The Burning Hell - Garbage Island

cover_BBI0453_Garbage Island _TheBurningHell_medium.jpeg
cover_BBI0453_Garbage Island _TheBurningHell_medium.jpeg

The Burning Hell - Garbage Island

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Vinyl (Eco-Vinyl -- Random splatter vinyl, gatefold sleeve and printed innersleeve) BBI0451
or CD (digipack w/ booklet) BBI045

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"Five years after 2017's similarly themed Revival Beach, The Burning Hell's apocalyptic vision has been distilled into a floating raft of cultural flotsam, a great Pacific garbage patch of seabirds, wistful nostalgia and romantic flight. Mathias Kom's busy songs, mostly co-written with Ariel Sharratt and jake Nicoll, remain super-literate and fantastically droll, over backings that range from bubbling synth pop and acoustic folk to rattly punk and even a spot of semi-calypso. Silver Jews and Jeffrey Lewis spring to mind on the terrific "Birdwatching"; "Bird Queen Of Garbage Island" sounds like a glorious revival of Tom Tom Club. “ - Rob Hughes / UNCUT

Mathias Kom about Garbage Island :

“During that first pandemic summer, I walked down to the shore every morning and watched the seabirds shriek and dive. Despite their constant scavenging and my own beachcombing, the ocean was always redecorating the rocks with more old lobster traps, buoys, plastic water bottles, bits of rope, and other ambiguous treasures, like a broken claw machine spitting out knick-knacks at a child who had already claimed her coveted stuffed dinosaur and didn’t want to play anymore. I was reminded of Garbage Island, imagining a volcanic mountain of trash rising from the ocean, perhaps playing host to colonies of screeching gulls or harbouring post-apocalyptic pirates. Also known as the Pacific Trash Vortex, Garbage Island is, in reality, an enormous mass of floating marine debris, mostly microplastics, trapped in an endless gyre by ocean currents. There are no pirates living there.

The image of Garbage Island wouldn’t leave me alone, and somewhere in the dark, soupy brain-place that songs come from, a world began to emerge. A world made from the flotsam of our lives, the ultimate repository for the human race’s epic collective moulting season. A world where birds reasserted their prehistoric dominance, a world where new forms of plant life sprung up, leaves veined with translucent plastic. There were humans in this world, too, but not many. Those that survived relied on endless improvisation, the ingenious repurposing of whatever physical scraps of the old world they uncovered in the elastic soil of their island refuge. Their main pastime: birdwatching.

Garbage Island is an album about what we lose when things fall apart, and what we can gain from collaborative regeneration. It takes place in this crumbling near-future world that bears a distinct resemblance to our own, beginning with the violence of collapse, loosely chronicling the escape of the album’s unnamed protagonists on a pedal-boat swan, as they trade doom for danger on their way to a future home built from the detritus of the past.

Along the way, the album narrates both the need for action and the joys of refusing the hustle, imagines a futuristic nostalgia for the days of post-apocalyptic touring life, celebrates escape and solitude, and concludes with the hesitant suggestion that the end of the world can’t last forever. The songs feature the omnivorous genre-bending and rapid- fire surrealist lyricism the band has been known for in the past, but while there is humour and playfulness in abundance, there are few jokes. It’s either the darkest record The Burning Hell has made, the most reassuring, or the most fun. It might be all three.

Making a record about a future world of disintegration and renewal while the real world seemed to be collapsing around us felt right. Ariel Sharratt and I were locked-down on our farm on PEI, forced to embrace the slowness, patiently collecting sounds and ideas, orienting ourselves toward process. With tours perpetually cancelled, rescheduled, and cancelled again, we reconnected with the primal urge to simply make music, rather than perform or manage it. Our collaborator Jake Nicoll was stuck in Ontario, where he had been visiting his dad’s farm when the pandemic was declared, but he was able to cobble together some forgotten recording gear in an abandoned sheep pen, and we started sending tracks back and forth.

This is the first record the band (Mathias Kom, Ariel Sharratt, and Jake Nicoll) has engineered, produced, and mixed entirely by ourselves, and time and distance allowed us to revel in the slow joy of collaboration and discovery, a joy that leached out onto the tapes and circuit boards. Our comrades in St. John’s (Darren Browne, Jud Haynes, Kelly McMichael, Krista Power, and Mara Pellerin) contributed musical brilliance, and cameos from Ariel’s brother Jesse and her dad Steve enrich the album. We painted over our usual canvas of bass, drums, and guitar with a homemade dulcimer and glass harmonica, ASMR-inspired breakdowns made from the sounds of actual garbage, watery synthesisers, harmoniums, woodwinds, and field recordings of oceans and bird sounds contributed by supporters all over the globe, which stitch the songs together as the album transitions from the end of the world to “The End of the End of the World.” As the first snowdrops emerged in the spring of 2021, what was becoming Garbage Island was mixed in a 1970s camper trailer Jake had spent the winter converting into a mobile, solar-powered recording studio.

- Mathias Kom


other releases by The Burning Hell:
Baby (Vinyl) 2008/2018
Public Library (Vinyl/CD) 2016
Don’t Believe The Hyperreal (Vinyl/CD) 2015
People (Vinyl/CD) 2013


01./A1. No Peace (04:38)
02./A2. Nigel the Gannet (03:41)
03./A3. Birdwatching (02:05)
04./A4. Dirty Microphones (03:54)
05./A5. The Last Normal Day (02:48)
06./A6. Empty World (02:33)
07./A7. Minor Characters (02:39)

08./B1. All I Need (04:10)
09./B2. Swan Boat (03:07)
10./B3. Bird Queen of Garbage Island (05:04)
11./B4. Speechlessness (04:22)
12./B5. The End of the End of the World (04:25)

All songs written by Mathias Kom except where noted by Mathias Kom with Ariel Sharratt, Jake Nicoll, Darren Browne, and Jud Haynes.

Mathias Kom: lyrics, guitars, double bass, ukulele, tin whistle, tin can, percussion, synthesizer, vocals
Jake Nicoll: drums, percussion, wine glasses, harmonium, hammered dulcimer, piano, Wurlitzer, flute, bass, steel drum, typewriter, scotch tape, bells, vocals
Ariel Sharratt: drums, tenor sax, bass clarinet, synthesizers, drum programming, packing tape, vocals

Darren Browne: bass on tracks 1, 3, 4, 5, 10, 11; bouzouki on 9
Jud Haynes: bass on track 6
Mara Pellerin: vocals, French horn, trumpet
Steve Sharratt: vocals, lap steel
Krista Power: vocals
Kelly McMichael: vocals
Jenina MacGillivray: vocals
Simon Read: vocals
Charlie Glasspool vocals
Jesse Sharratt: whistling

Recorded in St. John’s, Newfoundland at Studio J, in Baden, Ontario at the Weber Farm Cabin and the Scamper, and in Fairfield, PEI at the Fairfield Social Club.
Produced by Jake Nicoll with Ariel Sharratt & Mathias Kom.
Mixed by Jake Nicoll in The Scamper.
Mastered by Norman Nitzsche at Calyx in Berlin.
Artwork and layout by Emmie Tsumura.

©+(p) 2022 BB*ISLAND, under exclusive license from The Burning Hell/Mathias Kom

Release: July 8th.2022

LP BBI 0451 / CD BBI 0452 digital BBI 0453