DEBORAH MARTIN AND CHERYL GALLAGHER
Tibet
Spotted Peccary (2004)


Ambient musician Deborah Martin and harpist Cheryl Gallagher traveled to
Tibet several years ago. This album musically conveys their impressions,
reactions, and remembrances of that trip, which obviously was one of deep
personal significance and profound impact. As such, judging it critically
(in a straightforward review) is inadequate. A project this personal and
intimate simply cannot be properly evaluated by the usual analytical
methods.

However, for the sake of communicating my thoughts on the recording, I have
to offer some kind of commentary on it. But, I wish to emphasize that I
cannot put my statements in any accurate context, except as a listener.
Martin (keyboards, samples, Tibetan bells, bowls, drums, assorted
percussion, and conch shell) and Gallagher (Camac electric harp,
electronics, samples, and percussion) are joined on several tracks by the
"usual suspects" from Spotted Peccary on assorted other instruments, i.e.
Howard Givens, David Helpling, Mark Rownd and Mark Hunton.
The music on Tibet covers a wide range of moods, varying from powerfully
dramatic to ethereal and drifting. Owing to the presence of ethnic
percussion and some Tibetan musical motifs, as well as recorded sounds of
monks, nuns, and sherpas, if I had to classify this, I would call it a
hybrid of ambient, world, and new age (as much as I'm confident that Martin
and Gallagher may dislike my using that term). However, it's hard to deny
the spirituality inherent in this music, as well as characteristics of the
music itself when it crosses over into gentle warm melodicism wedded to
ethno-tribal beats. An example wourld be "Glacier" which mixes undulating
waves of synths, Taos drums, sparse harp, and other percussion to weave a
mysterious, haunting spell that conveys a sense of grandeur without a trace
of bombast (no small feat, that).

"Morning in Tibet" opens with bells and the singing of Tibetan nuns, amidst
swelling electronic textures and synth chorales. The music's expansive
nature depicts what (I imagine) it would be like to greet the day from "the
ceiling of the world." High-pitched whistling keyboards and lower register
drones intermix forming an awesome "whole" that helps you visualize the glow
in the eastern sky getting brighter and warmer. The track builds with the
addition of rhythmic EM elements (classic new age keyboards, such as
twinkling bell tones).

There are eight tracks on Tibet, and their variety "feels" as if you are
joining Gallagher and Martin on a "mental" return trip to the country. While
much of the music is decidedly ambient in structure and essence (such as the
spacemusic-like "Essence" with its gently flowing and then soaring and
exultant keyboards), I think that labeling it such actually sells the album
short. Which is not to infer that ambient music is lacking, but rather that
Tibet has something decidely more impactful contained in its digital
grooves. It hits you, for example, on "Seeker and Sought" when Gallagher's
beautiful harp playing eases in on top of the underlying washes of synths
and textures, joined by angelic synth chorales, morphing into a powerful
synthesis of the two with additional thundering drumming and percussion.
Actually, one other recording that this reminded me of was the vastly
under-appreciated Asia Voyage by Jon Mark (not coincidentally also inspired
by that musician's travels, this time to the Far East). Both albums share an
ambient aesthetic, but draped in some world fusion and new age
accouterments. A track like "Eklabati" with its myriad mysterious ethnic
percussion, dark ambient undercurrents, and subterranean (!!!) textures,
might seem out of place amidst the more ethereal tracks, but it flows almost
seamlessly in among the other songs, since Tibet is truly a musical voyage.
The presence of dramatic synth strings (sounding much like those used on Jon
Jenkins' and Paul Lackey's fantastic album Continuum) transitions the song
from the underground and elevates it into the atmosphere, almost as if we
were flying above the clouds, especially when flute samples and Taos drums
are also added to the mix.

The album concludes with "Procession" (the longest track at ten-plus
minutes). The sound of wind intermingles with lush keyboards and the cries
of wildlife (I believe it's the apes that are indigenous to that part of the
world, but I could be wrong...remember the ones in the opening to the movie
Baraka?). There is a simple yet majestic feeling at work here (Mark Hunton
contributes flute to the song, as well). Field recordings of sherpas and the
clanging bells of some sort of pack animals used on the trails, I suspect,
as well as chanting excerpts, coalesce with the music, no doubt serving as a
conduit for Gallagher and Martin (and open-minded listeners) to be
transported right THERE amidst the mountains and the people and the deep
spirituality that permeates everything. The penetrating call of a conch
shell collides with an assortment of bells, cymbals, drums and the resulting
cacophony is actually a musical celebration of the sheer power of the
locale, as if the musical elements were bringing all the energy into focus,
like sunlight through a magnifying glass. The song slowly unwinds almost as
if we were reaching the end of the journey itself, which in some ways, we
are.

As I wrote above, literal descriptions of Tibet might better portray what
you would actually "hear" on the CD, but I simply cannot listen to a
recording this heartfelt and personal and not have a deeper reaction than
simply "hey, this is pretty good." It is more than "pretty good," but it's
also not for everyone, obviously. Ambient purists need to be aware of the
presence of drumming, chanting, and field recordings, as well as some new
age music textures (mostly, a warmer than usual musicality than is found on
ambient recordings). Somehow, I don't think Martin and Gallgher are overly
concerned with how many people "get" this album, but I hope there are those
out there who will appreciate it nonetheless. However, regardless of how
many people hear it and/or enjoy it, Tibet stands as a singular achievment
and a testament to Martin's and Gallagher's dedication for preserving their
memories of a very special time in their lives and passing those impressions
along to us. Recommended.