PREORDER
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ARTIST
TITLE
Borrowed Out Of Time
FORMAT
LP
LABEL
CATALOG #
DLC 017LP
DLC 017LP
GENRE
RELEASE DATE
8/22/2025
"Borrowed Out Of Time is the latest album by Kaurna Country artist and writer, Tristan Louth-Robins. It follows a steadily paced run of releases for labels like 3LEAVES and his own Studio Maurilia which share an inquisitive spirit, informed by, but different from, influences such as Alvin Lucier and Rolf Julius. While Tristan's compositions might be neatly situated somewhere adjacent to both sound art and acoustic ecology, they aren't beholden to those genres, and his work with field recordings and composition are smart in their suggestive possibilities. Borrowed Out Of Time feels like a step forward for Tristan; it makes sense that it's his first full-length vinyl release, made real by Adelaide's redoubtable De La Catessen imprint. Tristan is one of those consistent presences within Adelaide's network of experimental musicians, sound artists, and general refuseniks... The album itself started with Tristan's use of remote acoustic recorders. Deploying them to a reef at low tide, near his hometown in Normanville, he found himself empathizing with these lonely, passive technological presences: 'It was the first time I could remember a profound pang of something for what the technology was experiencing, sensing and 'feeling'.' A loosely contemporaneous encounter with James Bridie's Ways Of Being and the concept of unwelt ('the way non-human things sense and experience the world around them'), plus a commission for an installation work for Adelaide Festival's Neoterica, nudged Tristan further in the album's direction, thinking through ideas of the uncanny/unheimlich and interference. If that material, plus other recordings sourced from those acoustic recorders, proffers the groundwork for Borrowed Out Of Time, Tristan's embellishments and extrapolations in his home studio bring other voices to bear -- a Tama acoustic guitar; tape hiss; digital noise; cymbals; fence wire; ring modulation; yet more -- producing a suite of four works that strike as gently poignant, even as they deal with source material that is sometimes disembodied, denaturalized, or rendered adrift through processes of compositional dislocation... Throughout, I hear a cussed curiosity and a sharpness in attention, coupled with a compositional ear that's hitherto been mostly implied; now, though, Tristan's music has achieved an easeful poetics that has no need to ask you to be enamoured of it. It's simply there, smartly designed, inviting even at its most austere, ready to welcome you to its world, on its own terms, but with warmth and understated wit." --Jon Dale
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