Tracklist:1. Rise2. Running3. Two Hands In My Pocket4. Wescott5. Thrush Song6. I Made A Lovers Prayer7. Dawn Birds8. Buffalo9. Reliever10. Ambassador Cathedral11. Appalachia BorealisIn the Fall of 2022, Phil Cook found himself living alone in a small home
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Tracklist:
1. Rise
2. Running
3. Two Hands In My Pocket
4. Wescott
5. Thrush Song
6. I Made A Lovers Prayer
7. Dawn Birds
8. Buffalo
9. Reliever
10. Ambassador Cathedral
11. Appalachia Borealis
In the Fall of 2022, Phil Cook found himself living alone in a small home at the edge of field and forest in North Carolinas Piedmont. For most of Cooks life he lived near the hearts of the towns he had called home, near the groan of traffic and hubbub of coffee shops. Such close quarters helped make the gregarious Cook a prolific collaborator, from co-founding Megafaun to working with The Blind Boys of Alabama, Bon Iver, Hiss Golden Messenger, and endless others. But Cooks closest neighbor now was a trailhead, so he went and listened, enraptured first by the stillness and then by the manifold birds. He began leaving his windowsill slightly cracked each night, so that the dawn chorus greeted him. Cook began recording these tangled bird songs, and he slowly joined them. With the sun finally high, Cook would listen to the days recordings and improvise in real time on the instrument that remains the first and most steadfast love of his musical life, the piano.
When Cook left that cabin after a year, he moved into a home of his own in Durham, with plenty of space for his two boys to play and for something hed never actually owneda proper piano. Over the next several months, Cook spent untold hours drilling down on these pieces. During lessons with the Southern gospel great Chuckey Robinson, the pianist had challenged Cook to sustain fewer notes, to stop clouding and crowding his melodies by using the instruments pedals as crutches. His music suddenly had more clarity, with the sounds and the feelings they ferried given more room to function. Cook dug into the danger and delight, into the idea that we twist our bodies into knots trying to understand what is best for our hearts.
In April 2024 Cook returned to Wisconsins Chippewa Valley where he was raised. His lifelong friend and bandmate, Justin Vernon, had just finished an overhaul of April Base, the studio compound where Cook has worked on more than a dozen records during the last 15 years. Cook asked Vernon to produce Appalachia Borealis as simply as possiblemerely to listen and offer feedback in two extended afternoon sessions, to talk about the right takes and make sure that theyd captured the heart. It, of course, got more complicated, as they experimented with the process. Vernon would add or subtract the bird songs to Cooks headphones, seeing how they impacted his playing. Or they would route his notes through a massive reverb chamber, Cook
responding in gossamer improvisations. Appalachia Borealis is a deeply poignant and personal set of 11 piano meditations, built with the emotional range of a full and open existence. Inspired by those windowsill improvisations, it reflects not only the turmoil and sadness of a fraught time for Cook but also the hope, light, and joy of looking for the other side. You can sometimes still hear the birds whose tune and time helped to inspire so many of these songs. Even when theyre not within earshot, their essence remains.
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