This is not your average Warp release, so don't expect complex futuristic electronic textures or stuff like that, and that's mainly because it is a soundtrack to the new film from independent director Lynne Ramsay (Cannes' aficionados might remember Prix du Jury winners "Small Deaths" and "Gasman" or internationally acclaimed "Ratcatcher"). It's a little awkward to dive into a movie soundtrack when you haven't seen the movie, especially when, like in this very case, the music is complementary to the visuals. Every song is an integral part of the film that enhances the sensory experience of the scene you are currently looking at. The movie (from an adaption of an Alan Warner novel) tells the story of Morvern Callar (interpreted by Samantha Morton), a woman who looks for life and excitement in the club scene but then drifts away from that in search for more and in doing so travels from Scotland to Spain. Trips and traps are accompanied by music from mainly the seventies and the nineties (with a couple of pieces from the decade in between). Experimental, introspective, surreal, flowery and dark at the same times, the fourteen compositions give you an idea of the variety of emotions the film carries with it... As I said earlier, expect less electronics and more experimental wave approach, with a line up that includes Can, Aphex Twin, Boards of Canada, Stereolab, The Velvet Underground, Broadcast, Gamelan Drumming, Holger Czukay, Lee 'Scratch' Perry, Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood and Ween.
The musical voyage is appealing and what I read about it sounds interesting, so be on the lookout for this film (let's hope that the IFC Independent Movie Channel will soon show this fine European production on the other side of the ocean). The movie was released two days ago, on the 1st of November, and Warp's soundtrack CD will be released tomorrow, November, the 4th. For more info about the movie go to www.allianceatlantisfilms.com