
“Mountain take that wing” opens with a burst of high frequency sounds like the final emergency transmission from a starship falling from orbit. The glitches in that signal break its uniform, piercing quality and it crackles to give way to minimal saxophone warble and ghostly guitar, courtesy SUMAC’s Aaron Turner, streaming in the middle distance. The breathy saxophone notes that take the central spot in the mix overlayered by some animated saxophone and guitar that distorts abstractly like a sudden fissure opening to another dimension breaks into the more grounding sounds. But the guitar unleashed intones mournfully like a kaiju awakening from millennia of dormancy. The title provides a perfect image of an immense, ancient earth beast regaining full consciousness and indeed taking to flight, serenaded by angelic voices, provided by Gemma Thompson formerly of post-punk band Savages, in the last minute of the song. We hear the majestic creature crying out as it enjoys its liberty once again. Listen to “Mountain take that wing” on Spotify and follow Patrick Shiroishi on Instagram. His new album Forgetting is Violent is out now on vinyl, digital download and streaming via American Dreams.

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