Tent Music
Tent Music is both the name of the recording project and the album by Micaela Tobin (White Boy Scream) and Joshua Hill. Recorded in 2 nights in a tent in Northern Arizona - the music contained in this album - like the tent itself - was a vector for channeling and visitations as the two improvised using voice, electronics and violin. The result was beyond anything the two could have planned - songs took the form of searching invocations to structured songs that wouldn't feel out of place in the ecstatic pop tradition of A Silver Mt. Zion or Akron / Family.
The pre-order comes with a 32 page booklet by Garek Druss that turns each song into its own hand drawn sigil - an invitation to engage with this music on a deeper level.
In June 2021, Hill, violinist –– noted film composer and multimedia artist –– was staying with his parents in Northern Arizona, simultaneously retreating from the pandemic and caring for his father, in the throes of dementia. Tobin, passing through on her way from Los Angeles to New Mexico, stopped to stay for a few nights, pitching a tent in the Hill’s yard. On a whim, Hill and Tobin decided to set up microphones and a few instruments in the tent and record, only miles from then raging wildfires, a hundred feet from Hill’s ailing father –– and yet, evidently, a world apart from any of it: sealed off from the smoky skies and from Hill’s father, swept up in a mind cutting itself loose from reason.
Whether despite or entirely because of the fact that Hill and Tobin had very few expectations and established no particular goals for this activity, and certainly owing something significant to the tent itself and the context that it created, what emerged over the next two nights seemed to establish itself in channelings and visitations. The textures and tales that Hill and Tobin entirely improvised over those two nights, when revisited again and again over the course of the next couple of years of sculpting and additional recording, bore a variety of unexpected fruits. “Both of us have a pretty long practice with improvised and experimental music,” Tobin says, “but there were voices coming out of me in those two nights that I’ve never used before. It felt like channeling something. When we started listening back to it, the story emerged.”
While upon reviewing the recordings Hill and Tobin were frankly shaken by the otherworldly and ancient qualities of what emerged within the tent over the course of two nights, Tent Music is also undeniably modern in the way that it moves from utterly abstract to patently catchy, blending sounds both organic and technologically shaped. Tobin and Hill seam it all together with fourth wall-shattering, hyperclose, ASMR textures, sounds of mouth and body and devices that would not be out of place on a claire rousay recording. This spectrum is brought into vivid relief by mixing engineer Michael Krassner, who took Hill’s meticulous sculpting a step further.