The Baring of Shadows

The Baring of Shadows 2020

Kardashev blew me away with this 25-minute record, which I picked up on a whim back in May. For me, The Baring of Shadows is head and shoulders above anything else in their discography, although a record of this quality and scope was clearly signposted by their last outing, The Almanac.

Angry metal guy

 

It’s an impressive feat to create a truly unique sounding metal release with today’s ease of entry and the mass saturation of every subgenre. Many artists striving for this often sacrifice listen-ability and staying power. Yet here Kardashev have crafted a sonically fluid force of creativity and emotional outpouring built with genuine substance.

Trent Bos – Heavy Blog is Heavy

Within the tradition of art and poetry, The Baring of Shadows could be characterized as a lamentation—“a passionate expression of grief or sorrow”—and as with the greatest examples in this genre, whether it be the book of Lamentations in the Bible or the Lamentation of Christ, The Baring of Shadows has the power to reach beyond the specific, speaking to all humanity in the most profound of ways.

Robert Westerveld – Blinkers Removed

The story of The Baring of Shadows

The Baring of Shadows tells four separate stories of loss, pain, and sorrow from the perspective of a single person. This is a visceral telling of universal pain. The album’s direction was intentionally built by Mark’s desire to explore what it is to empathize with someone whom you cannot empathize with. To try and feel as they have felt and imagine their suffering.

This album’s lyrical content has not been experienced by Mark or Nico at this point making it a thought experiment in what literal pain and sorrow from the finding the body of a loved one who has committed suicide, the abandonment of an innocent child to the harsh winter elements, the passing of a parent, and the continuation of life as a widowed parent of two.

These realities have not been personally experienced by Kardashev, but can be invoked through lyrics, music, and art.

This album serves to prove that pain can be known without experience, that loss is familiar to everyone at some point, and sorrow does not choose sides.

This was Kardashev’s first vinyl release.

Inspiration

This album had many inspirations, but one was stronger than the rest. The desire to convince anyone that thinks they’re alone for any reason that we’re all in this together. If nothing else, we can all agree that pain is real and must be encountered and that fact should bind us.

Musically, this album was influenced by Lantlos, Bohren & der Club of Gore, Numenorean, Opeth, Isis, Primitive Man, Alcest and more.

There was a musical vision for this album that Kardashev refers to as the “glue” that binds each of the songs to one another and yet, not to any other album/release. That is a sense of atmosphere that evokes a “smokey” nature. Each song invokes this kind of feeling at some point to convey the aural sensation of being unsure or unclear.

This element of smoke became integral to the aesthetic of the album as the visuals were decided on.

Visually, this was the first album that Kardashev didn’t have Chris Gerlings work on as he had exited the band in October of 2019. Instead, Mark and Nico did much research into how they would convey the album’s intent and content. They began by looking for watercolor artists that focused on black and white watercolor. After emailing some prospective artists, they came across some fan art on Instagram by Karl E also known as @existential.yogurt. His style is hyper unique and very muted in color and design. The colors, compositions and style seemed to be kismet as they began to message back and forth with love for each others creative craft.

Like all previous releases, Kardashev included incense along with all physical purchases of the album in the hopes that listeners would burn it while listening to the album in the comfort of their home to build a stronger connection with the content and band.

Recording

The recording process for this album changed in a few ways with the addition of Sean Lang on drums and Alex Rieth on bass.

Firstly, after each song had a completed composition, Nico would email a copy of the song to Sean and he would write drums on an E-Kit at his home studio in Vancouver, BC, Canada and then email the new drum compositions back to Nico.

Nico then emailed the newest mix down to the band members and had them meet up with him to record their parts.

In true Kardashev fashion, Mark didn’t write anything until the composition, drums, and bass were finalized, allowing him to work with the album as a whole rather than the songs as pieces of a greater unknown album.

During this process, they upgraded their studio microphone from a Shure SM7b dynamic microphone to a Rode NT1 condenser microphone. This allowed Mark’s voice to be captured with more accuracy and nuance.

A new bass guitar and pickup configuration was used under the guidance of Alex as their new bass player.

Mixed and Mastered by:

Kardashev would go on to have this album mixed and mastered by their long time friend, Miah Lajeunesse in Knoxville, TN. Only, this time, Nico would fly out to work with Miah in person for the first time since they began their journey together in 2012. For 3 days and almost 15 hours per day, Miah and Nico sculpted, edited, blended and mixed the album from start to finish. Unlike ever before they could collaborate in real time over production elements, effects and everything from bass tone to reverb decay time. It was the perfect opportunity to see the album all the way through from start to finish for Kardashev. This new paradigm would change the working relationship and the final outcome of every album moving forward.

Gear Used:

The recording gear and software was relatively the same, with minor changes to bass equipment and drum process.

 

  • Hardware
    • Custom Gaming PC
    • Focusrite 18i20
    • Yamaha HS8
  • Vocals
    • Rode NT1
  • Guitars
    • Ibanez Prestige Uppercut RGD7UCS 7 String Guitar
    • TItan X pickups
    • Fractal Axe FX Ultra
    • Elixir Strings
  • Bass
    • Ibanez SR505 5 string bass
    • DI box
    • Elixir Strings
  • Drums
    • Toontrack EZ Drummer
  • Software
    • Propellerhead Reason DAW
    • Reaper DAW
    • Toontrack EZ Drummer

Artwork

Kardashev was more than elated to have Karl E. (yogurt) as the album artist as he had incredible skill and beautiful command over the imagery that he thought up. When Nico approached him on Instagram, there was already a bond over Kardashev’s music as Yogurt had used Kardashev lyrics in the description of one of his posts. This bond grew into a partnership for more than just the album artwork. Kardashev would go on to commission him for additional works after the release.

Over a series of weeks, Nico and Yogurt messaged back and forth over Instagram sending updates and discussing direction and execution. Fortunately, Yogurt knew what he was doing, so the work was cut out for the band and all that was left was to receive updates and compound excitement with each one.

Unlike previous releases, these artworks were uninterrupted by text and labels and instead served to stand on their own in the CD booklet. This would be the first series of artwork that Kardashev would offer as prints available to purchase independent from the music of the album.

The final artworks are incredibly rich in color and theme.

Lyrics

A Frame. A Light.

Breath held by the door on
Damp-dust window sills.
Be awake!
No. I Can’t.
I Can.
The silence tells the truth.
Why did I wait?
Be awake!
No I can’t.
I can.

Grey from cinder.
Kiln-words in the fire.
“Alone”.

Across from me
An empty frame,
but light against the wall.
Your light against the wall.
Come home to me!
Come home to me!
Your light against the wall.
Your light against the wall.

Oh so long ago.
Oh so long ago.

Snow-Sleep

“Wait by the river.”

“Something has changed.
Something is different,
I know.
Where have you gone?
It’s getting dark.
Was I left behind?
You’re far away!
Where have you gone?”

Fear.
Child hardened by snow.
Given up to the cold.

“Where have you gone?
It’s getting dark.”

“Follow along the riverbed.
You’ll find her waiting there.
Breathe into your hands.”

She yields to the ground.
White breath above
A quickly waking ghost.
She knows
this is the last moon.
This is the last time she’ll lie awake
Screaming out. Asking forgiveness.
“Mother! Please come back!”

“What did I do?”
“Why did she leave?”
“I didn’t mean to…”
“I’ll do better, I swear!”

“Its my fault!”
“She did this to herself!”

Was I left behind?
You’re far away.
This is my fault.
I will be fine.
Where have you gone?
You’re far away.

Torchpassing

You can sleep in peace.
Come to me first.
Come to me first.
You’re home.
Come to me first.
Come to me first.
I know you.
There’s hope
In the empty spaces.

Speak to me
In honest answers now.
See the light behind your eyes
And you will find
Every thought you’ve lost.
Echo-songs
From far away
In the woods.

Growing still.
Growing cold.
Your lifeless body…
I won’t forget.

Patience, I’ll wait for the another night,
Gracious, I’ll wait for another fight,

First sight of snow,
Sun on the carpet,
The smell of our home,
When I was so young.

I would sit in your forest forever.
Forever.
The chanting of your leaves with me for always.
For always.
I will follow your footsteps
I will walk behind.
I will follow your footsteps.
I will forget.

Heartache

I am lost
Without your eyes on my eyes,
And the children,
They are silent,
Unable to understand
You’re dead underground.

Sleep next to me
Like you did,
And like you’ll never do again.
No strength left.
Tell me,
How am I supposed to love them on my own?

This is permanent.
I am powerless.

Perfume bottles
And an unfinished painting.
Our house claims that you’re still here.

How could you have been
So careless?

There is no god
Who can bring you back.
The only truth
Is that our children haven’t slept for days
And we are without you.

Track Breakdowns

A Frame. A Light.

This song is about the finding of a loved ones body moments after they’ve killed them self. The warmth of the fire still present, and the warmth of their body gone. Arriving too late, but having seen the signs and doing nothing. The regret and pain of knowing that helping was just out of reach.

Snow-Sleep

This song takes on a perspective from what could be considered the victim of the pain and sorrow as the story is told from both a narrative and first person account. A child, younger than five, is with their family in the winter woods when they are abandoned by their family, intentionally. They’re left to die and in their final moments, they use what reason they’ve developed to sift through the confusion and fear of their abandonment. Cyclical feelings of guilt, confusion, consolation, worry, pain, attempt to reason and cope with what is happening.

Torchpassing

A parent lies dying in hospice at the end of their life as their child sits with them to give them assurance that their passing should not be wrought with fear and anxiety, but with calmness as they enter the next stage in their life. There is beauty in accepting that someone you love must leave you, and this song embodies that in the most intimate of ways. Many lovers and children can be had, but a mother or father cannot be replaced. This song explores that kind of sorrow with uplifting promises to remember them as they were although, we’ll all forget eventually.

Heartache

The heaviest of songs sonically is Heartache. The song bombards the listener from start to finish with heaviness. Lyrically illustrating Kardashev’s interpretation of what losing a lover mid-life must be like. How impossible the surmounting responsibilities must be to live on without that support, security and love. To raise children and try to explain to them how life goes on without knowing yourself. To console the inconsolable and reason with the unreasonable.

Credits

  • Music, Melody, Composition
    • Nico Mirolla
    • Mark Garrett
    • Alexander Adin Rieth
    • Sean Lang
  • Artwork
    • Karl E.
  • Recording
    • Nico Mirolla
  • Editing
    • Nico Mirolla
  • Mixing
    • Miah Lajeunesse
  • Mastering
    • Miah Lajeunesse
  • Distribution
    • Subliminal Groove Records LLC