Oliver Coates’ Throb, shiver, arrow of time is a
portal into somatic chiaroscuro, aglow with the
embers of imperfect memories and smudged with
the plumes of internal echoes, which augment in
vast, mercurial dimensions.
For his third album on RVNG Intl., the British
cellist, composer and producer offers a capsule of
personal resonance and remembrance, assembled
over the past six years. Throb, shiver, arrow of time
traces the familiar metallic anatomy and viscous
string modulations of his 2020 release skins n
slime, while recentering his inner compulsions
following a procession of lauded score writing
projects, including the films Aftersun (Charlotte
Wells, 2022), The Stranger (Thomas M Wright,
2022) and Occupied City (Steve McQueen, 2023).While working on Aftersun, Wells asked Coates
how music could signal that someone is going on
a trawl through their memory—a question that has
stayed with him ever since and fosters a heartbeat
running through the record. Throb, shiver, arrow
of time is “all about inaccurate transmissions
from our memories, overlaid with emotions
from other sources,” says Coates. The release is
imbued with the ache and glow of recollections
mulched together, where the guttural dissonance
of misremembering is shrouded by strange orbs of
sentiment.At the record’s inner core is “Shopping centre
curfew,” a swift yet cavernous track that emerged
five years ago when two real world events, both
occurring in South London during the pandemic
lockdowns, became fused in a dream: the
demolition of Elephant and Castle shopping center,
and the discussion of a curfew as a real possibility
for all men following a violent crime. A strange
simultaneity occurred with this piece of music and
Coates built the album out from there, a sense of
temporal entropy refracting shimmers of lurking
convulsions into lucid sonic topologies.The ten compositions of Throb, shiver, arrow of
time find weightless melodies soaring across afterimage gradients, magnified and compressed. Misted
tones within “Please be normal” and “90” soften
drone-soaked shudders of inner acoustics messing
up. Vocal invocations appear from long-term
collaborators Malibu and chrysanthemum bear, as
well as drifting synth radiance from Faten Kanaan.Throb, shiver, arrow of time furthers Coates’
reach in collapsing the digital into the analogue
and vice versa, allowing serendipity to reorganize
the material and push out against the confines
of flatness. This sculptural approach to sound is
deeply influenced by the intricate installations
of artist Sarah Sze, whose permutations of
visual matter with its own after-image form
kaleidoscopic epitaphs for ephemera and emotion.
Coates’ thinking about Sze’s work and processes
flowed together with his own playing and editing
techniques, superimposing the textural relief of a
live take back into a composition, and allowing the
sound to succumb to a dream of itself.As Coates expands, “The cello is a kind of
melancholic instrument with a light ethereal spirit.
When the sound is flattened into digital processes,
with shifted frequencies and time stretching I’m
trying to give it even more of those qualities.
Sometimes I’m distancing myself from it, so it
becomes a piece of discarded debris that has soul
in it, a down-sampling. Or other times, it’s trying to
maximize the present tense in the act of playing,
and collapse that vivid color into a burnished,
photocopied kind of sound. So the music acts like
weather, weathering the listener, or as flames
licking at the sides of objects.”As the record unfurls, the compositions swell in
duration, until the granular glimmers of its finale
“Make it happen” persist in almost violent delight.
“There’s a feeling of not wanting to let this album
go, trying to defy the extinguishing sound at the
end of the music, trying to push the colors beyond
the confines of the structure, to defeat the silence.”
In the scramble to resist denouement, Coates
suspends the arrow of time in its eternal flight,
just for a moment, to reveal the solace of the dust
settling in the afterglow.
Oliver Coates’ Throb, shiver, arrow of time will be
released on vinyl, Japanese import CD, and digital
editions on October 18, 2024. On behalf of Oliver
and RVNG Intl., a portion of the proceeds from this
release will benefit The Traditional Music and
Song Association of Scotland, an organization
fostering opportunities for people of all ages to
participate in the traditional music and culture of
Scotland.