Frameworks
Frameworks is an album that seeks to explore the emotional landscape of changing the lens of how you view the world. Studies have shown that most habits and beliefs are set by the age of seven. And yet, throughout life we sometimes undergo radical change. What does it mean to change the way you think? How does it feel to change the way you view the world? What does it sounds like to leave a part of you that you thought gave life meaning only to find a deeper and truer meaning. The tracks across Frameworks present a narrative arc of having a belief, relationship, ideal, or other foundational aspect of your life that is removed from your life. The album moves through the spaces of unease and tension, but ultimately finds itself in a new space of hope and calm. The music of Frameworks is built on a piano tuned, not to the traditional 12 tones of equal temperament, but rather to Just Intonation scales of the composer’s devising. Some of these intervals are as close as a sixth of a tone apart. At the beginning of the album, these microtones are utilized to show tension and discomfort, but by the end the listening ear becomes acclimated to them, and they are recontextualized by the harmonies to sound warm and inviting. This serves to further the narrative of the album as a whole. Throughout the album the piano is wrapped in granular processing, analog and modular synths, self-patched filters, and programmed beats.
Tracklisting:
- Have This Mind
- Glacial Requiem
- A Moment
- Broken Trellis
- Shapes and Shards
- Chiastic Crux
- Afterwind
- Earth Everlasting
- Be Interlude
- Bursting Downstream
- Sea Coda
Micah Pick
Micah Pick is a composer, pianist, and producer from Bedford, VA. His music has previously appeared on Audiobulb Records with the album Brighter Than I Thought released in 2020.
Credits:
+ Music composed, performed and produced by Micah Pick
+ Field Recordings by Go Outside Music
+ Mastering by Holosuite Mastering
Special thanks to Mike Early, Benjamin Muach, and everyone in a dark room on a Vermont winter night for being First Listeners.
Reviews
Inactuelles
After Brighter Than I Thought (2020), the British label Audiobulb Records has just released a second album, Frameworks , by American pianist, composer and producer Micah Pick . The most audible feature of this new opus is the use of just intonation for the piano ( for this notion, see here ) according to scales specified by the composer. The micro-intervals used may initially surprise the novice listener and create some listening discomfort. The ear gets used to it, rest assured. Quite quickly, the right intonation imposes its own charm! In addition to the piano, you will hear analog and modular synthesizers, programmed rhythms, field sounds, all of course processed electronically, so that the purely acoustic part is difficult to pin down, as is often the case now.
“Have this Mind” plunges into the atmosphere: a burst of synthesizer drone on a glittery background of electronic dust precedes the entrance of the piano, doubled by the synthesizers. The piano sparkles, in melodious showers. He wades into slightly troubled waters, distills a slightly melancholic air, then everything ignites in a great orchestral game before returning to calm, meditative piano. Nothing aggressive in this friendly, even seductive music. With “Glacial Requiem”, Micah Pick moves up a gear. Dramatic piano on a scratched, fractured background with grainy textures. Impressive piece, which gives its full measure to the piano in just intonation: it is absolutely beautiful!
The short "A Moment" plunges us even further into a tumultuous world where the layers of sound jostle, prelude to another great peak of the record, the superb "Broken Trellis", floating in a disturbing weightlessness. The piano questions the mystery, tries to float in a chaos of troubled forces. Very beautiful electronic music!
“Shapes and Shards” (track 5) is even blacker, as if we were at the meeting point of telluric currents, murky and sloshing, traversed by erratic percussions. The piano reappears in the following track, “Chiastic Crux” (track 6). It seems to hover over a fog of traveling drones, then it imposes its mark, the piece taking an almost repetitive techno turn. It prances limpidly in the middle of a deluge of stripes, before returning royally calm to a desolate background. A few field recordings set the scene for “Afterwind”, a more peaceful piece at the beginning. But the meditation of the piano stands out against striped structures with interrupted movements. The piano becomes more energetic, entering into synergy with the background which is decidedly nothing less than tamed.
“Earth Everlasting” (track 8, Terre eternal ) takes one of the melodies from “Broken Trellis” in a more ambient context. It is an elegiac hymn, little by little invaded again by dark, thick forces, a hymn which would like to be a song of light and which is smothered by darkness!
"Be Interlude" (track 9), is the short return of the murky, overwhelming powers, before "Bursting Downstream", a long (not too much: around three and a half minutes) formless bubbling, not the best track. Very nice ending fortunately with “Sea Coda”.
The best in this generous disc is the piano, each time the composition gives it a marked role to give shape to the electronics, in short avoiding too easy electro-ambient music.
A very good disc all the same!
Favorite titles :
1) “Glacial Requiem” (title 2)
2) "Have This Mind" (track 1) / "Broken Trellis" (track 4) / "Afterwind" (track 7) and "Sea Coda" (track 11)
Noticed
When listening to "Glacial Requiem", I always had the impression that I already knew this title, for a long time in fact. I was thinking of Harold Budd. I searched in vain in his discography. Nothing found !
Original > HERE
Last Day Deaf
Bedford, Virginia based composer, pianist, producer, and your shepherd of soft experimental ambient, Micah Pick is set to release his third solo LP ‘Frameworks’ March 22nd. The album is the follow-up to 2023’s ‘Undecoded’ and 2020’s Audiobulb Records released LP ‘Brighter Than I Thought’, as well as a collaborative release with Benjamin Mauch and albums under the moniker American Mythology.
‘Frameworks’ is a pleasure for the ears from the start, although moods and paces shift and swirl throughout the entirety of it. 11 tracks in length, the album is filled with an overwhelming sense of safety and warmth, as though you’re being hugged by the person you love most. The light yet secure feeling of snugness bleeds through and as we begin ‘Frameworks’ with first track ‘Have This Mind’, you find yourself entering a new world, one in which the ceilings are covered in incandescent bulbs, heavy-duty and a bit fuzzy. A microtonal piano was used throughout the album, wrapped in granular processing, analog and modular synths, self-patched filters, and programmed beats. Pick’s process of combining natural sounds with ambient electronics has one feeling as though they’re walking amongst the ocean in a recently developed encapsulated technological device, and his ear for silence amongst the harmony is heavenly. There are certain tones used that strike an almost ancestral chord, whereas others amongst the LP feel fresh, newly found. Sonically it can be derivative (in the best sense of the word) of Aphex Twin, Nils Frahm, Allesandro Cortini, as if at a crossroads between Steve Hauschildt and Godspeed You! Black Emperor. ‘Glacial Requium’ keeps an eternal fire burning, both modestly and decadently, a must-listen. ‘A Moment’ captures your attention for only one minute in time but the combination of fuzz and drone, silence and water-like fluidity, make it memorable. ‘Broken Trellis’ is seemingly regretful, and at times the slightest bit unsettling, whereas ‘Earth Everlasting’ is all comfort and perhaps my favorite track off ‘Frameworks’. ‘Sea Coda’ is the contemplative last track of the LP. As though you’re wistfully thinking of what once was by the seaside, hearing the waves crash in front of you. Sea birds quietly singing in the last few seconds is an ideal way to end such a calming piece of art.
The Blue Ridge Mountain based artist has delivered an album great for intent conscious listening as well as flawless background for your more unconscious moments of the day, so put ‘Frameworks’ on right this instant!
Original > HERE
Igloo Magazine
Imagine music based around the tonal possibilities of retuning a piano. The first time anyone listening might frantically insist that “this is out of tune.” According to ancient tradition, artists sometimes try new things, maybe someone might try to use new languages or somehow create unexpected contexts. Traditionally most sound comes in basic harmonic or dissonant flavors, with lots of variations. There is an itchy feeling as the tones change slightly and do not always quite match up harmonically for that familiar pure sweet resonant sound. The search for harmonic synchronicity is almost happening but is not always there, that is the sound specifically employed here. That matching tone becomes thrillingly close and as the tuner moves the tone as the music proceeds. This creates a wider sense of what you can fit into your listening experience, and perhaps others (besides me) might choose to accept this odd recording as a musical event. It says something positive about using the entire palette of sound available to artists today. Plus the musical listening thrill of surprises and new rhythms that the collage arts have to offer. Perhaps music is a contrived listening experience and we thrill at the emotions that can be evoked and shared.
There are some beats and some engaging rhythms, mostly the feeling is relaxing and has mostly drones. The slow sustained notes of the piano sometimes sound like the tuning is off. The blues idiom shares the bending notes that reach across the normal scale, could that make this music sound almost familiar? Crying as the tone bends. Primarily piano with fanciful collage editing, lots of synths, effects, field recordings, and some percussion asking questions about the nature of existence and what is music compared to birds or waterfalls?
The microtonal sound recontextualizes the familiar sound of the piano. This could be tough on the artist who is doomed to having it pointed out every time that the thing is out of tune. The lesson is that as you listen the more sense and beauty emerge from the warped mystery.
Frameworks is a neoclassical album with elements of electronic and ambient music. Piano with hints of synths, effects, field recordings, and some percussion asking questions about the nature of existence. Mostly what stands out is the artist’s bravery to use a musical language that is built on a piano being tuned, not to the traditional 12 tones of equal temperament, but rather to Just Intonation scales of the composer’s devising and by the end the listening ear becomes acclimated to them, and they are recontextualized by the harmonies to sound warm and inviting to the constant listener.
Curving to match a new normal, “Have This Mind” (4:26) brings mild bending to the tones, the idea of drifting calibration for the notes, a slow piano with flickering synthesizers and crackling microphone noises, perhaps someone walking in dry foliage and strings that explore the bending tones, a form of glitch that provides a delicate sparsity and fleeting moments of dense chaos. Slow down. Take it in. Give up on the sense of “off” and accept the wider range.
The “Glacial Requium” (4:39) furnishes this landscape with more piano microtones and complex textures. Enduring bending notes slightly wavering, the sound of sustained tones reaching into oceans of reverb. The ear can find simultaneous unrelated field recordings, moments of drip and splatter percussion, always playing with the nearness of harmonic normality. Only “A Moment” (1:15), one note alone evolves into very complex bursts of microscopic tones combined with the slowly fading drones. Now to the garden at night, see the “Broken Trellis” (5:12) holding haunting melodic fragments. Soon something start to take form, while something else is leaking out, something polyphonic at a higher speed.
The ear constantly attempts to assemble these “Shapes and Shards” (5:13) bringing from the jumble the piano and muffled electronics that sound orchestral, odd bits come and go whilst the piano sustains drone atmospherics. And suddenly a new pattern pops out, there is a more woven fabric of rhythms and textures, the piano is flittering around like crazy in a structure where the phrases are repeated in reverse order and there might be a passage framed in identical content, “Chiastic Crux” (4:42), feedback and piano collage montages.
“Afterwind” (6:04) I hear morning song birds in the breeze, a piano takes over, with hesitant notes and another form almost emerges from the complex layers of the teasing microtones. A slow fade-in, “Earth Everlasting” (5:26) repeats some of the same haunting fragmented melodies searching for tonic resolution, this time a slightly more solid dream is suggested in the fog. Another collision of elements, the piano and the flickering fields. Dreams do not require or even try to accept any explanation, they just happen. Things start to pick up, then they drop away into the fadelands. “Be Interlude” (1:20) gallops out of the darkness, now we have a cadence and tempo that stands apart, using the established sound library of the album. “Bursting Downstream” (3:33) has a comparatively busy complexity, this is my favorite track. The notes search for the resolution we have craved all along, but the density keeps a steady stream of surprises coming. Bits link with the sonic history here, but a whole new composition rises from the distance and territories we have come through. Triumphant resolution is at hand! The final track, “Sea Coda” (5:57) returns us to the shores of the vast waters, and the piano tuner brings closer the sense of the old normality. Now we have experienced and endured the slowly bending wrong notes and know how all of nature can include some educational flaws. Rain finds all surfaces and penetrates slowly.
Micah Pick is a classically trained musician based in Bedford, Virginia (USA) who works as a collaborative pianist and music educator. These themes explore the surprise at finding unexpected joy even at our darkest moments when our worst fears are realized and facing the unique stresses of adulthood by retaining a sense of childlike joy.
Original > HERE
EKM
Micah Pick brings a unique and captivating blend of neoclassical, experimental, ambient, and electronica music on his new album Frameworks.
A new concept album is coming soon in 2024 by the Bedford Virginia-based pianist, composer, and producer Micah Pick. The album is titled Frameworks and it explores the human ability to adapt to surroundings and situations as well as changing their worldviews and habits as new situations occur. Frameworks is Pick’s seventh album and it follows his cinematic-sounding Undecoded album from 2023 and another concept album of his in It Feels Great but the Planet is Dying from 2022. Micah Pick – Framework is an eleven-track and forty-eight-minute experiment for the listener to see just how they adapt to the environment and experiences brought on while listening to the album. To pull off this experiment Pick incorporates the use of some brilliant composing and producing techniques.
When composing Frameworks, Pick needed to bring a balance of warmth and tension to the music to create an experience that needed adaptation and also had entities that were inviting. The warmth is brought on by the collection of instruments that Pick utilizes in the album which includes a blend of granular piano, orchestral strings, analog and modular synths, and varying atmospheric ambiance. The tension is brought on by the use of non-standard tuning of the instruments as well as the addition of chaotic production effects and stereo panning. A constant tension-building production technique found throughout Frameworks is the use of fast-alternating filters that change a specific instrument or ambiance profile from stereophonic to monophonic. This is a similar effect that you could create yourself while listening to the music if you were to jiggle the input jack of your headphones going into the playback device creating a crackling-like effect.
As the uneasiness of the dissonant instruments, off-centered panning techniques, and the chaotic filters first hit the listener, it is the warmth from the blend of instruments as well as occasional Lo-fi beats and ASMR tapping sounds that keep the listener engaged throughout the album. There are also moments when the original melodies from the granular piano sound as if they were pulled from the Impressionistic period of music and composers like Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel. As you make your way through to the end of the album you will find that you have indeed adapted to where the constant tension heard in the beginning is now the norm and is accepted and all it took was the inviting aspects of the music to keep you engaged while your listening habits adapted over time. We highly recommend that you listen to the entirety of Micah Pick – Frameworks in one sitting so you can experience the full listening experiment and the eureka moments that come with it as you realize your listening habits have adapted in the process.
Original > HERE
Tunite Music
Frameworks by Micah Pick is a captivating instrumental album comprising eleven intricately crafted pieces that traverse the realms of classical and electronic music with an experimental flair. Reminiscent of the works of acclaimed artists like Nils Frahm, Aphex Twin, and Allesandro Cortini, the album mesmerizes listeners with its unique fusion of familiar piano melodies and electronic effects.
The journey begins with "Have This Mind," an ethereal opening track featuring a piano tuned to a microtonal scale. This unconventional tuning, coupled with electronic ambient elements, sets a mesmerizing tone, drawing listeners into an otherworldly soundscape. "Glacial Requiem" follows suit with a hauntingly beautiful melody, evoking an eastern ambiance through its uncommon melodic progression.
As the album progresses, each track unveils its own distinct atmosphere and emotion. "Broken Trellis" exudes a sense of melancholy, with the piano echoing amidst monumental atmospheric layers, while "Shapes and Shade" immerses listeners in a dramatic sonic landscape crafted through atmospheric electronic pads.
A standout piece, "Chiastic Crux," seamlessly blends electronic textures with intricate piano harmonies, showcasing Pick's masterful composition skills. Meanwhile, "Afterwind" evokes serene and contemplative moods, utilizing nature-inspired soundscapes to enrich the listening experience.
"Earth Everlasting" follows, enveloping listeners in an ambient mood that seamlessly transitions into "Be Interlude," characterized by a powerful atmospheric electronic pad. Subsequently, "Bursting Downstream" takes center stage, crafting a tension-filled arpeggio that gradually dissipates into a serene atmosphere. This tranquil ambiance sets the stage for the album's final piece, "Sea Coda," which opens with another nature-inspired ambient introduction before introducing a heartfelt piano melody. As the poignant conclusion to the album, this sentimental piece serves as the perfect finale, each track acting as a tile that completes the intricate framework of the entire album.
Throughout Frameworks, Pick's innovative use of microtonal piano tuning adds a layer of complexity and depth to the music. Initially creating a sense of tension and unease, these microtones gradually evolve, ultimately contributing to a warm and inviting harmonic palette by the album's conclusion. This artistic choice not only highlights Pick's dedication to pushing musical boundaries but also enhances the album's overarching narrative of transformation and growth.
In addition to his musical prowess, Micah Pick's background as a composer, pianist, and producer shines through in every track. His meticulous attention to detail and emotive performances further elevate the listening experience, inviting listeners on a deeply introspective journey through sound.
Frameworks is more than just an album; it's a sonic exploration of shifting perspectives and embracing change. Through its meticulously crafted compositions and thought-provoking themes, Micah Pick invites listeners to contemplate the nature of transformation and find solace in the beauty of evolution. With Frameworks, Pick solidifies his position as a visionary artist, pushing the boundaries of genre and emotion with each meticulously crafted note. The album will be released on all digital platforms on the 13th of April 2024.
Original > HERE