© 2024
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
🎧 We met our goal for the Spring Membership Drive! Thank you to everyone who contributed! ❤️

Ashley Paul Incites A Microscopic Riot On 'Watch Them Pass'

Ashley Paul.
Courtesy of the artist
Ashley Paul.

Even in still moments, particles incite microscopic riots. Brooklyn-via-Boston composer and multi-instrumentalist Ashley Paul is used to making a huge racket, most regularly with her husband Eli Keszler. On her Line the Clouds, there's tension in patience as she navigates a singer-songwriter's reactions.

With cautiously plucked electric guitar, saxophone squeaks and bowed percussion, Line the Clouds is not a conventional singer-songwriter album. The techniques and sonics come from free improvisation, but Paul plays with them as though they were handed down from folk singers past. The sparse, abstract instrumentation is just as expressive and hushed and unsure as her voice, perhaps most starkly heard on "Watch Them Pass."

It's easy to say that "Watch Them Pass" is Line the Clouds at its most stripped down: guitar and voice, with the breathy coo of a saxophone somewhere in the background. The repeated phrases — "watch them pass," "no one is there for you" — are cryptic and melancholy, like I Could Live in Hope-era Low taking lyrical cues from Jandek. But as finger-picked guitar melodies and Paul's double-tracked and slightly off-sync vocals tumble over each other, a tiny universe forms, awaiting a riot.

Line the Clouds is out now on REL Records (vinyl) and Boomkat (digital).

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Listen to the Viking's Choice playlist, subscribe to the newsletter.