Jo Montgomerie’s "Ephemeral Rituals" doesn’t so much invite you in as quietly rearrange the room while you’re standing in it. When you finally notice, the walls have moved, the light has changed temperature, and something intimate is humming where silence used to be. This is not music that explains itself; it insinuates, repeats, insists - like habits we swear we don’t have, until we do.
Based in Manchester, Montgomerie has been patiently refining a language of abstraction where sound behaves less like narrative and more like weather, residue, muscle memory. Her materials are deliberately oblique: clacks, drones, frictions, tones that feel sourced from somewhere familiar but refuse to show their passport. The opening piece immediately sets the tone with a percussive insistence that feels mechanical yet oddly human, a rhythm that could be labor, ritual, or simply time tapping its fingers on the desk. From this apparent austerity, something unexpectedly luminous blooms - dark, yes, but glowing, like a bruise that remembers sunlight.
What distinguishes "Ephemeral Rituals" is Montgomerie’s refusal to treat texture as an end in itself. These pieces are dense, sometimes industrial in weight, but they breathe. There’s a devotional quality here, not in the religious sense, but in the way repetition becomes care, and care becomes meaning. Tracks unfold slowly, with a confidence that doesn’t rush the listener, trusting that attention will catch up eventually. And if it doesn’t - well, that’s on you.
There are moments where the album brushes against familiar coordinates of experimental music history - post-industrial dub shadows, spectral drones, the cinematic patience of sound-as-environment - but nothing feels derivative. Instead, Montgomerie seems to treat those references like half-remembered dreams: useful, evocative, and slightly unreliable. Her sound design often feels photographic, which makes sense given her parallel visual practice. You can almost hear layers being superimposed, images bleeding into each other, grain becoming emotion.
The emotional core of the record lies in its focus on small, human compulsions: breathing, running, waiting, leaving. These aren’t grand gestures; they’re the quiet rituals that structure ordinary life, magnified until they become strange again. By the time the closing tracks roll around, the music feels less like something you’re listening to and more like something you’re inside - an atmosphere where stillness isn’t empty, just attentive.
"Ephemeral Rituals" is not a record that begs for interpretation, nor does it reward casual consumption. It’s stern but generous, austere but strangely tender. Think of it as a set of private ceremonies conducted in public sound, where noise becomes memory and repetition turns into care. No veil is lifted, no secret revealed - but somehow, you leave feeling seen.