By Vito Camarretta(@) - Apr 02 2026
There’s always a moment, when reading phrases like “recorded in a Benedictine Abbey” and “improvised without any material”, where you brace yourself for either transcendence or an hour of politely arranged fog. "Immutable Traveler" manages the irritating trick of being both elusive and oddly precise, like a memory you don’t trust but can’t quite dismiss.
Tangent Mek operate here as cartographers of absence. Their instrumentation - violin (Anouck Genthon), viola da gamba (Anna-Kaisa Meklin), and flutes/voice (Marina Tantanozi) - suggests something rooted in early music or folk traditions, but what emerges is closer to a slow dismantling of those expectations. The trio doesn’t quote the past; they let it echo faintly, as if heard through thick stone walls and unreliable recollection.
The Abbey of Sorèze is not just a setting here, it’s an accomplice. Two rooms - the “blue” and the “white” - act less like studios and more like resonant bodies, stretching tones into long, trembling threads. Sound doesn’t sit still; it seeps, lingers, mutates. You begin to suspect that what you’re hearing is less performance than negotiation: between air and wood, between intention and accident, between what is played and what the room decides to keep.
Improvisation is often sold as freedom, but "Immutable Traveler" treats it more like archaeology. These pieces feel excavated rather than invented. Fragments surface, are turned over, partially erased, then reassembled into something that resists narrative closure. The title track, drawing from Etel Adnan, carries this particularly well: a voice that is neither fully present nor entirely gone, suspended between declaration and disappearance. It doesn’t “sing” so much as haunt the idea of singing.
Elsewhere, tracks like “say it clear, say it loud” do the opposite of what they promise, dissolving clarity into grainy textures and hesitant gestures. “drizzle” and “in the air” feel like studies in near-absence, while “byzantine abolition” briefly thickens the atmosphere into something ritualistic, almost severe, before letting it dissipate again. Even the shortest piece, “virgule”, behaves like a comma in a language that refuses to form a sentence.
There’s a quiet stubbornness to this album. It refuses to perform for the listener, refuses to resolve its tensions, refuses even to fully declare what it is. And yet, it’s not hostile. If anything, it’s strangely generous in its restraint. It allows space - actual, acoustic, psychological space - for the listener to wander, to project, to get lost without the safety net of structure.
In a world where music is often engineered to grab, hook, and retain, "Immutable Traveler" does the opposite: it drifts, withdraws, and occasionally pretends you’re not even there. Which, irritatingly, makes you lean in closer.
What Tangent Mek ultimately propose is not a journey with a destination, but a condition of perpetual transit. Memory as landscape, sound as residue, identity as something that erodes and reforms in the act of being heard. An “immutable traveler”, it turns out, is not someone who stays the same, but someone who keeps moving through change without ever quite arriving.