The Kingdom of Fife assumes the role of the main character in Birl of Unmap, the collaborative album of Kinbrae and Clare Archibald.
Full Spectrum and The Dark Outside have announced the collaborative album Birl of Unmap, where Kinbrae – the project of twin brothers Mike and Andy Truscott – will team up with writer and artist Clare Archibald.
The newly formed trio has invested in the development of a modus operandi that resorts to creative dialogue and sonic experimentation practices, exploring "abstract notions of place and deconstructing its innate rhythms and sonic totems". For this reason, the location (the Kingdom of Fife, in Scotland) is extremely relevant to the production of the album.
The record is described in the following way:
"For the unfamiliar, a bit of vocabulary context may be required – “birl” is a Scots word that means to spin or whirl. To wit, Birl of Unmap is an attempt to unravel the dynamic layers that make Fife an area of both artistic and physical interest, as well as interpreting something of the perceived language of the place. Sitting across the water from the cities of both Edinburgh and Dundee, yet also adjacent to the open North Sea, the Kingdom of Fife is both connected to the greater world and resolutely of itself. It can be reached from all directions by iconic bridges and yet is not an island, but such a landscape permits the existence of half-seen truths and spaces. Birl of Unmap is a response to one such place – a place of several pasts and many names in West Fife that has existed as an open cast mine, the long gone pit village of Lassodie, and most recently as a not-quite-fully realised land art vision of the post-modern architect Charles Jencks. Currently known as St. Ninians, the area in question has existed in a strange limbo between purpose and public access for many years, though it was sold in 2021 for redevelopment as an eco-wellness centre. Birl of Unmap is the telling of a place from different times and perspectives, of the land, of the art that Jencks installed there using decommissioned mining machinery, of the idea of the Final Void in both mining and cosmic terms and of what it means to know, to share a place and pass on bits of it with space allowed for retelling. Infused with field recordings from the earth, water, air, and industrial installations on-site, the album seeks to give space to the energies of a place and the landscape legacies of human and more than human interactions with it. Drawing on academic research, oral histories, and the experiences of other Fife-based artists, as well as former miners and residents of the site, ‘Birl of Unmap’ stands as more than the sum total of aesthetic tropes, embodying an ambitious call to consider how we balance our own experiences and understandings with those of others. This is an invitation to wander through the layers and perhaps find something more of ourselves within them.
Birl of Unmap will be available in full on the 11th of February. Cassette editions will be available through Full Spectrum in the US, cassette and CD editions of Birl of Unmap will be available through The Dark Outside in the UK.
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