When: 7.30pm on Tuesday 18 April 2023
Where: Gullivers, 109 Oldham Street, Manchester, M4 1LW
We’re delighted to be working with Shannon Lay for the first time!
Geist feels like a window – or a mirror – into possibilities of the self and beyond. Shannon Lay’s latest album is tender intensity, placeless and ethereal. It exists in the chasms of the present – a world populated by shadow selves, spiritual awakenings, déjà vu and past lives.
‘Something sleeps inside us,’ Lay insists on the opening track, and that’s the guiding philosophy throughout. A winding, golden, delicate thread of intuition that explores the unknown, the possibility. Its title, Geist, the German word for spirit, is rife with an otherworldly presence, the suggestion of another. The promise that you are never alone.
Lay tracked vocals and guitar at Jarvis Tavinere of Woods’ studio, then sent the songs out to multi-instrumentalists Ben Boye (Bonnie Prince Billy, Ty Segall) in Los Angeles and Devin Hoff (Sharon Van Etten, Cibo Matto) in New York; trusting their musical instincts and intuition. She then sent those recordings to Sofia Arreguin (Wand) and Aaron Otheim (Heatwarmer, Mega Bog) for additional keys, while Ty Segall contributed a guitar solo on Shores.
As a whole, Geist is both esoteric and accessible. There’s the concise, pared-back cover of Syd Barrett’s tilt-a-whirl-esque Late Night, while Rare to Wake, inspired by Dune, is existential and meditative, a circular guitar riff looping at the core of it. Awaken and Allow, is ancient-feeling and mainly a cappella, its melody channels her deep Irish roots, a moment of reflection, before a drop happens – its intensity mirroring the anticipation and anxiety that come with taking the first step to accepting change for yourself.
Time’s Arrow, with its refrain of heading downhill, was inspired by something a close friend said. Lay notes: ‘I wanted Time’s Arrow to be this gentle reminder that we’re on our way, and we’re moving forward. There is medicine in every moment so don’t rush.’
A Thread to Find, which Lay wrote after walking into an old hotel in Switzerland and being struck by the feeling like she’d been there before, is a testament to the energy we leave behind and stumble across.
And the title track Geist, a song about the power living in all of us, is a love song to the possibility of healing, an ode to falling into the arms of what you’re becoming. It’s a glimpse into the parts of yourself you have yet to meet. But you can, if you want to.
Local support comes from Alf Whitby. Sad pop singer Alf Whitby brings shape shifting sounds to soothe the soul. Centred around piano and guitar, his songs drift effortlessly, meandering through the mind of a twenty something trying to figure things out. A spattering of singles followed his debut album released in 2020, all drawing on summoned up characters and dreamt up landscapes – definitely folk songs at heart, but keep an ear out for jazzy chords and indie rock jangles.
Buy tickets now. Tickets are also available from Dice.fm, WeGotTickets.com, Ticketline.co.uk and on 0871 220 0260.
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