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From The Desk Of Basia Bulat: Oblique Strategies

BasiaBulatLogoThe reaction to Tall Tall Shadow (Secret City), Basia Bulat’s third full-length, has been exceedingly positive, a happy circumstance for a performer who made her thus-far moderate fame on the folk singer/songwriter circuit and is now looking to switch things up. Bulat’s first two albums, adept enough affairs, traded mostly in the light arrangements and soft dynamics of contemporary folk music. If her talents extend beyond many of her peers (notably her staggering facility on a wide range of stringed instruments from the dulcimer to the charango), her aesthetic palette as presented on her first two albums was largely traditional. Tall Tall Shadow, by contrast, opens with the stomping, gradual crescendo of the title track, an immediate announcement of increasing speed and volume that sustains for the rest of the record. It’s a sonic gamble for Bulat, who for the first time finds herself pushing her aesthetics into more energetic territory. Still, the song structures and modes are of a piece with her previous releases, making Tall Tall Shadow a furtherance rather than a divergence from her previous work. Bulat will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our new feature on her.

ObliqueStrategy

Bulat: A friend gave me a deck as a gift a few years ago, and they’ve proven to be extremely useful! Really fun as an exercise if one is stuck or hits a wall in a creative project, but I also went through a phase where I’d meet up with some friends at the coffee shop in the morning before we all started our day, and we’d each pick a card for ourselves as though it were a kind of group tarot reading. Whatever the words on the back of the card, we were to keep them in mind as we went through the day. My favourite is still: “Go outside. Shut the door. It always works.”

Video after the jump.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_wQJ4spLHcw