thirty-year career that spans the New Romantic movement, ambient works and progressive rock, and mature and esoteric pop, Sylvian has tested popular styles and bent them to his own vision.   But the ‘00s have seen a more extreme side of his work.  While 2003’s Blemish startled long-time fans with its emotional rigour, Sylvian has taken the next step with Manafon – a work of nuance and stern musicality, that is also intriguing, suspenseful, and horribly beautiful.</p>

<p>On Manafon, Sylvian pursues “a completely modern kind of chamber music.  Intimate, dynamic, emotive, democratic, economical.”  In sessions in London, Vienna, and Tokyo, Sylvian assembled the world’s leading improvisers and innovators, artists who explore free improvisation, space-specific performance, and live electronics.  From Evan Parker and Keith Rowe, to Fennesz and members of Polwechsel, to Sachiko M and Otomo Yoshihide, the musicians provide both a backdrop and a counterweight to his own vocal performances – which, minus one instrumental, are nakedly the center of each piece.  </p>

<p>Sylvian’s voice has never been so dominant or so striking, and his resonant tenor and deliberate vibrato  captivate the listener from the start of “Small Metal Gods.”  Its prominence would come off as egotistical – except that each performance is an exercise in self-exposure, and each character study is written in the third-person, to allow the maximum detachment.  </p>

<p> “It’s like a one-man monologue in which every change of light and backdrop is crucial to the carrying of the central performance.  It’s an ensemble work even though there is a central performance.”  Though the setlist is all ballads, romanticism is out, and no percussion provides a pulse.  All the melody and rhythm rest in the voice.  Aside from overdubs of acoustic guitar or John Tilbury’s somber, Feldman-esque phrases on piano, Sylvian enhanced but did not reconfigure the improvisations, giving himself just the skeletons of songs to guide him.  </p>

<p>When an instrument locks with the lyrics – as when Fennesz introduces a texture that clinches the disaster of “Snow White in Appalachia” – the moment is indescribable; when it dissolves, Sylvian doesn’t pause.  Neither a complement nor a Greek chorus, the instrumentalists maintain an ambiguous attitude to the singer, and what he’s saying.  When Sylvian’s delivery implies sympathy or mockery on “The Greatest Living Englishman,” the music is cantankerous but dry, and Otomo Yoshihide’s  abrupt snippets of classical vinyl may or may not share the joke.    </p>

<p>The closing track, “Manafon,” depicts the British poet R. S. Thomas.  Sylvian explains that it is “a description of a man of faith, who struggles with that faith, who imposes an order on the external world in the hope of finding it internally. A man who embraces the morals and values of his faith and lives by them but who also struggles with the silence that burns inside his own heart and mind. God’s silence. He’s a man out of time who begins to look, on the surface, more like some tragicomic figure as time passes. While he seems to be an insufferable individual in many ways there’s a quixotic element in his quest for knowledge, for upholding morals and values that even he struggles with when it comes to believing in their efficacy.”</p>

<p>Manafon’s contradictions lay at the heart of its excellence.  It’s driven not just by the tension between improvisation and composition, frontman and ensemble, or in Sylvian’s words, “intimacy and solitude.” Manafon captures the dilemma of a man who studies himself clincically, but cannot truly understand himself; who’s disillusioned, but maybe laughably so.  The most common sensation, which hangs in almost every note, is a feeling of suspense.  The sole instrumental – to which Sylvian also contributes – sounds less like a performance, and more like a wellspring of possibilities. </p>

<p>The album ends simply on a phrase and a breath.  But there’s a happier ending in its other theme: Manafon also explores the creative process.  Intuition drew Sylvian to these pieces and these players, and the surprises they bring: a cello visiting like a warm hand on a forehead, the unpredictable use of unadulterated sine waves, the brassy path of Evan Parker’s soprano sax solo.   Manafon has a forbidding core, but aesthetically, each piece is an engrossing discovery.</p>

<p>“Maybe I’m attracted to the stories of individuals who search for meaning on their own terms,” says Sylvian.  “But what I’m fascinated by is the devotion to a creative discipline.  The meaning with which the work imbues the life regardless of its reception and, to a certain extent, its importance.”  Sylvian’s search is endless, and maybe quixotic.   The fruits of the journey are unknowably rich.</p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>

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