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Manafon

David Sylvian

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Album Review

If there is a single theme that runs through David Sylvian's Manafon, it's simply: "No hope...no doubt." Like 2003's Blemish, it's a rather difficult record, and its emotional and spiritual cousin. It's dark, fraught with emotional and musical difficulty, nonlinear sounds and improvised music, and lyric themes that express a tension between hopelessness and the love of everyday life. The title comes from the name of a village in Wales where the poet R.S. Thomas once lived, studied the Welsh language, and published his first three volumes. He is the principal muse for Manafon, though there are others. Much of the writing reflects — like Blemish — Sylvian's own struggles, though they are often (but not always) relegated to the third person. The studio musicians have either worked with Sylvian before or with one another: they include saxophonist Evan Parker, pianist John Tilbury, guitarists Christian Fennesz and Keith Rowe, members of Polwechsel, and turntablist/guitarist Otomo Yoshihide, among others. There are no drums. It must also be said that the presence of the late Derek Bailey (who worked on Blemish) is felt deeply on this recording, which was created on three continents. Despite these vanguard players, Manafon is not an avant jazz or "new music" record. It blurs all categories beautifully, and while it makes listeners work a bit, its payoff is a dark and luxuriant dream that cascades, floats, hovers, and changes both shape and shade often, and does so seamlessly.

Sylvian's voice is front and center; it is so prominent that despite all of the instrumentation, in whatever musical conflagration chosen for a particular track, the voice is almost on its own. His phrases and lyrics were either improvised to fit the live sessions or were written in response to them. There are numerous electronic effects, but they never intrude on Sylvian's voice, which is simultaneously emotionally engaged in the process and yet detached from the actual emotions expressed in the songs themselves — even when they are confessional in nature. The album opener, "Small Metal Gods," is an example, and one of the most moving tracks on the set. Accompanied by acoustic guitar, laptop, electronics, bass, and cello, he sings "...You balance things like you wouldn't believe, when you should just let things be/Yes you juggle things 'cause you can't lose sight of the wretched story line/It's the narrative that must go on, until the end of time/And you're guilty of some self-neglect, and the mind unravels for days/I've told you once, yes a thousand times, I'm better off this way...." Other standouts include "Random Acts of Senseless Violence," with stellar work by Yoshihide (who was instructed to use only the sounds of classical or modern chamber music), as well as Tilbury's ghostly piano. Parker shines on "The Rabbit Skinner," the lone instrumental "The Department of Dead Letters," and "Emily Dickinson." "Snow White in Appalachia" contains one of the most beautiful "melodies" on the set, and the closing title track is something so abstract yet memorable that it sums up both Sylvian's lyrical and musical themes as a strangely beautiful construction of their own even if at times they are disturbing. Manafon is a quiet yet forceful stunner, a recording that, if heard, is literally unforgettable.

Customer Reviews

BLEAK PIECE OF CRAP

I'm a HUGE Sylvian Fan but I'm not sure what is up with him lately but this album is entirely unlistenable.... unless of course you want a soundtrack to your own suicide. In all 9 tracks there is not one I will listen to ever again... not one beautiful track. I'm very discouraged and actually regret buying without listening first. I want my money back Sylvian.... get into some therapy, fall in love with life again and write me a beautiful album please.

Imbalanced

As a David Sylvian fan, I was very disappointed in this album. The project feels self-indulgent. Mostly just Sylvian's voice, more speaking than singing, very depressing lyrics over an almost total absence of music. I always found Sylvian's strength to be the instrumental arrangements, and still think his finest work is the instrumental disc of "Gone to Earth". Sylvian sounds demoralized and lost, and so you will you if you listen to this.

Originality so rare that most are not ready for it

Perhaps one has to listen to multiple thousands of songs, in various genres, to get to the point where they are tired of the status quo. Then and only then will they be thankful for works like this one. "Beautiful" and "haunting" are words that are thrown around easily, but really apply to music like this, and like Talk Talk's later works. Talk Talk frontman Mark Hollis once said, "Before you play two notes learn how to play one note - and don't play one note unless you've got a reason to play it." That seems to be the foundation for Sylvian here. I for one am delighted for Manafon (my first Sylvian purchase), and would rather listen to this than all the soulless pop that is infecting the airwaves these days.

Biography

Born: February 23, 1958 in Lewisham, London, England

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

Following the 1982 dissolution of Japan, the group's onetime frontman David Sylvian staked out a far-ranging and esoteric career that encompassed not only solo projects but also a series of fascinating collaborative efforts and forays into filmmaking, photography, and modern art. Born David Batt in Kent, England, on February 23, 1958, Sylvian formed Japan in 1974 and served as primary singer/songwriter throughout the group's eight-year existence. Just prior to Japan's breakup, Sylvian began...
Full Bio
Manafon, David Sylvian
View In iTunes
  • $9.99
  • Genres: Pop/Rock, Music, Pop, Classical
  • Released: Sep 11, 2009

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