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Wormit reservoir: a concrete columns and pools of water in a large sunless room

Wormit Reservoir

Wormit Reservoir

Akio Suzuki and John Butcher performed in an old underground reservoir in Fife. Buried into the side of a hill, and accessed only from above, the old reservoir in Wormit isn’t the easiest to find. But my God it’s got a preposterous sound, a huge booming decay and some radically challenging focal points and echoes, careening around off its concrete walls. Normally I suppose that would be the worst thing you could think of in a performance venue, but for this tour it’s pretty ideal.

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Perhaps the most charming, engaging artist I’ve seen, Japanese musician and inventor, instrument builder and shaman Akio Suzuki is probably unknown to most of you. But we think his work is utterly captivating and crucial; it deserves a much bigger audience. Akio has been performing, teaching and building instruments for nearly 40 years. His music is simple and pure, and beautifully unworried by the rules of modern music. He explores nature and how its atmospheres and sounds can be harnessed and then set free, how you can lose yourself in the sound that surrounds us, and how musical creation and beauty exist in all things, in all moments.

“I think of Akio Suzuki as a kind of magician” David Toop

“Hearing this music, I remember many things, including playing in a puddle as a tiny kid” Yamatsuka Eye: Boredoms

I think John Butcher is the most exciting saxophone player in Europe today. Bent to his will, a saxophone can sound like almost anything. I’d swear that in his playing I’ve heard unbelievable sounds, far beyond any notion of traditional technique: the reverberation of dub like echo, gulps of breath and animal yelps, the clatter and noise of farm machinery or of skittering daisy wheel printers, that internal rush you hear when breathing in cold winter air, trilling gasps of birdcall or moaning train whistles, the far off call of steeple bells. The fact that this teeming and apparently limitless palette is balanced in a way that produces performances of both structure and unpredictability, and that they’re constantly so approachable and engaging is, to be honest, quite staggering.

Recordings of the performances from this tour have been released on Ftarri, Confront and Blume Records.

Documentation

6 images
Akio Suzuki playing a percussion instrument inside Wormit Reservoir

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

John Butcher blowing a soprano saxophone inside Wormit Reservoir

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

The columns of wormit reservoir pools of water, concrete everywhere

▴ Credit: Keiko Yoshida

Wormit reservoir: a concrete columns and pools of water in a large sunless room

▴ Credit: Keiko Yoshida

Akio Suzuki blowing some glass rods inside wormit reservoir

▴ Credit: Keiko Yoshida

Akio Suzuki rubbing things on the floor of wormit reservoir

▴ Credit: Keiko Yoshida

Akio Suzuki playing a percussion instrument inside Wormit Reservoir

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

John Butcher blowing a soprano saxophone inside Wormit Reservoir

▴ Credit: Bryony McIntyre

The columns of wormit reservoir pools of water, concrete everywhere

▴ Credit: Keiko Yoshida

Wormit reservoir: a concrete columns and pools of water in a large sunless room

▴ Credit: Keiko Yoshida

Akio Suzuki blowing some glass rods inside wormit reservoir

▴ Credit: Keiko Yoshida

Akio Suzuki rubbing things on the floor of wormit reservoir

▴ Credit: Keiko Yoshida

Artists

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