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Patience (After Sebald) (soundtrack)

The soundtrack for Patience (After Sebald) (2012), a film by Grant Gee, was composed and produced by English musician James Leyland Kirby under his ambient music project the Caretaker. The official soundtrack album was issued on 23 January 2012. Unlike other albums of the Caretaker that used old recordings of playful and bright ballroom music, Kirby's score for the film uses a 1927 record of Franz Schubert's piano-and-voice-only composition Winterreise (1828) as its main audio source. It also differs from other works of the project where hissing sounds are used instead of crackles, the loops are shorter in lengths, and the non-musical aspects of each track (the hiss sounds) serve as the foreground of the mix. The soundtrack was favorably received by professional music journalists.

Patience (After Sebald)
Soundtrack album by
Released23 January 2012
Genre
Length48:56
LabelHistory Always Favours The Winners
ProducerJames Kirby
The Caretaker chronology
An Empty Bliss Beyond This World
(2011)
Patience (After Sebald)
(2012)
Extra Patience (After Sebald)
(2012)
Extra Patience (After Sebald)
Soundtrack album by
Released15 February 2012
Genre
Length24:11
LabelHistory Always Favours the Winners
ProducerJames Kirby
The Caretaker chronology
Patience (After Sebald)
(2012)
Extra Patience (After Sebald)
(2012)
Everywhere at the End of Time
(2016–2019)

History

 
Patience (After Sebald) filmmaker Grant Gee asked James Kirby to make music for the film in 2009 and provided him a 1927 record of Winterreise (1828) by Franz Schubert for producing the soundtrack.

Grant Gee asked James Kirby to soundtrack his film Patience (After Sebald) in 2009.[1] Gee explained in an interview that when he figured out what film stock he would be using to record footage, he "knew [he] wanted to use James’ music" for the presence of "scratches and degradation and repetition" from old records.[2] Kirby created the soundtrack before he started work on An Empty Bliss Beyond This World (2011).[1] The official album for the soundtrack of Patience (After Sebald) was first issued on vinyl on 23 January 2012[1] and then in digital stores on 14 February 2012.[3]

On the official album release for Patience (After Sebald)'s soundtrack, there are more pianos heard than there are voices.[4] “No one knows what shadowy memories haunt them to this day” is the first track on the album where vocals become a dominant sound.[5] On 15 February 2012, the album Extra Patience (After Sebald) was released for free; it is a set of alternate versions of tracks from the soundtrack's main album release as well as music that is not included on the album release but is heard in the actual film.[6] It is where more of the focus is on the vocal aspects of the 78-rpm recording and was compared by James Knapman of Igloo magazine to Akira Rabelais' album Spellewauerynsherde (2004).[5]

Composition and sound

 
The main audio source used for the soundtrack of Patience (After Sebald) is a 1927 recording of Winterreise (1828) by composer Franz Schubert.

The soundtrack is a set of classical ambient piano-based music[7] categorized by Jordan Cronk of Coke Machine Glow as "one of the warmest, most tangible examples of modern drone music."[8] Unlike past works of the Caretaker where the audio snippets used were from bright, playful ballroom records,[5] the main audio source of the soundtrack is a degraded 1927 78-rpm recording[1][2] of a rendition of Winterreise (1828), a piece by Austrian composer Franz Schubert.[9] The record was bought by Gee and given to Kirby for making the film's music.[10]

Labeled by critic Andrew Ryce as "one of Kirby's most consistent and stylistically severe" works, the soundtrack only consists of pianos and vocals.[11] As the official press release for the film describes, the soundtrack uses parts of the 78-rpm recording and turns them into a "dust-caked haze of plangent keys, strangely resolved loops and de-pitched vocals which recede from view as eerily as they appear."[9] The samples are repeated,[4] stretched,[5][4] and detuned[5] to the point where, in the words of AllMusic journalist Heather Phares, "they're nothing but ghostly shadows of themselves" and "literal rings of melancholia."[4] The snippets are altered in ways that results in pianos sounding like organs or synthesizers and, in the words of Knapman, voice parts that turn into "almost operatic arias."[5]

Knapman noted that the loops on the soundtrack are shorter in length than what would usually be heard on other releases of the Caretaker.[5] "Increasingly absorbed in his own world” uses a repeated sample that is the longest in length out of snippets from all the tracks.[5] Jonny Mugwump, a critic for Fact magazine, wrote that the music doesn't have "narrative development" and instead uses "world-weary atmospherics and heavy repetition and loops," a structure identical to the Caretaker's album Persistent Repetition of Phrases (2008).[12] The score also differs from previous Caretaker works in that hissing sounds are used instead of vinyl crackles[13] and the non-musical elements of the music serve as the main focus (the hiss sounds).[12] As Rory Gibb of The Quietus analyzed, the pianos are "half-vanished" by the sounds of static noises and dark mist,[1] while Ben Beaumont-Thomas of The Guardian wrote that the pianos "lollop along, drenched in static, while detuned voices burble from the murk."[10]

Each piece of Patience (After Sebald)'s score has audio samples and static sounds with different timbres and moods as well as varied amounts of processing, and the soundtrack balances between both calm pieces such as "Increasingly Absorbed in His Own World" and sinister cuts such as "No One Knows What Shadowy Memories Haunt Them to This Day" in a chiaroscuro-like technique.[4] The most processing takes place on the second half of the original album release, where, in the words of Mark Richardson of Pitchfork, "transformation becomes the prevailing theme."[14] Throughout the soundtrack, the tone of the hiss textures range from calm to harsh to the point where it "separat[es] the listener from the melody" on "Approaching the Outer Limits of Our Solar System," Phares analyzed.[4] Certain samples are used in more than one track but significantly change in terms of how they are processed or change in speed.[5] For instance, “I have become almost invisible, to some extent like a dead man" consists of a piano sample with only very little static sounds in the background. The same snippet is used in “In the deep and dark hours of the night" but with the sample being slowed down and the static being much more present in the mix.[5]

The soundtrack also varies in the way samples are edited. On "As If One Were Sinking into Sand," the piano loop cuts out and starts over when it perform a melody that starts to "trail up hesitantly," which "expresses Sisyphean frustration" in the words of Phares.[4] She wrote that the track "When the Dog Days Were Drawing to an End" involves a loop where a piano "anticipates a murky vocal," but the loop repeats before the vocal line can finished, thus "leaving listeners craving a resolution that never comes."[4] On "The Homesickness That Was Corroding Her Soul," there is brief silence before the melody beings in each repetition of the loop, which, as Phares described, "seems to punctuate each loop with a pensive sigh."[4] The pitch of the sample also changes randomly, thus giving the track a feel of unease.[14] “No one knows what shadowy memories haunt them to this day” and the album closer "Now the Night is Over and the Dawn Is About to Break" are tracks that stretch out single syllables from male vocal snippets and turns them into what Richardson described as "tense, uneasy drones."[14]

Concepts

Richardson analyzed Schubert's works as representing "frozen world[s]" and wrote that "Kirby responds in kind, crafting [a film soundtrack] that hints at the season's chill with characteristic complexity and ambiguity."[14] In the music for Patience (After Sebald), there is more tension in what Will Ryan of Beats per Minute described as the "space between the origins of Kirby’s source material and the place – nearly three-quarters of a century later – we’re now hearing it."[13] The record used for making the score is in the public domain, which Mugwump suggested was a commentary of the problems of media ownership during a period of illegal downloading.[12] Kirby himself described the soundtrack as "a lot more of a winter album, a lot darker,"[1] while Gee explained that the music executes a "gritty, dusty, destroyed universe," which represents "Sebald's images of dust falling, particles and granularity."[10] Cronk theorized that the music regards Kirby's fear of how civilization will work in the future, as it is "grounded in a more contemporary milieu than [other works of the project] even as it continually portends the demise of an unidentified civilization."[8] Richardson wrote that the soundtrack's voice parts "reinforce the feeling of collapsing into something, the howls, that could stand in for pain or ecstasy, suggest that something will never be the same."[14]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic81/100[15]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [4]
Beats per Minute72%[13]
Cokemachineglow80%[8]
Fact4/5[12]
Mojo     [15]
Pitchfork8.0/10[14]
Resident Advisor4/5[11]
Tiny Mix Tapes     [16]
Uncut     [15]

The score for Patience (After Sebald) was awarded by magazine Chart Attack as one of the top ten "Great Soundtracks by Independent Artists," where the magazine labeled it as "probably the closest you’ll ever get to hearing what dementia sounds like without actually losing your mind."[17] Self-titled magazine called the music "a magical instance of mood manipulation," which was impressive given the type of sounds Kirby worked with that would've otherwise resulted in a "monotonous listen."[18] Describing the music as "conceptually and emotionally satisfying," Phares opined that the score "succeeds as beautifully evocative music to accompany the documentary, as another distinctive entry in Kirby's Caretaker discography and as an inspired blending of different works that makes its own statement."[4]

Cronk highlighted how the music "breathe[d]" the signature style of the Caretaker in a different manner, writing that "the drones he constructs to buttress each piece accentuat[es] the simultaneously lulling and foreboding samples without suffocating the natural ambiance either ingredient naturally imparts."[8] Similarly, Knapman praised Kirby's work for Patience (After Sebald) as another example of retaining the Caretaker's style but having different methods doing so.[5] He opined that the short lengths of most of the soundtrack's sample loops led it to be sometimes "actively grating" without watching the film, but the music "peak[ed] more than it dip[ped]" due to the variety of ways that the snippets are manipulated.[5] He also wrote that Extra Patience (After Sebald) was better than the official album release of the soundtrack due to its shorter track lengths.[5] Ryan opined that while most of the soundtrack was "truly great," it was also a "little slight" in a few parts where it "sidle[d] around like lost Alzheimer’s patients [...] without really capturing the inherent tragedy there" due to the loops feeling "plodding," "stilted," and not "interesting."[13]

Track listing

Patience (After Sebald)[3]
No.TitleLength
1."Everything Is on the Point of Decline"2:33
2."As If One Were Sinking Into Sand"2:30
3."Approaching the Outer Limits of Our Solar System"5:40
4."When the Dog Days Were Drawing to an End"4:50
5."A Last Glimpse of the Land Being Lost Forever"2:55
6."The Homesickness That Was Corroding Her Soul"3:36
7."I Have Become Almost Invisible, to Some Extent Like a Dead Man"4:00
8."In the Deep and Dark Hours of the Night"4:38
9."No One Knows What Shadowy Memories Haunt Them to This Day"4:04
10."Increasingly Absorbed in His Own World"4:24
11."Isolated Lights on the Abyss of Ignorance"4:32
12."Now the Night Is Over and the Dawn Is About to Break"5:14
Total length:48:56
Extra Patience (After Sebald)[19]
No.TitleLength
1."Everything Is on the Point of Decline (Again)"1:13
2."So Run Down"2:12
3."Isolated Lights on the Abyss of Ignorance (Again)"2:02
4."Of Grace and Providence"2:26
5."A Golden Pheasant on a Black Ground"2:16
6."The Quilter Standard"1:24
7."After the Earth Has Ground Itself Down"4:38
8."But the Stars Had Come Out"3:00
9."Sebald"5:00
Total length:24:11

Personnel

Derived from the liner notes of Patience (After Sebald).[20]

Release history

Region Date Format(s) Label
Worldwide 23 January 2012 Vinyl[1] History Always Favours The Winners
14 February 2012 Digital download[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Gibb, Rory (4 January 2012). "The Caretaker Releases New Album". The Quietus. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  2. ^ a b Smith, Damon (9 May 2012). "Grant Gee, Patience (After Sebald)". Filmmaker. Independent Filmmaker Project. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  3. ^ a b c . The Caretaker Official Bandcamp. Archived from the original on 20 February 2012. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Phares, Heather. "Patience (After Sebald) – The Caretaker". AllMusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Knapman, James (31 March 2012). "The Caretaker :: Patience (After Sebald) (History Always Favours The Winners)". Igloo. Retrieved 2 August 2017.
  6. ^ "DOWNLOAD: Free Caretaker Album". The Quietus. 15 February 2012. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  7. ^ McQuain, Christopher (6 October 2012). "Patience (After Sebald)". DVD Talk. Internet Brands. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  8. ^ a b c d Cronk, Jordan (3 March 2012). . Archived from the original on 11 March 2012. Coke Machine Glow. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  9. ^ a b "Patience (After Sebald)". The Cinema Guild press release. p. 8. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  10. ^ a b c Beaumont-Thomas, Ben (25 January 2012). "Saturn calling: the sounds of Leyland James Kirby". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  11. ^ a b Ryce, Andrew (30 January 2012). "The Caretaker – Patience (After Sebald)". Resident Advisor. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  12. ^ a b c d Mugwump, Jonny (1 March 2012). "The Caretaker: Patience (After Sebald)". Fact. The Vinyl Factory. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  13. ^ a b c d Ryan, Will (14 February 2012). "Album Review: The Caretaker – Patience (After Sebald)". Beats per Minute. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Richardson, Mark (27 January 2012). "The Caretaker: Patience (After Sebald)". Pitchfork. Conde Nast. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  15. ^ a b c "Critic Reviews for Patience (After Sebald)". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  16. ^ Scott Reid, Reed. "The Caretaker – Patience (After Sebald)". Tiny Mix Tapes. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  17. ^ "10 Great Soundtracks by Independent Artists". Chart Attack. Channel Zero. 14 June 2012. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  18. ^ "Long Player Of The Day: The Caretaker, ‘Patience (After Sebald)’". Self-titled. 29 February 2012. Retrieved 2 August 2017.
  19. ^ . The Caretaker Official Bandcamp. Archived from the original on 16 February 2012. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  20. ^ Patience (After Sebald) (2012). The Caretaker. History Always Favours The Winners. HAFTW013-LP.

patience, after, sebald, soundtrack, soundtrack, patience, after, sebald, 2012, film, grant, composed, produced, english, musician, james, leyland, kirby, under, ambient, music, project, caretaker, official, soundtrack, album, issued, january, 2012, unlike, ot. The soundtrack for Patience After Sebald 2012 a film by Grant Gee was composed and produced by English musician James Leyland Kirby under his ambient music project the Caretaker The official soundtrack album was issued on 23 January 2012 Unlike other albums of the Caretaker that used old recordings of playful and bright ballroom music Kirby s score for the film uses a 1927 record of Franz Schubert s piano and voice only composition Winterreise 1828 as its main audio source It also differs from other works of the project where hissing sounds are used instead of crackles the loops are shorter in lengths and the non musical aspects of each track the hiss sounds serve as the foreground of the mix The soundtrack was favorably received by professional music journalists Patience After Sebald Soundtrack album by the CaretakerReleased23 January 2012GenreAmbient drone classicalLength48 56LabelHistory Always Favours The WinnersProducerJames KirbyThe Caretaker chronologyAn Empty Bliss Beyond This World 2011 Patience After Sebald 2012 Extra Patience After Sebald 2012 Extra Patience After Sebald Soundtrack album by the CaretakerReleased15 February 2012GenreAmbient drone classicalLength24 11LabelHistory Always Favours the WinnersProducerJames KirbyThe Caretaker chronologyPatience After Sebald 2012 Extra Patience After Sebald 2012 Everywhere at the End of Time 2016 2019 Contents 1 History 2 Composition and sound 3 Concepts 4 Critical reception 5 Track listing 6 Personnel 7 Release history 8 ReferencesHistory Edit Patience After Sebald filmmaker Grant Gee asked James Kirby to make music for the film in 2009 and provided him a 1927 record of Winterreise 1828 by Franz Schubert for producing the soundtrack Grant Gee asked James Kirby to soundtrack his film Patience After Sebald in 2009 1 Gee explained in an interview that when he figured out what film stock he would be using to record footage he knew he wanted to use James music for the presence of scratches and degradation and repetition from old records 2 Kirby created the soundtrack before he started work on An Empty Bliss Beyond This World 2011 1 The official album for the soundtrack of Patience After Sebald was first issued on vinyl on 23 January 2012 1 and then in digital stores on 14 February 2012 3 On the official album release for Patience After Sebald s soundtrack there are more pianos heard than there are voices 4 No one knows what shadowy memories haunt them to this day is the first track on the album where vocals become a dominant sound 5 On 15 February 2012 the album Extra Patience After Sebald was released for free it is a set of alternate versions of tracks from the soundtrack s main album release as well as music that is not included on the album release but is heard in the actual film 6 It is where more of the focus is on the vocal aspects of the 78 rpm recording and was compared by James Knapman of Igloo magazine to Akira Rabelais album Spellewauerynsherde 2004 5 Composition and sound Edit The main audio source used for the soundtrack of Patience After Sebald is a 1927 recording of Winterreise 1828 by composer Franz Schubert The soundtrack is a set of classical ambient piano based music 7 categorized by Jordan Cronk of Coke Machine Glow as one of the warmest most tangible examples of modern drone music 8 Unlike past works of the Caretaker where the audio snippets used were from bright playful ballroom records 5 the main audio source of the soundtrack is a degraded 1927 78 rpm recording 1 2 of a rendition of Winterreise 1828 a piece by Austrian composer Franz Schubert 9 The record was bought by Gee and given to Kirby for making the film s music 10 Labeled by critic Andrew Ryce as one of Kirby s most consistent and stylistically severe works the soundtrack only consists of pianos and vocals 11 As the official press release for the film describes the soundtrack uses parts of the 78 rpm recording and turns them into a dust caked haze of plangent keys strangely resolved loops and de pitched vocals which recede from view as eerily as they appear 9 The samples are repeated 4 stretched 5 4 and detuned 5 to the point where in the words of AllMusic journalist Heather Phares they re nothing but ghostly shadows of themselves and literal rings of melancholia 4 The snippets are altered in ways that results in pianos sounding like organs or synthesizers and in the words of Knapman voice parts that turn into almost operatic arias 5 Knapman noted that the loops on the soundtrack are shorter in length than what would usually be heard on other releases of the Caretaker 5 Increasingly absorbed in his own world uses a repeated sample that is the longest in length out of snippets from all the tracks 5 Jonny Mugwump a critic for Fact magazine wrote that the music doesn t have narrative development and instead uses world weary atmospherics and heavy repetition and loops a structure identical to the Caretaker s album Persistent Repetition of Phrases 2008 12 The score also differs from previous Caretaker works in that hissing sounds are used instead of vinyl crackles 13 and the non musical elements of the music serve as the main focus the hiss sounds 12 As Rory Gibb of The Quietus analyzed the pianos are half vanished by the sounds of static noises and dark mist 1 while Ben Beaumont Thomas of The Guardian wrote that the pianos lollop along drenched in static while detuned voices burble from the murk 10 Each piece of Patience After Sebald s score has audio samples and static sounds with different timbres and moods as well as varied amounts of processing and the soundtrack balances between both calm pieces such as Increasingly Absorbed in His Own World and sinister cuts such as No One Knows What Shadowy Memories Haunt Them to This Day in a chiaroscuro like technique 4 The most processing takes place on the second half of the original album release where in the words of Mark Richardson of Pitchfork transformation becomes the prevailing theme 14 Throughout the soundtrack the tone of the hiss textures range from calm to harsh to the point where it separat es the listener from the melody on Approaching the Outer Limits of Our Solar System Phares analyzed 4 Certain samples are used in more than one track but significantly change in terms of how they are processed or change in speed 5 For instance I have become almost invisible to some extent like a dead man consists of a piano sample with only very little static sounds in the background The same snippet is used in In the deep and dark hours of the night but with the sample being slowed down and the static being much more present in the mix 5 The soundtrack also varies in the way samples are edited On As If One Were Sinking into Sand the piano loop cuts out and starts over when it perform a melody that starts to trail up hesitantly which expresses Sisyphean frustration in the words of Phares 4 She wrote that the track When the Dog Days Were Drawing to an End involves a loop where a piano anticipates a murky vocal but the loop repeats before the vocal line can finished thus leaving listeners craving a resolution that never comes 4 On The Homesickness That Was Corroding Her Soul there is brief silence before the melody beings in each repetition of the loop which as Phares described seems to punctuate each loop with a pensive sigh 4 The pitch of the sample also changes randomly thus giving the track a feel of unease 14 No one knows what shadowy memories haunt them to this day and the album closer Now the Night is Over and the Dawn Is About to Break are tracks that stretch out single syllables from male vocal snippets and turns them into what Richardson described as tense uneasy drones 14 Concepts EditRichardson analyzed Schubert s works as representing frozen world s and wrote that Kirby responds in kind crafting a film soundtrack that hints at the season s chill with characteristic complexity and ambiguity 14 In the music for Patience After Sebald there is more tension in what Will Ryan of Beats per Minute described as the space between the origins of Kirby s source material and the place nearly three quarters of a century later we re now hearing it 13 The record used for making the score is in the public domain which Mugwump suggested was a commentary of the problems of media ownership during a period of illegal downloading 12 Kirby himself described the soundtrack as a lot more of a winter album a lot darker 1 while Gee explained that the music executes a gritty dusty destroyed universe which represents Sebald s images of dust falling particles and granularity 10 Cronk theorized that the music regards Kirby s fear of how civilization will work in the future as it is grounded in a more contemporary milieu than other works of the project even as it continually portends the demise of an unidentified civilization 8 Richardson wrote that the soundtrack s voice parts reinforce the feeling of collapsing into something the howls that could stand in for pain or ecstasy suggest that something will never be the same 14 Critical reception EditProfessional ratingsAggregate scoresSourceRatingMetacritic81 100 15 Review scoresSourceRatingAllMusic 4 Beats per Minute72 13 Cokemachineglow80 8 Fact4 5 12 Mojo 15 Pitchfork8 0 10 14 Resident Advisor4 5 11 Tiny Mix Tapes 16 Uncut 15 The score for Patience After Sebald was awarded by magazine Chart Attack as one of the top ten Great Soundtracks by Independent Artists where the magazine labeled it as probably the closest you ll ever get to hearing what dementia sounds like without actually losing your mind 17 Self titled magazine called the music a magical instance of mood manipulation which was impressive given the type of sounds Kirby worked with that would ve otherwise resulted in a monotonous listen 18 Describing the music as conceptually and emotionally satisfying Phares opined that the score succeeds as beautifully evocative music to accompany the documentary as another distinctive entry in Kirby s Caretaker discography and as an inspired blending of different works that makes its own statement 4 Cronk highlighted how the music breathe d the signature style of the Caretaker in a different manner writing that the drones he constructs to buttress each piece accentuat es the simultaneously lulling and foreboding samples without suffocating the natural ambiance either ingredient naturally imparts 8 Similarly Knapman praised Kirby s work for Patience After Sebald as another example of retaining the Caretaker s style but having different methods doing so 5 He opined that the short lengths of most of the soundtrack s sample loops led it to be sometimes actively grating without watching the film but the music peak ed more than it dip ped due to the variety of ways that the snippets are manipulated 5 He also wrote that Extra Patience After Sebald was better than the official album release of the soundtrack due to its shorter track lengths 5 Ryan opined that while most of the soundtrack was truly great it was also a little slight in a few parts where it sidle d around like lost Alzheimer s patients without really capturing the inherent tragedy there due to the loops feeling plodding stilted and not interesting 13 Track listing EditPatience After Sebald 3 No TitleLength1 Everything Is on the Point of Decline 2 332 As If One Were Sinking Into Sand 2 303 Approaching the Outer Limits of Our Solar System 5 404 When the Dog Days Were Drawing to an End 4 505 A Last Glimpse of the Land Being Lost Forever 2 556 The Homesickness That Was Corroding Her Soul 3 367 I Have Become Almost Invisible to Some Extent Like a Dead Man 4 008 In the Deep and Dark Hours of the Night 4 389 No One Knows What Shadowy Memories Haunt Them to This Day 4 0410 Increasingly Absorbed in His Own World 4 2411 Isolated Lights on the Abyss of Ignorance 4 3212 Now the Night Is Over and the Dawn Is About to Break 5 14Total length 48 56 Extra Patience After Sebald 19 No TitleLength1 Everything Is on the Point of Decline Again 1 132 So Run Down 2 123 Isolated Lights on the Abyss of Ignorance Again 2 024 Of Grace and Providence 2 265 A Golden Pheasant on a Black Ground 2 166 The Quilter Standard 1 247 After the Earth Has Ground Itself Down 4 388 But the Stars Had Come Out 3 009 Sebald 5 00Total length 24 11Personnel EditDerived from the liner notes of Patience After Sebald 20 Recorded by James Kirby Artwork by Ivan Seal Mastered by Lupo Andreas Lubich Release history EditRegion Date Format s LabelWorldwide 23 January 2012 Vinyl 1 History Always Favours The Winners14 February 2012 Digital download 3 References Edit a b c d e f g Gibb Rory 4 January 2012 The Caretaker Releases New Album The Quietus Retrieved 1 August 2017 a b Smith Damon 9 May 2012 Grant Gee Patience After Sebald Filmmaker Independent Filmmaker Project Retrieved 1 August 2017 a b c Patience After Sebald Patience After Sebald The Caretaker Official Bandcamp Archived from the original on 20 February 2012 Retrieved 1 August 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k Phares Heather Patience After Sebald The Caretaker AllMusic Rovi Corporation Retrieved 1 August 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Knapman James 31 March 2012 The Caretaker Patience After Sebald History Always Favours The Winners Igloo Retrieved 2 August 2017 DOWNLOAD Free Caretaker Album The Quietus 15 February 2012 Retrieved 1 August 2017 McQuain Christopher 6 October 2012 Patience After Sebald DVD Talk Internet Brands Retrieved 1 August 2017 a b c d Cronk Jordan 3 March 2012 The Caretaker Patience After Sebald Archived from the original on 11 March 2012 Coke Machine Glow Retrieved 1 August 2017 a b Patience After Sebald The Cinema Guild press release p 8 Retrieved 1 August 2017 a b c Beaumont Thomas Ben 25 January 2012 Saturn calling the sounds of Leyland James Kirby The Guardian Guardian Media Group Retrieved 1 August 2017 a b Ryce Andrew 30 January 2012 The Caretaker Patience After Sebald Resident Advisor Retrieved 1 August 2017 a b c d Mugwump Jonny 1 March 2012 The Caretaker Patience After Sebald Fact The Vinyl Factory Retrieved 1 August 2017 a b c d Ryan Will 14 February 2012 Album Review The Caretaker Patience After Sebald Beats per Minute Retrieved 1 August 2017 a b c d e f Richardson Mark 27 January 2012 The Caretaker Patience After Sebald Pitchfork Conde Nast Retrieved 1 August 2017 a b c Critic Reviews for Patience After Sebald Metacritic CBS Interactive Retrieved 1 August 2017 Scott Reid Reed The Caretaker Patience After Sebald Tiny Mix Tapes Retrieved 1 August 2017 10 Great Soundtracks by Independent Artists Chart Attack Channel Zero 14 June 2012 Retrieved 1 August 2017 Long Player Of The Day The Caretaker Patience After Sebald Self titled 29 February 2012 Retrieved 2 August 2017 Extra Patience After Sebald The Caretaker Official Bandcamp Archived from the original on 16 February 2012 Retrieved 1 August 2017 Patience After Sebald 2012 The Caretaker History Always Favours The Winners HAFTW013 LP Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Patience After Sebald soundtrack amp oldid 1086993564, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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