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Ian Williams' new album 'Les Blessures Invisibles' (Invisible Wounds) out now on all platforms



Ian Williams' soundtrack to the new documentary film by French director Eric Michel, 'Les Blessures Invisibles' (Invisible Wounds), is now available on all platforms. The film investigates the consequences for the Gabonese town of Mounana of almost half a century of uranium mining. The town had been the biggest supplier of uranium to the French nuclear industry, but in 1999 its mine was deemed no longer viable and the mining companies withdrew. This left the infrastructure to fall into disrepair and the townspeople to face an uncertain future, with the after-effects of years of close contact with radioactive material not yet known.

The album features music used in the film as well as some written for footage that did not make the final edit. A lush orchestral/electronic hybrid, it opens with the pastoral, cinematic Popol Vuh-like evocative opener ‘As Old As The Mountains’ (‘C’est Pas D’aujourd’hui Ces Montagnes’), which Williams explains “comes from a quote in the film which references the ancient landscape, with its mountains and forests which have survived the intervention of the mining companies and reverted to wilderness since their departure.” ‘As Old As The Mountains’ is being promoted with a video primarily comprised of 8mm cine films taken by the white settlers at the beginning of the mining process, charting the transition from idyllic innocence, through industrial exploitation, to the abandonment by and departure of the French mining corporations.

The soundtrack also contains percussive workouts such as the Leftfield-ish tribal techno stomper ‘URA235’, several ambient yet highly musical interludes, before ending with the gorgeously sweeping, string-laden Preisner-esque epic, ‘Mounana'.

‘Les Blessures Invisibles' was released in France shortly before the coronavirus lockdown, although it will be made available on DVD and VOD later in 2020.


Cover design: Lionel Avignon at Hartland Villa

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