Grouper - Grid of Points

Bandcamp Daily

These seven songs meditate on the minutiae of the past and the images that cling on despite the years.

Fri Apr 27 13:44:18 GMT 2018

The Quietus

Forlornly reminiscent, the music of Liz Harris as Grouper has taken many forms while always sharing this common DNA. Traditional notions of beauty lie in the ruptures of records like Dragging a Dead Deer up a Hill, The Man Who Died In His Boat and, most recently, Ruins. Grid Of Points follows the lineage of Ruins; it’s built on skeletal foundations, with Harris’s vocals and piano and occasional incidental noise like fuzz and feedback. But where Ruins (as its title would suggest) paints images of structural erosion, abandoned churches, demolished homes and deserted labyrinths, Grid Of Points crafts something more urban, domestic, and altogether less secluded.

That’s not to say Grid Of Points isn’t a lonely record. In Harris’s own words it concerns “the space left after matter has departed, a stage after the characters have gone, the hollow of some central column, missing.” The record wields a constant feeling of solitude; songs like ‘The Races’ and ‘The Parking Lot’ are built almost like hauntology except from original recordings. Much like The Caretaker’s Everywhere At The End Of Time project, Grouper is creating music in which other people exist only as ghosts.

The record is quiet, even for Grouper’s standards, and it runs little over 22 minutes. Everything’s held back, and it creates mesmeric payoffs in microscopic instrumental introductions - like the recording artefacts on ‘Driving’.

Harris is as elusive as her music, and gives few interviews. You follow her airy vocals through deserted landscapes with no guide aside from the track titles and occasional discernible lyrics. Mundanities, like roaming through a parking lot, driving and even breathing, are made eerie.

The last track, ‘Breathing’, is preceded by a field recording of a coal train – a moment of earthliness and a testament to the album being recorded in Wyoming. ‘Birthday Song’, the album’s melancholic centrepiece, brings enchanted whispers and dwells on the same note. ‘Breathing’, that closing song, is sensual music in its most delicate form. Every track on Grid Of Points is captivating.

Share this article:

Wed May 02 16:06:39 GMT 2018

Tiny Mix Tapes 90

Grouper
Grid of Points

[Kranky; 2018]

Rating: 4.5/5

We’re going to the beach. Not the clean, iridescent shores of film scenes or sepia photographs, signifiers of a landscape that privilege the temporal over the spatial — it is always the childhood or the honeymoon that we beckon toward, and whether the sand in the picture belongs to Blackpool or New Jersey is mostly irrelevant — but the real beach. The sun is not shining. It rained a few hours ago, in fact, or is just about to, because there’s a dull kind of sadness in the air that lingers either side of the storm. To your left is a row of shops and cafés, closed on Sunday. To your right is a parking lot, asphalt grey in keeping with the weather, littered but otherwise empty. In front of you is the sea.

The sunless beach is a powerful image for the same reason that suicide rates spike at Christmas: from early childhood, we are inundated with words and pictures reinforcing the idea that happiness is something to be manually allocated, that weekends and holidays are the ecstatic reprieves that we deserve from our institutional labor, and that these times and places represent our best shot at real joy. When reality doesn’t match the picture, our first assumption is never that the picture needs fixing, but that our lives are out of sync. The map supersedes the territory. Like no other artist, Grouper’s Liz Harris seems to sing from these points of dislocation, lighting up lost or forgotten neural pathways like a lighthouse in the fog. In contrast to 2014’s colossal Ruins, Grid of Points feels relatively slight, though it remains incredibly spacious.

The academic marriage of physical, cultural, and mental zones is nothing new, but it has historically focused on the city, either as direct focus (psychogeography, flânerie) or dialectical periphery (Marion Shoard’s edgelands, Gloria E. Anzaldúa’s Borderlands/La Frontera). Harris is no flaneur though, and while Grouper’s opaque lyrics and increasingly skeletal compositions mean that any interpretation is likely to be personal, it seems undeniable that if Grid of Points occupies a physical location, it is far removed from busy urban scenes. Nonetheless, the meshing of organic and concrete imagery is a near-constant. Within less than a minute of the album’s opening, “The Races” sings of the rain falling, before giving way to the quiet melancholy of “Parking Lot.”

Like its predecessor, the album is musically stripped to its most utilitarian elements, focusing on Harris’s voice and piano, with almost nothing else permitted to enter the frame. If there is a notable difference in sound, it’s that the artist’s singing no longer marches in strict time and pitch with the piano’s melody, but ventures into the occasional portamento, gifting a few beautiful jazz notes to the piece. It is also seven tracks long, less than half an hour of music; though as Harris herself notes, it is a record that feel stylistically sparse anyway: “Though brief, it is complete. The intimacy and abbreviation of this music allude to an essence that the songs lyrics speak more directly of.”

It’s also a more meditative piece, and as such the highlights are not pronounced in the manner of “Holding” or “Heavy Water/I’d Rather Be Sleeping.” If there is a peak, it is perhaps the comforting lilt of “Driving,” though in truth the tracks drift into each other, each as devoted to the whole as opposing ends of a waterfall. At last, the trance is broken by a faint whooshing sound arriving in the distance. It soon becomes apparent that it’s a train, but in those first few seconds, it sounds to me like the gasp of the ocean withdrawing from the beach. Perhaps that’s just where my mind goes, a child of the seaside. I think that’s the magic of it.

Fri Apr 27 04:04:56 GMT 2018

Drowned In Sound 90

Contradictory though it may sound, some artists shelter behind fragility. Partially obscured behind a veil of insecurities, they are able to project profound feelings without necessarily damaging their true selves in the process. One suspects that Liz Harris – better known as Grouper – is not such an artist. Her last full-length, 2014’s Ruins, contained some of the most heartbreakingly damaged songwriting ever put to tape. With little more than a piano (and some carefully selected field recordings) for accompaniment, Harris’ voice transmitted a genuine avalanche of emotion. Nothing she had released before, from the fever dream of Way Their Crept (2005) to the spectral stargazing journey of 2011’s two A I A records, provided sufficient preparation for this. Ruins made it crystal clear that the layered ambient haze that had become the Grouper stock-in-trade was an unsuccessful defence mechanism (if it ever had been a defence mechanism before).

Grid Of Points by Grouper

Her frail guitar wall penetrated, Harris has now followed up Ruins with another starkly minimal piano-led gem of a record. Grid of Points is even more austere than its predecessor. At an unfashionably brief 22 minutes in length, this album is as barely there as it sounds. Harris is one of those unique songwriters who has the ability to enter the room as you listen to her music. On Grid of Points, however, she flickers in and out of the listener’s atmosphere. She has (perhaps rather fittingly given the haunting tone of her oeuvre) become a ghostly presence.

Whether this is an act of transcendent release or defeatist acceptance might be a matter for each individual listener to decide upon. The six full songs here are all defiantly beautiful. Each feels like an individual casualty, something that one could say is further accentuated by the sparsely evocative titles: not least those of ‘Birthday Song’ and ‘Thanksgiving Song’. There is even less depth to the Grouper sound her than on Ruins. Slightly more echo aside, there is a comparative absence of ambient flesh on the bony skeleton of Harris’ compositions. It’s a genuine shock when the album ends in a torrent of field recording noise (that of trains hurriedly cantering down the tracks), one that acts as a cathartic full stop after the quiet deluge of melancholy that has preceded it.

To come back to frailty: I’m not entirely sure that music this consciously fragile can be fully absorbed, let alone rated and neatly summarised (or even vaguely captured) in words. Harris has built a firmly underground (yet intensely powerful) career out of exposing the very core of her being to the elements. Grid of Points is the sound of what’s left after the winds have subsided. It’s astonishingly beautiful and astonishingly, painfully real.

![105556](http://dis.resized.images.s3.amazonaws.com/540x310/105556.jpeg)

Tue May 01 14:39:37 GMT 2018

Tiny Mix Tapes 90

Grouper
Grid of Points

[Kranky; 2018]

Rating: 4.5/5

We’re going to the beach. Not the clean, iridescent shores of film scenes or sepia photographs, signifiers of a landscape that privilege the temporal over the spatial — it is always the childhood or the honeymoon that we beckon toward, and whether the sand in the picture belongs to Blackpool or New Jersey is mostly irrelevant — but the real beach. The sun is not shining. It rained a few hours ago, in fact, or is just about to, because there’s a dull kind of sadness in the air that lingers either side of the storm. To your left is a row of shops and cafés, closed on Sunday. To your right is a parking lot, asphalt grey in keeping with the weather, littered but otherwise empty. In front of you is the sea.

The sunless beach is a powerful image for the same reason that suicide rates spike at Christmas: from early childhood, we are inundated with words and pictures reinforcing the idea that happiness is something to be manually allocated, that weekends and holidays are the ecstatic reprieves that we deserve from our institutional labor, and that these times and places represent our best shot at real joy. When reality doesn’t match the picture, our first assumption is never that the picture needs fixing, but that our lives are out of sync. The map supersedes the territory. Like no other artist, Grouper’s Liz Harris seems to sing from these points of dislocation, lighting up lost or forgotten neural pathways like a lighthouse in the fog. In contrast to 2014’s colossal Ruins, Grid of Points feels relatively slight, though it remains incredibly spacious.

The academic marriage of physical, cultural, and mental zones is nothing new, but it has historically focused on the city, either as direct focus (psychogeography, flânerie) or dialectical periphery (Marion Shoard’s edgelands, Gloria E. Anzaldúa’s Borderlands/La Frontera). Harris is no flaneur though, and while Grouper’s opaque lyrics and increasingly skeletal compositions mean that any interpretation is likely to be personal, it seems undeniable that if Grid of Points occupies a physical location, it is far removed from busy urban scenes. Nonetheless, the meshing of organic and concrete imagery is a near-constant. Within less than a minute of the album’s opening, “The Races” sings of the rain falling, before giving way to the quiet melancholy of “Parking Lot.”

Like its predecessor, the album is musically stripped to its most utilitarian elements, focusing on Harris’s voice and piano, with almost nothing else permitted to enter the frame. If there is a notable difference in sound, it’s that the artist’s singing no longer marches in strict time and pitch with the piano’s melody, but ventures into the occasional portamento, gifting a few beautiful jazz notes to the piece. It is also seven tracks long, less than half an hour of music; though as Harris herself notes, it is a record that feel stylistically sparse anyway: “Though brief, it is complete. The intimacy and abbreviation of this music allude to an essence that the songs lyrics speak more directly of.”

It’s also a more meditative piece, and as such the highlights are not pronounced in the manner of “Holding” or “Heavy Water/I’d Rather Be Sleeping.” If there is a peak, it is perhaps the comforting lilt of “Driving,” though in truth the tracks drift into each other, each as devoted to the whole as opposing ends of a waterfall. At last, the trance is broken by a faint whooshing sound arriving in the distance. It soon becomes apparent that it’s a train, but in those first few seconds, it sounds to me like the gasp of the ocean withdrawing from the beach. Perhaps that’s just where my mind goes, a child of the seaside. I think that’s the magic of it.

Fri Apr 27 04:04:56 GMT 2018

Pitchfork 78

Liz Harris’ sparse, 22-minute record follows the trajectory of her 2014 album Ruins to a place that feels even more wind-blown and remote.

Mon Apr 30 05:00:00 GMT 2018