Ancestral Ground

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only 2 left

about the cd

An interrogation of identity pervades every corner of Ancestral Ground, Zeynep Ağcabay’s debut body of work under her birth name. As someone who has formed her practice creating soundscapes for high fashion labels and runway shows, this mini-album represents the artist finally being given full creative license. Although Zeynep’s Turkish ancestry is heard across all seven tracks, it is not simply a borrowing or a homage. Still very much connected both geographically and culturally with her ancestral ground, the Turkish ney flute present throughout these recordings evokes a gesture of respect to her father’s fostering of a musical upbringing and an inquisitive gaze into the timbrality of instruments operating within a wholly different embedded culture than those of the West.

A growing community of London-based artists with roots elsewhere are investigating what geographically and culturally mixed identities can mean when translated into sonic offerings. What perhaps sets Zeynep Ağcabay apart is the complex feelings of anguish toward a bureaucratic system that has been the hostile backdrop to her years living in London, unable to move freely around Europe and necessitating an implementation of composition-as-labour to survive an overwhelmingly unlivable city. This is the dissonant shadow-self sibling of mea0u, Zeynep’s deconstructed pop moniker, and from the Portishead trip-hop leanings channelled at the end of Umay Ana straight into the nine-minute closing track Ak Ana, these are perfect representations of this shadow-self succeeding in turning malevolence into a euphoric device.

  1. 1 - Ayzit 3:56
  2. 2 - Kayra 2:25
  3. 3 - Gok Tanri 2:30
  4. 4 - Ruya (Rouia) 1:26
  5. 5 - Lura (Luwr) 4:59
  6. 6 - Umay Ana 5:11
  7. 7 - Ak Ana 8:59

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Copy and paste this code to your site to embed.

Ancestral Ground

12,00

only 2 left

  1. 1 - Ayzit 3:56
  2. 2 - Kayra 2:25
  3. 3 - Gok Tanri 2:30
  4. 4 - Ruya (Rouia) 1:26
  5. 5 - Lura (Luwr) 4:59
  6. 6 - Umay Ana 5:11
  7. 7 - Ak Ana 8:59

Embed

Copy and paste this code to your site to embed.

about the cd

An interrogation of identity pervades every corner of Ancestral Ground, Zeynep Ağcabay’s debut body of work under her birth name. As someone who has formed her practice creating soundscapes for high fashion labels and runway shows, this mini-album represents the artist finally being given full creative license. Although Zeynep’s Turkish ancestry is heard across all seven tracks, it is not simply a borrowing or a homage. Still very much connected both geographically and culturally with her ancestral ground, the Turkish ney flute present throughout these recordings evokes a gesture of respect to her father’s fostering of a musical upbringing and an inquisitive gaze into the timbrality of instruments operating within a wholly different embedded culture than those of the West.

A growing community of London-based artists with roots elsewhere are investigating what geographically and culturally mixed identities can mean when translated into sonic offerings. What perhaps sets Zeynep Ağcabay apart is the complex feelings of anguish toward a bureaucratic system that has been the hostile backdrop to her years living in London, unable to move freely around Europe and necessitating an implementation of composition-as-labour to survive an overwhelmingly unlivable city. This is the dissonant shadow-self sibling of mea0u, Zeynep’s deconstructed pop moniker, and from the Portishead trip-hop leanings channelled at the end of Umay Ana straight into the nine-minute closing track Ak Ana, these are perfect representations of this shadow-self succeeding in turning malevolence into a euphoric device.

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