| “I rhyme to  see myself, to set the darkness echoing,” writes the Nobel Laureate Seamus  Heaney of his solitary profession in his poem “Personal Helicon.”   These words  always come to mind when listening to the music of Mirel Wagner. There is a  defiant air of unflinching bravery in her carefully chosen words and the  skeletal chords of her acoustic guitar. Her songs are like smooth, polished  black pebbles, thrown into a cold bottomless pond, drops of life that set the  darkness rippling.  Her  acoustic balladry is as far as you’ll get from clichéd coffee house folk,  having more to do with the primeval darkness of Swans than the folksy bonhomie  of Bob Dylan.    Her  background couldn’t be more normal: a relatively sheltered childhood in the  suburbs of Helsinki. Wagner would spend her teenage years rummaging around the  blues section of her local library, fumbling around with her brother’s acoustic  guitar.  Wagner is wary  of speaking of her Ethiopian origins (she was adopted at 1 ½ years of age) and  insists that she is Finnish. And so she is. Her art is all the more astonishing  considering this cultural context, all the more shocking in its strangeness  because it stems from something so normal.    Her  self-titled debut is still causing ripples today. Its nine songs distill the  very essence of darkness, are the hollowed-out bare bones of the blues. They  seem ancient and worn, old beyond their years, chillingly frank in their brutal  honesty. It is an incredible set of songs, a record so potentially faultless  that it would seem impossible to better. Written when she was still in her  teens, like the child-poet Rimbaud, she seemed to channel something much bigger  than her frail frame would imply, the kind of fountain that dries up once you  drink from it too thirstily, the kind of sunlight that you only walk in once.    For this  very reason, I’ve been dreading her second record. “Oh me too!” exclaims  Wagner. “It’s just the classic story: I had years to write and polish that set  of songs, and now I’ve been so busy touring and performing that writing new  songs has been hard.”    Have no  fear, it’s all here.    Her  forthcoming album, When the Cellar Children See the Light of Day, according to  Wagner, is “more of the same.” And lo and behold, it is: a better-recorded,  better-written, better-sung, deeper version of the first.    “People  keep asking me to somehow define this record in context with the first. I  started using a plectrum, but maybe that’s not really it, either. It’s just  ‘more,’ in some way. ‘One louder,’ if you will.”    When the  Cellar Children See the Light of Day was recorded at Shark Reef Studios in  Hailuoto by electronic music producer Vladislav Delay (Luomo, Uusitalo). Vladislav  fleshes out Wagner’s sound while keeping her winning formula intact, with  subtle production touches that make the album sound vast and huge.    “Aki  Roukala (Wagner’s manager) knew Vladislav and suggested we work together. It  was really good, actually. I’m really glad we did. It was very relaxed and  intimate, just the two of us in the studio. Vladislav listened to what I had to  say rather than try to impose something on me. He only suggested something  once, and when we tried it out, it worked perfectly.”  When the  Cellar Children See the Light of Day is an impressive set of songs, uniform and  cohesive. Wagner wrote the majority of these songs up on the peninsula of  Hailuoto in northern Finland, in an old log cabin next to Roukala’s family  home. The isolation and relative starkness of the place (no central heating, no  electricity) helped bring out the songs. During her month-long exile, Wagner’s  only companion was a solitary mouse, with which she shared her food.    The ominous  counting of opener “1-2-3-4” signals the arrival of a new, more commanding  voice. No lament, this song rather taunts and pushes the envelope, seeming to  revel in a kind of sadistic pleasure in recounting things that live below the  floorboards and in darkened corners. There is something foreboding implied in  the process of counting, as if a prelude to something unspeakable.    The second  song, “The Dirt,” which is reminiscent of Mark Lanegan, comes from that same  vast, empty and dusty desert, from which he walks into town. It broadens Wagner’s  palette by introducing the solitary howl of an electric slide guitar after the  payoff line “you’ll be in the dirt / you’ll be the dirt” comes around the first  time.    That line,  as perfect as it is merciless, recalls the wheel of Greek tragedy or Shakespeare,  crushing in its emotionless realization of the facts, while taking pleasure in  charting your inevitable downfall. The dirt swallows you until you become it.  “Ashes to ashes, dust to dust,” as the Good Book says.    The line is  also quintessential Wagner in the sense that it changes the tone of the  original by altering just a single word. The last line draws blood. It’s a  classic blues moment.  Vladislav  also enlisted the talents of his friend, Academy and Grammy award-winning  Scottish composer Craig Armstrong, who played bowed cello on the song  “Ellipsis” and piano on the album closer, ‘Goodnight.” He is the only other  musician on the album.    “Ellipsis”  has that endless vastness of Nick Cave’s most desolate ballads. Its notes echo  to the horizons. And “Goodnight” introduces a meandering piano line reminiscent  of Tindersticks. It traces the melody absentmindedly like you’d trace the  outline of the back of a sleeping lover, humming along as it goes strolling  down the road.    When the  Cellar Children See the Light of Day  is  solely Wagner’s vision. At times it is playful, at times chillingly emotionless  - Wagner is difficult to pin down. Her vocals are louder than ever on this new  record, with the whisper of yesteryear drawing breath and huffing and puffing  your house down. From under the floorboards, from the darkness that gathers in  the corners of your room, and mind.    - by Jean Ramsay |