ALLISON BURIK REALM
ALLISON BURIK
REALM
Independent Label
Allison Burik, composer/arranger/co-producer/Alto saxophone/bass clarinet/vocals/alto flute/ guitar; Magdalena Abrego, guitar; Sylvaine Arnaud, recording engineer/mixing/co-producer; Peter Atkinson, recording engineer/winds; Harris Newman, mastering; Renee Abaroa, bone typeface on cover.
For several years Allison Burik has gained notoriety and audience in the world of modern jazz and experimental music. The opening “Be the Dragon” composition might just be her alter-ego talking to her inner creative self. It blasts into my listening room, like shepherd horns gathering the flock. Allison’s singular use of reed instruments projects an emotional delivery. She adds the guitar to create an eerie mood and commands this listener’s attention. In her press package, they explain this song was built from a foundation of Burik’s oceanside guitar and bird songs, captured during an artistic residency in Skagastrond, Iceland. Allison herself explains it to me in her liner notes.
“The “Be the Dragon” piece is dedicated to all the women and gender-fluid folks that defied ‘traditional’ gender roles to take up arms in battle. … The song features an experimental contact microphone setup in which I’m wearing a collar that presses small microphones against my neck to capture the melodies I hum, while simultaneously playing the saxophone. There are also contact microphones attached to specific keys of my sax to amplify the percussiveness of the instrument,” Burik explains.
Track #2 takes me to an entirely different space and time. Titled, “As the Norn’s Weave” it begins with her lovely voice calming the moment into submission. Her vocals appear with an acoustic guitar accompaniment. Burik superimposes alto saxophone, bass clarinet and vocals in a lovely way. I have always loved the sound of a bass clarinet and her tone on the instrument is warm and vibrant. Still, I wonder how she would present this ‘live’ and in-concert? Because it appears she’s playing all the reed instruments simultaneously. Would she have to pre-record and layer the music to make these songs come to life in person? This song was born out of the world tree of Norse myth. It’s said, in that myth, that three Norns weave our fates with their web of wyrd, and decide the destinies of all beings in all ‘Realms.’
Burik has decided to take the less trodden musical path and use her creative sense of purpose to lean toward mythology and feminine inspiration, along with non-binary characters, and folklore to express herself. On the third track, “Solstice (Dreams and Memories” a low growl begins the arrangement, that soon is transformed by what sounds like sea and birds. Then I seem to hear footsteps trudging on sand, beneath wind and weather. A voice sings a carefree song as the steps are taken. Much of the music on this record was composed during her artist residency, the one Burik did in June of 2022 in Iceland.
During her composing of songs, Allison has named Solstice 1, II and III.
“These are fragments of a musical theme that has been rumbling around in my brain since the winter solstice of 2018. They are brief musings on the passage of time, reality, and existence,” she explains.
On the final two compositions, the eighth track being “Solstice III (The Promise), Allison is joined by the guitar of Magdalena Abrego. Also, Abrego plays on the ninth and final track called “Fragment 94.” Allison’s vocals dip and dive during this arrangement. It’s for only a short minute and a few seconds that this song plays, but it makes quite an impact. This Solstice blends into the final song that has lyrics. It celebrates the ancient Greek lyric poet, musician, and lover of women, Sappho; a character from the isle of Lesbos, who lived from c.610 to c.570 BCE. She is regarded as one of the most important and influential writers of her time. Hellenistic poets deemed her “the tenth Muse.”
Sappho’s lyrics read, “And there was no dance, no holy place, from which we were absent.”
This album appears to be a spiritual journey for the artist. It reflects not only the creativity of Allison Burik, but draws inspiration from myths, world history and folktales. Allison feels that she is using music to showcase the mixture of modern identity validated by ancient ways. Her album is meant to acknowledge the history of human beings, our mistakes of the past that are holding hands with a repetitious path to the future. At the same time, with her music, Allison Burik celebrates the many ways of simply being human.
Reviewed by Dee Dee McNeil
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