22 Nov 2024
UsernamePassword

Remember Me? | Join | Recover
Click here to sign in via social networking

GiGi Genie - EP Review: Seasons of The Soul / Wa O Te Wairua

21 Nov 2022 // A review by Nicholas Clark
Seasons of The Soul or Wa O Te Wairua, is a collection of songs by multi-instrumentalist and self-described folk noir artist GiGi Genie. The group is led by songwriter GiGi Crayford and her support band which includes flautists, violinists, zither and percussion players. Crayford herself plays the autoharp which features prominently in this release, but every instrument is balanced and steps aside for others to shine at moments. The tracks are based off the four seasons, although they have other names also. This artistic decision to have two names and a seasonal relevance is no doubt to add to the depth each song the artist has imbued them with, and to hint at the complexity of their improvised compositions and their original inspiration.


The EP was recorded after the 2020 l
ockdown, but inspired by events dating back to 2018. This collection, it would seem, is a long time coming and holds many memories and emotions for the songwriter. According to Crayford herself, they are “early explorations of writing music and they bring me back to a time of vulnerability and visceral memories of the seasons they sprung from.”

The EP begins with Waiata O Koanga (Spring) or Bird Song, written for her grandmother. The track begins gently, with more instruments joining hesitantly and almost warily. All the tracks feature field recordings, and this first one features some rich bird song recorded from Zealandia. Crayford plays the rain-stick (or seed percussion) that operates like a paragraph break between ideas that are loose enough to glide over into other sections. It’s all very organic until a violin enters with a little more of a deliberate melody to end the piece. The song is sweet and uplifting, hinting at beginnings and the potential for things to develop. There are more than a few unusual vocal melodies giving some tension that is resolved through sweet harmonies that follow, and a few bird sounds impersonated occasionally with Crayford’s mouth. If that sounds odd, it doesn’t sound like it in the context of the song.

Second track, Waiata O Raumati (Summer) or The Seed features more instruments, including zither and an expressive slide guitar. The song seems quieter, slower, somehow warmer, with many different sections to it. At five and a half minutes the track reduces to a field recording of birds and insects, and then the instruments return but are rearranged as if a new song entirely is being built up again. There is some Mexican folk element to this ending, perhaps an exotic Phrygian note selection that works perfectly for the “we are the seed” lyric that repeats until the song ends.

Waiata O Ngahuru (Autumn) or In My Bones is a little more introspective and slower still. There are more than a few stop-start sections, with the minimal approach leaving dead silence for a few seconds between. GiGi sings ‘I surrendered to the light’ as if there is a suggestion of a non-negotiable change being imminent. These songs definitely do not seem to relate to the traditional five stages of grief (Denial, Anger, Fear, Bargaining, Acceptance) but there is an unmistakable acceptance to the proceedings on this track.

Finally, Waiata O Takurua (Winter) or The Phoenix ends the EP with what is closest to a single. A music video supporting this EP has been made for this song, directed by Sam Tattersfield, and it really is something to behold. Two hidden interpretive dancers, one covered in white fabric, the other black, interact dramatically on a Wellington beach. Musically, you can hear autoharp, guitar, mandolin and flute, but there are also deep breaths added to the mix and the sound of fire crackling which relates to the fire element of the Phoenix. It is a natural place to end the release, hinting at rebirth and a cycle to repeat once an energy force is spent. This track features the most raw emotion, and GiGi’s voice is at its most stricken with feeling.

Crayford is joined by Michael Sutherland on guitar, keyboards, percussion and vocals, Christopher Ding on flute, Hannah Fraser on violin, and Khailana Kendrick providing additional vocals. They create a rich tapestry of melodies that overlap with her voice and percussion, and they almost appear to be polite in their appearance. The whole release is gentle, natural, unusual and encompassing to the point of hypnotising. I can imagine this being played at retreats and meditation gatherings. It’s hard to compare the music with too much else happening in New Zealand, excepting Wellington’s other soundscape artist: Serpent Dream, but they are more haunting and ambient building than the joyful and expressive sounds to be heard here.

A record to play while making art, travelling or healing.

Rating: ( 4 / 5 )
 

About GiGi Genie

Let yourself be drawn into the raw world of folk noir with songstress GiGi Genie and band. Growth and empowerment ripple through the sounds of autoharp, guitar, mandolin and flute. Exploring our relationship with nature, being an evolving human and the expanding cosmos through delicate melodies, eclectic expression and intense crescendos.




Visit the muzic.net.nz Profile for GiGi Genie

Releases

Seasons of the Soul
Year: 2022
Type: EP

Other Reviews By Nicholas Clark

DarkWater - Album Review: Turning Point
13 Nov 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Turning Point is a complex, dynamic album that takes the listener on an intense ride. There are mysterious, fragile, powerful and gritty moments to discover on this ten-track offering that sounds both balanced and refined.
Read More...
Job Site - EP Review: The New Zealand Experience
15 Oct 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Emerging from the Waikato, high energy punk band Job Site showcases their special blend of comedic music on their latest offering, the 4 track The New Zealand Experience EP. The band plays fast and heavy throughout the recording, with rhythms that range from oi-punk, thrash music and even a little 2000’s indie rock.
Read More...
Festival Review: Great Sounds Great Review 2 @ Wellington - 31/08/2024
03 Sep 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Six iconic venues. Twenty eight acts.
Read More...
Voodoo Bloo - Album Review: Dead-end Rodeo
28 Aug 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Rodeos, at least in this country, aren’t perceived as sport nowadays. If the term is used at all in New Zealand it usually refers to a metaphor for an intense struggle to survive or to conquer the unconquerable, if but for fleeting moment.
Read More...
Gig Review: Bad Schematics @ Moon, Wellington - 26/07/2024
27 Jul 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Fresh from picking up numerous awards in the recent National Battle of the Bands competition, Bad Schematics have embarked on a North Island tour including Tauranga, Auckland and their hometown Palmerston North, to promote their newest album,C O L L I D E. Tonight, along with winners of the competition for this year, Adoneye, finalists Donal and The Bucks and last year’s second place winners, Dave and the Dirty Humans, Bad Schematics hit Wellington’s favourite underground alternative music venue and pizzeria, Moon.
Read More...
Gig Review: Floyd Marsden @ Valhalla, Wellington - 18/07/2024
19 Jul 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Although technically a sad affair, (as it was to be final of Floyd Marsden’s string of local shows promoting her album The Disco Lizards), the atmosphere in Valhalla was uncharacteristically filled with retro vibes but the usual friendly faces. In support for this show was Adult Friends, spearheaded by vocalist/guitarist Jackson Kidd who was also the producer of The Disco Lizards.
Read More...
SuperMild - EP Review: SuperMild
11 Jun 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
SuperMild is a busy band playing lots of venues and entertaining crowds with their blend of reggae tinged psychedelic rock. Their debut, self-titled four song EP is out now, and it spans the many sounds the band can summon with just three members.
Read More...
Anecdata - Album Review: Obsolete
05 Jun 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Anecdata is a one man band, Dan, who proves without a shadow of a doubt that a single person can be far more prolific than a band of many members. He has recorded nine albums and a number of singles, dabbling in various genres (grunge pop as well as new wave inspired rock) and done covers also including New Zealand classic Sierra Leone, originally by Coconut Rough, and two Beatles covers (I Am The Walrus, and Things We Said Today).
Read More...
View All Articles By Nicholas Clark

NZ Top 10 Singles

  • APT.
    ROSÉ And Bruno Mars
  • DIE WITH A SMILE
    Lady Gaga And Bruno Mars
  • BIRDS OF A FEATHER
    Billie Eilish
  • TASTE
    Sabrina Carpenter
  • I LOVE YOU, I'M SORRY
    Gracie Abrams
  • ESPRESSO
    Sabrina Carpenter
  • SAILOR SONG
    Gigi Perez
  • LOSE CONTROL
    Teddy Swims
  • A BAR SONG (TIPSY)
    Shaboozey
  • GOOD LUCK, BABE!
    Chappell Roan
View the Full NZ Top 40...
muzic.net.nz Logo
100% New Zealand Music
All content on this website is copyright to muzic.net.nz and other respective rights holders. Redistribution of any material presented here without permission is prohibited.
Report a ProblemReport A Problem