Penelope Trappes - A Requiem + Live in Salford (25th April 2025, Trinity Church)
Every truth entails descents and ascents, and when the subject is the need for a dialogue with an otherworldly presence (specifically everything that revolves around the dead), a visual and sensorial scenario emerges that paralyses, seduces, induces feelings and reasoning to make new discoveries, in a journey in which density is measured by songs like blankets, veils, ascending exploratory eddies, in which the result is a reasoned and useful shock.
With her fifth album, Penelope traces yet another educational path of those who in their search compose a new piece of their soul, this time also helping themselves to the cello, the sacred imprint of new spiritual marriages that allow her path to be lucid. A mass that bypasses dogmas, that paralyses walls, that makes fear and fears welcoming, with sounds and clusters of notes that precede and follow the enchantment of a voice on patrol, capable of neuroses, impulses, frustrations and icy tears, in a solstice in which the movement of its inner sun goes out of orbit to meet the moon, the earth, life and even death, in a resounding celebration of mysteries strung together, tepid, vibrant, necessary and complete.
The peculiarities of her artistic axioms are maintained, her integrity, her beautiful obstinacy for the contemplation of vibrant emotion that has always distinguished her. Music as expectation, as an obligatory and reflective muteness towards another dimension, the dreaded one, of death, but experienced by her with elegance and the incredible feat in managing to transform it into an unexpected enchantment.
A journey that, starting from the woods of Scotland, lands in the mystical channels, the sensorial ones, in the songs of witches and wandering souls in which the seal of slowness allows expansion and understanding, passing through an ancient folk, here camouflaged, almost segregated by electronic forms that however intend to ensure that the breaths of that musical genre are free to leave the historical traces of a mode that has always made contact with human nature a priority. Penelope enhances the play of light, fragments cognitive forms and makes us perform a series of remarkable acrobatics in order to be the wings of her writing, of her inner courtyard, to be the burning light of a timid but capable candle.
The rituals shown thus become necessities, the tail end of impetuses and impulses that flow into the sacredness of perhaps unknown messages and forms with the task of shaking. Life is thus shown as a painful perimeter in which the deepest conquest is its experimentation, making the memory not a photo album but a series of encounters with characters who dispense wisdom and mysteries (druids above all), to drag everything into the vortex of rapid flights, although the music is slow and always full of ash and smoke. Her tears at the loss of the past are resoundingly genuine, translated and transported to the pyramid zone of connections with an afterlife that fortifies her soul and distances her from perdition. Her visions multiply, the grafts of ancient sacredness seem to be uncontainable fragrances, in which grief is neither the beginning nor the end of it all, but rather a travelling companion, a friend, a propensity (conscious or otherwise) with which she relates splendidly.
Not songs but candelabra, cognitive pills that come from her native places, a mnemonic exercise that directs her in the choice of contact with the truth, in the obedient form of parental respect, in a journey that crosses flashes and descends into comprehension, with mournings that become expressive, liturgical chords, contaminating and precious, for an album that proves to be a diary in which to learn to write a summary and a propensity, a foretaste of the Penelope that will be, through this artistic sharing, which embraces us and delivers the awareness of a maturity that has transformed blackness and tears into a necessary and creative space.
Her eye (phoenix-like Arabian phoenix and migrating angel) transfers into the grooves a continuous testimony of conscious, slowed down and therefore exalted and exhilarating jets, in which the individual notes are diadems free to rise and stand out, creating the possibility of successions that bewitch and attract like the infinity of death…
A work in which jazz, experimentation, neofolk, the nails of Diamanda Galas and the nervous waves of Zola Jesus are only the outline of a polar circle that freezes the fury of existence, transforming it into a fatuous fire. The Australian artist creates miracles, torments, crumbles, continuous processions, with an artistic production that makes the whole thing flawless, in which the half-light, the intensity of the darkness, the voices of spirits are all messengers of future contacts. They bypass time, they attack with grace, to be the Sistine Chapel of our time, in which new gods and new human forms, emerging from the study of the dead, dispense new figures and new identities.
The dramatic nature of the tale and the images constitutes the anticipation of our conscience, a legacy that, starting from music, swallows the impervious paths of our fears, to celebrate them, console them but above all tame them. The condensation of elements shatters security, with a rational implant that sows humidity and dryness in the breaths: a long anaesthetising jet to sugarcoat bitter pills, but in the end, after repeated listening, one feels in an ancient time, like living entities, victors over death because they have become immortal spirits guided by a necessary madness...
Salford, concert
In the cosy, dark church, the artist appears with a headdress that acts as an emissary, as a storyteller from ancient times, delighting the audience who, silent and pleasantly shocked, watch a performance in which her latest album A Requiem is performed, to bring emotions together within long reflections. And it is magic, nightmare, hypnosis, with her breath into the microphone that becomes a mantra, a chill that chills the walls, making the superfluous something to be abandoned for good. A lucid performance that leaves you bruised, your eyes like meteors on a journey with no set goals but in which Penelope shows us density. New grafts, compared to the original songs, allow for further insights and the manifest awareness that with this latest work she has written her masterpiece, a summary and expansion of her cognitive gravity. Her voice, never overly effected (she doesn't need it, she is already perfect, without any doubt), and her hands are sacred, hypnotic and seductive dances, with which she manages to manifest herself as a conceptual transfer that makes watching and listening to the concert the idyllic cognitive terminal of this new educational miracle of hers…
Alex Dematteis
Musicshockworld
Salford
27th April 2025
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