Writing of first single ‘Waves Crash Here‘, we described how Scott William Urquhart and Constant Follower‘s joint record Even Days Dissolve represents “a continued engagement with both memory and the natural world.” Constant Follower’s 2021 album Neither Is, Nor Ever Was set out the Glasgow band’s delicate but powerful brand of folk music, where lead Stephen McAll’s broached such weighty questions with care and grace. The new record develops this style by drawing energies from its assembled collaborators and further grounding itself in the Scottish landscape. Be it Urquhart’s probing and meditative guitar or the precision Norman MacCaig’s poetry, Even Days Dissolve presents the Constant Follower sound in its most developed state, and one uniquely positioned to capture “the duality of permanence and ephemerality of the environment which inspired it.”
MacCaig and the coastal wilderness which so often features in his work are inspirations Constant Follower have always worn proudly, and the songs of Even Days Dissolve feel like direct descendants from this lineage of Scottish literature. But the record goes further to cement the link by having “the grand old man of Scottish poetry” posthumously appear on a pair of the tracks. “Bringing two of these songs together with the voice of our beloved Norman MacCaig has been a real highlight of this project,” McAll explains. “His poetry was introduced to me by my high school teacher Mrs Tatarkowski, and it was the first prose I was able to read and understand when I was recovering from a traumatic head injury. So his work holds a deep space in my heart. I don’t think any poet or songwriter has matched his ability to capture the space and wonder of the natural beauty of Scotland.”
The first example of this is ‘Wildlife Cameraman (Summer Farm)’, where McAll splices his own story of the titular cameraman into MacCaig’s rendition of the poem ‘Summer Farm’. An ode to a life in the outdoors, where solitude inverts upon itself so as to find company in open spaces. Be it through the ducks and hens and swallows, or even the “straws like tame lightnings” hung from from hedges and strewn on grass. The poem offers the landscape as a place in which to escape interior turmoil if never quite transcend it, and serves as an archetypal example of MacCaig’s ability to bend the apparently trivial into something with true existential significance.
I lie, not thinking, in the cool, soft grass,
Afraid of where a thought might take me—as
This grasshopper with plated face
Unfolds his legs and finds himself in space.Self under self, a pile of selves I stand
Threaded on time, and with metaphysic hand
Lift the farm like a lid and see
Farm within farm, and in the centre, me.
The song comes complete with a stop-motion video directed by Erentia Bedeker and the animation studio Wreckless Creative, furthering the track’s strange sense of solitude/non-solitude:
‘Space Between Stars’ offers a moodier sound, a certain tension runs through Urquhart’s guitar even as it evokes the sprawling distances of its title, while ‘Ash Wednesday Slow’ sees hip hop artist CRPNTR deliver an evocative spoken word segment which itself seems to charge the guitar with a newfound momentum, as though Urquhart taps into the energy found between the words themselves. The song serves as a perfect example of what Urquhart offers the record. Because if MacCaig and McAll capture an image of the landscape, then his guitar offers the movement, be it fine detail or sweeping elegance, lifting the songs from static poems into something breathing, tableaus animated with moving time.
Closer ‘Comes A Silence (Basking Shark)’ is a fitting conclusion, the guitar this time accentuated by saxophone and harp by Matt Carmichael and Andy Aquarius respectively as MacCaig returns to detail an encounter with the titular creature via his poem ‘Basking Shark’. A “roomsized monster with a matchbox brain” met while rowing on a “sea tin-tacked with rain,” which inadvertently triggers something of a crisis of identity. Because for all of its ancient size and cryptic silence, MacCaig experiences the shark not as some mystery rising from the depths but a thing in its proper place. Rather it is he who is cast adrift, representative of humankind having forgotten its position within the natural order of things. “Swish up the dirt and, when it settles, a spring,” MacCaig writes. “Is all the clearer. I saw me, in one fling, / Emerging from the slime of everything.” Here the basking shark is a kind of sublime experience, a visitation able to submerge us back into the ecosystems we have spent so long trying to escape.
It’s an apt encapsulation of the message at the heart of Even Days Dissolve. Let us head back into the environment around us, Scott William Urquhart and Constant Follower suggest. Stitch ourselves back into the fabric of the land. For the land is already within us and always has been. It just takes a moment to remember it, to understand.
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Even Days Dissolve is out now and available from the Constant Follower Bandcamp page.