Hoping For The Invisible To Ignite (Gizeh, 2011)
Hoping for the Invisible to Ignite is the debut album from FareWell Poetry, a mini-collective that pairs Parisian musicians Frederic D. Oberland with Anglo-saxon poet Jayne Amara Ross, who contributes texts, Super 8- and 16-mm hand-processed films, and tape recorder to FareWell Poetry’s haunted sound. In some ways, the group’s approach updates the spoken word tradition associated with the 1960s bohemian scene where beat poets accompanied by improvising jazz musicians unleashed stream-of-consciousness raps in smoke-filled basement cafes.
Listening to Hoping for the Invisible to Ignite, one might also be reminded of The Velvet Underground performing at The Factory, with all of the visual spectacle attendant upon such a “happening,” as one more precursor to FareWell Poetry. One shouldn't make too much of such references, however, as the mesmerizing Hoping for the Invisible to Ignite is radically unlike the material others before them have issued (its texts are anything but off-the-cuff, for example); certainly the deluxe treatment Gizeh has given the release, with the CD supplemented by a DVD disc containing forty minutes of material, enhances the impression made by the project.
The album's twenty-minute epic “As True as  Troilus,” its text referencing the tragic tale of Troilus and Cressida  that one most naturally associates with Shakespeare's 1602 play,  artfully segues from passages of delicate restraint  to frenzied  freakout, with the group's musicians sympathetically wrapping their  collective sounds around  Amara Ross's dramatic whisper. Prodded by a  mournful wave of E-bow guitars, the music slowly builds in intensity  until it deflates midway through, as if readying itself for the even  more intense climb undertaken during the second half. A subsequent  passage finds chiming guitars accompanying shifts between dreamlike and  mournful moods until, fourteen minutes in, the music detonates with an  immolating fury that's almost overwhelming.
Strip away the voiceover and instrumentally  the group could at times pass for Godspeed You! Black Emperor. That's  especially evident during the instrumental moodscaping that occurs  during the two-part “All in the Full, Indomitable Light of Hope,” and  especially during those moments where electric guitar, glockenspiel, and  strings collectively generate elegiac atmospheres. Both groups also  share an affinity for slow builds and cathartic climaxes, something  clearly heard on FareWell Poetry's album in “As True as Troilus” and in  the second part of “All in the Full, Indomitable Light of Hope” when the   pieces build to crushing climaxes. Without wishing to stretch the  connection too far, even the sombre, piano-laden coda “In Dreams  Airlifted Out” suggests kinship between the two outfits. Hoping for the Invisible to Ignite's  four tracks were performed in the studio live (though re-recorded to  add the natural reverb of the Saint-Margaret of Antioch Church in Leeds  to the resultant sound), and as such the material exudes a freshness and  spontaneity, the material structured certainly but definitely coming to  life in-the-moment. 
In featuring Amara Ross's black-and-white film  treatment of “As True as Troilus”  as well as a bonus live performance  shot  at Saint-Eustache Church in Paris, the DVD proves to be  considerably more than a minor add-on. The twenty-minute film production  has Jean Cocteau's  Le Sang d'un poète (Blood of a Poet) and          La Belle et la bête  (Beauty and the Beast) and David Lynch's Eraserhead  as precursors (one might also cite Guy Maddin's entire filmography) to  the chiaroscuro visual style used in the FareWell Poetry piece. The  visuals display a scratchy, time-worn look that reinforces the  hallucinatory, even surreal character of the film content. In certain  moments the images,   sometimes violent and sexual in nature, are  duplicated on left and right sides of the screen and include    figures  dancing, hands sewing, and a ship at rest in a harbour (additional  background details relating to the film are included in an insert, along  with the texts for “As True as Troilus” and “All in the Full,  Indomitable Light of Hope”). Put simply, Ross's powerful piece brings an  entirely new dimension to the CD version of the piece. The  twenty-minute live presentation is compelling  in its own way too in    the way it humanizes the group's ethereal sound by showing  the  musicians and Ross, like some modern-day enchantress, bringing “As True  as Troilus” into being  before a small but appreciative audience. 

 
