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DEAD SPACE CHAMBER MUSIC

Prog Folk • United Kingdom


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Dead Space Chamber Music picture
Dead Space Chamber Music biography
Formed: 2015, Bristol, UK
Status as of June 2022: active

DEAD SPACE CHAMBER MUSIC are a dark-neoclassical prog folk group from Bristol, UK. They reinterpret historical material, especially from the medieval and Renaissance periods, taking forms and melodies that are hundreds of years old and utilising them in new and varied and semi-improvised contemporary works.. Drawing on many musical approaches along the way, they incorporate elements and atmospheres of dark medieval, neofolk, ritual ambient, and doom in their music.

The band is a four piece of Tom Bush (Guitars, Sampler), Katie Murt (Drums, Percussion), Liz Paxton (Cello), and Ellen Southern (Voice, Percussion, Bowed & Plucked Psaltery), but Tom Berry, who recorded their OEIRA EP while still a student in 2018, and who the band have worked with ever since, is often considered the fifth member, for his sympathetic recording, mixing and mastering of their material.

Bio courtesy of Nick (nick_h_nz)

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DEAD SPACE CHAMBER MUSIC discography


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DEAD SPACE CHAMBER MUSIC top albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

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Dead Space Chamber Music
2018
3.91 | 3 ratings
The Black Hours
2021

DEAD SPACE CHAMBER MUSIC Live Albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

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Hagioscope Obscura
2020
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St Kenelm's - The Sapperton Sessions
2020
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DSCM The Black City Session
2021
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Live at Dark Alchemy V
2024

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DEAD SPACE CHAMBER MUSIC Official Singles, EPs, Fan Club & Promo (CD, EP/LP, MC, Digital Media Download)

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Early Demos
2016
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OEIRA EP
2018
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Strange Seas - with Tommy Creep
2019
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Liement Me Deport
2019
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Lactimę (Excerpt)
2019
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Screaming Veils - live at The Gryphon, Bristol
2020
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Ocean Star
2020
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Y Dref Wen (The Shining Town) - with Tribes of Medusa
2020
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Lo 'mperador del Doloroso Regno
2020
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Siren Chant - live at The Sun at Night, St Leonards Church, London
2020
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Mari Lwyd / Morfa'r Frenhines - live at St Thomas the Martyr
2021
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Nocturne for Erich Zann
2021
3.00 | 1 ratings
The Grail Carol
2022

DEAD SPACE CHAMBER MUSIC Reviews


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 The Black Hours by DEAD SPACE CHAMBER MUSIC album cover Studio Album, 2021
3.91 | 3 ratings

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The Black Hours
Dead Space Chamber Music Prog Folk

Review by nick_h_nz
Collaborator Prog Metal / Heavy Prog Team

4 stars [Originally published at The Progressive Aspect]

The power of music is a curious thing. Sometimes it takes just one album to open up my mind and ears to something that then consumes me. It doesn't happen often, but when it does, it hits hard. Though I'm not a stranger to the sorts of music that made up the excellent compilation 'The Black Stone - Music for Lovecraftian Summonings', they were not what I would normally listen to. Yet when I first heard that album in January 2021, it more or less changed my listening patterns and preferences for the remainder of the year, and its effects are still lasting. One of the tracks on that compilation that particularly stood out was 'Nocturne for Erich Zann' by a group called Dead Space Chamber Music. When I discovered that they'd released an album last year, I had to hear it. And I can say, without any doubt or reservation, that not only did The Black Hours not disappoint, but it quickly became one of my favourite releases from 2021.

So how to describe the music of Dead Space Chamber Music? Well, that's a tough one, as they are both ancient and modern, and take on aspects of many different genres without ever really belonging to any. Folk, classical, metal, and ambient all make up a part of the sound, but they exist somewhere in between. Indeed, from the very first time I heard their music, I thought Liminal Space Chamber Music might be a better moniker, not just because of their liminality of genre, but because their music seemed to come from and describe those liminal spaces in space and time that are quite perfect for a compilation of Lovecraftian inspired music. Dead Space Chamber Orchestra have a wonderful ambiguity and disorientating quality to their music that places them in a position of no one era or genre. And while The Black Hours is largely more of an album of this world (however blurry the timeline might be), rather than the space between this world and those that the horrors of a Lovecraftian universe might creep through, the music remains liminal - and that is one of its greatest attractions for me.

If there is an element of horror in the music of 'The Black Hours', it's more because of the shapeshifting nature of the music, and the unease that might impose on the listener. The modus operandi of Dead Space Chamber Music appears to be to take music from centuries ago and reshape it into something new. But while there are plenty of bands that like to add a touch of what they believe is the sound of Medieval or Renaissance music (for example) to their own pieces, it's often superficial, and even artificial. But Dead Space Chamber Music are, as far as I'm concerned, one of the few bands that genuinely and authentically represent the music of those old ages, even if it is not in a manner that might be expected. You may query my use of authentic, given the contemporary nature of these interpretations, but (as with much music from long ago) these traditional tunes had a basic structure, although largely left their arrangement to the performer. Improvisation played an important role in the performance of these pieces at the time, and so the improvisation within Dead Space Chamber Music's interpretation is, in a sense, true to form.

For a more modern example of how a piece can have underlying structure but rely on improvisation, you need only look to Terry Riley's 'In C', which was deliberately 'composed' in such a way that no two performances were ever likely to sound alike. But however different it might be, it is always recognisable. I imagine Dead Space Chamber Music continually evolve and innovate upon their own reinterpretations in the same manner, so that if any of 'The Black Hours' were performed live, it would be different from the recordings on the album - yet still recognisable for what it is. I would love to hear the music of Dead Space Chamber Music live - preferably in a church, crypt or cemetery. But in terms of the album, the best way to hear it, I think, is with headphones - as it has been mixed superbly to become completely immersive. The way in which certain sounds pan at certain moments elevates tension and excitement in a way that I don't believe could be experienced without headphones. Listen to this in the dark, or simply with your eyes closed, and it's a quite incredible listening experience.

Part of what makes 'The Black Hours' work so well is certainly the mix, but ultimately it's the 'chamber' part of the band's name. True to the idea of a chamber orchestra, there is a directness and focus in the quartet's playing that provides both intimacy and intensity. The sound is often far bigger than one could expect just four musicians to make, and it's truly impressive. Conversely, there can be an incredible delicacy. The distance between the heavy and loud peaks, and quiet and delicate lows is immense. The wide dynamics are just one way Dead Space Chamber Music use space within their sound. No space is dead space, effectively, as it is all used so well. Again, without headphones you could be missing a lot. And at all times the interplay between the band is just a joy to hear. I presume, as should be the case for any chamber music, they have recorded themselves playing together in the same room. At this point, I might normally be expressing how eager I am to hear a third album from the band. But Dead Space Chamber Music's Bandcamp page seems to have a cornucopia of goodies to work my way through, and I've not even thought to begin, because I can't stop playing The Black Hours'

Thanks to kenethlevine for the artist addition.

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