A newcomer to the post-classical and ambient worlds, yet fully formed as he arrives, Jim Wallis is no stranger to embracing musical crossover. A drummer in critically lauded indie bands Modern Nature (members of Ultimate Painting / Beak>) and Still Corners, Wallis is also a superb ambient artist in his own right, releasing his debut album on Tip Top Recordings on February 7th. Today, he shares second single 'Return Train', a moving piano-driven piece.
The album accompanies forthcoming independent movie ‘Europa’. ‘Europa "Based on a True Story", will be premiering in the main competition at the International Documentary Film Festival of Amsterdam this month, and documents the story of an asylum seeker who takes his own life.
Wallis learnt to play the cello especially for the album, something that was a somewhat cathartic experience for the talented multi-instrumentalist: “Since my grandma passed away in 2012, her beautiful old cello had been sat untouched in my parents' house, so I dusted it off and started taking lessons. It was a strange, sometimes moving experience to spend time playing the instrument my grandmother had played for 80 years from when she was a teenager, and particularly to do so while working on this project where living and dead characters interact” said Wallis.
‘Europa’ a film by Rwandan director Kivu Ruhorahoza, is about Simon, an asylum seeker who has recently killed himself, who returns to commune with important people from his life. He is suspended in limbo, which became a central idea to Wallis when writing the score. “I was quickly drawn to sounds and textures that try to create the feeling of being suspended...bowed strings, long synth drones, atmospheric guitar sounds.”
Inspired in part by the work of Robert Fripp and Brian Eno, album opener ‘Return Train’ weaves piano with humming cellos. “Out of necessity, the arrangements I wrote for the cello had to be simple” said Wallis, explaining his employment of the instrument after having found the cello at his Grandmother’s, “but that seemed to fit the mood and soon I was able to layer up drones on ‘Return Train’.
The classically trained musician takes influence from ambient artists such as A Winged Victory for the Sullen, whom he shared a stage with at Botanique in Brussels, William Basinski, Tim Hecker, Bing & Ruth and Stars of the Lid.
“The way in which A Winged Victory for the Sullen use piano, strings and guitar sounds definitely had an influence on this score” Wallis elucidates. “In 2017, shortly before finishing the score, I visited Japan and went to a Japanese bath house on Naoshima island where they played the album Evening Star by Robert Fripp and Brian Eno, which really stayed with me.”
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