
I FIRST met musician, composer and artist Erland Cooper outside London鈥檚 Barbican Centre in late spring. He had been standing for 12 hours next to his 2.4-metre-high ice sculpture, Glacier. This thawing, crystalline monolith reflected the climate change themes and fragile beauty of his fourth-and-latest album, Folded Landscapes.
鈥淚t was a kind of slow protest鈥 a gentle way to bring conversations together,鈥 explains Cooper when we next meet, some months later. 鈥淚 love that people just came up and sat beside me, picked at it, talked about it.鈥
We are now in Cooper鈥檚 basement studio, where another ice block looms amid his collection of digital technology and vintage synthesisers. The ice contains frozen hydrangea and thistles, plus a channel designed to hold a hydrophone mic, used to capture underwater audio 鈥 its drip-drip melting forms a rhythmic backdrop to our conversation.
Advertisement
Cooper鈥檚 work is imbued with child-like wonder, but also a lingering, worldly reflection. Does he consider himself an activist-artist? 鈥淚 don鈥檛 like to be divisive. I like people to come up with their own views and engage in conversation rather than make statements,鈥 he says.
鈥淎nd this is an opportunity to celebrate and cherish the natural world. [Musician/artist] Brian Eno said art has the ability to make you feel something. Generally, when you feel something, you make changes. Music is a really good catalyst for that.鈥
Folded Landscapes emerged through Cooper鈥檚 typically playful experiments. Its seven movements were recorded with the Scottish Ensemble chamber orchestra, across temperature shifts spanning the sub-zero and a sweltering studio, with the audio master tape exposed to the elements and sun-scorched on 19 July 2022, the UK鈥檚 hottest day in history.
鈥淚 took these incredible virtuoso musicians into a factory in Glasgow and recorded them in sub-zero temperatures,鈥 he grins. 鈥淭hey all had fingerless gloves and big jackets, and were just beaming, because it was something different. It was a process to really get under the fingernails of rising temperatures. The first one to four movements are austere, a steep glacial ascent. Then it鈥檚 a toboggan ride of hope down the other end.
鈥淥ver the seven movements of thawing, the fidelity of the audio is getting worse, but the music arguably becomes more hopeful. There鈥檚 this kind of Scottish classical ceilidh on the sixth movement, and I鈥檝e fond memories of sweating in the studio as they were vigorously playing.鈥
The album also features guests such as UK poet laureate Simon Armitage, while its heady fifth movement samples familiar voices, including Greta Thunberg, alongside a 1970s news report delivering very similar ecological warnings. 鈥淭hat moment is not about those personalities, it鈥檚 actually just about noise 鈥 that echo chamber of opinion, which can be quite antagonistic,鈥 says Cooper.
Secret soundings
He delights most in 鈥渢he magic of the everyday鈥, whether it is around his London flat or his birthplace of Orkney in Scotland, which recurs throughout his work, including an earlier triptych of albums. Cooper and his siblings were raised by scientist parents. While he never studied music, at weekends he would sneak into the school where his father worked to teach himself to play the piano and decipher tape machines.
鈥淪cience has always played a major role in this feeling of exploration,鈥 he says. Increasingly, he has gravitated towards collaborative work, both with other people (in previous outfits including The Magnetic North and Erland & The Carnival) and with nature itself. 鈥淢y music鈥檚 always got a sense of place,鈥 he says. 鈥淗ow can I dig into the soil a bit harder?鈥
Cooper literally dug deep for another project, Carve the Runes Then Be Content With Silence, 鈥減lanting鈥 the score and the only tape of his first classical album at a secret spot in Orkney, with just treasure hunt clues to retrieve it.
After a year and a half marinating in the soil, the tape was finally unearthed by two fans and is currently being displayed on a 鈥渄rying out鈥 tour across UK independent record shops. It will be premiered as part of a in June 2024. In an on-demand era, it feels radical to really wait to experience something. 鈥淭his memory of something suddenly became the most precious thing,鈥 says Cooper.
His latest release, in May, was a piano version of 鈥 this time applying the echo captured in Norwegian glacial caves to the elegantly minimal melodies. Here, he uses impulse response data (in this case, the reaction of a dynamic environment in relation to external change) collected from Svalbard by a team of European scientists for their own studies measuring the diversity of acoustic climates, which depend on the morphology and dimensions of the caves. Cooper recorded his piano using an ice-encased hydrophone, trying to gauge how the ice 鈥渉ears鈥 music.
鈥淚nstead of taking the piano to a glacial cave in Norway and recording there, could I take the reverb of the cave and bring it back to my studio? Technology allows us to do that,鈥 he says.
One of the scientist team, Pawel Malecki, sent me an email expressing his delight at being contacted by Cooper for this album. 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 the first time someone has shown interest in our impulse responses, however, Erland鈥檚 idea undoubtedly stands out for its uniqueness and creativity,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淯sing the acoustic properties of caves for producing music adds a level of immersion and symbolic connection to the caves.
鈥淎bove all, I鈥檓 thrilled that the acoustics of northern environments are gaining attention. Our work has primarily been of interest within specialised scientific circles. Now, with projects like Erland鈥檚, a broader audience will get to experience and appreciate the captivating acoustics of the Svalbard glaciers and caves.鈥
For now, Cooper sets up the hydrophone and sound desk 鈥 and that is how I end up reciting Shakespeare to an ice sculpture. When Cooper replays my voice 鈥 filtered through frozen water and Arctic cave echoes 鈥 it sounds coolly haunting, transformed into something or someplace else. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a mic-drop moment,鈥 he smiles. 鈥淩eally, living with the natural world is a duet in itself.鈥
Arwa Haider is a writer based聽in聽London