
The Quiet Drift: CD
Director David Lynch once said âI long for a kind of quiet where I can just drift and dream. I always say getting inspiration is like fishing. If youâre quiet and sitting there and you have the right bait, youâre going to catch a fish eventually. Ideas are sort of like that. You never know when theyâre going to hit you.â Inspired by this quote in both name and spirit, Hollie Kenniffâs The Quiet Drift is an ambient gallery of cloudlike synths, seraphic strings, echoing guitars, and other celestial textures guided to cohesion by Hollieâs own wordless singing. Though the album certainly creates (and originates from) the kind of space where Lynchâs proverbial âfishâ can be caught, The Quiet Drift is a fitting title for Hollieâs own history, both recent and distant. During the course of the albumâs creation, Hollie and her family moved cross-country from an island in Washington state, to an island in Maine before ultimately relocating to Canada. âAs a child I visited Ontario year-round,â she explains in her own words. She continues âMore than any other landscape, I think the lake, rivers, and woods there left the most enduring impression on me. The landscape and pace of life of these places will always stay with me.â But the reverberant spaces Hollie crafts need no physical headquarters. Instead of conjuring views of nature at the ground level, her sound more readily evokes a top-down perspective, with the distinct features of the land shrinking underfoot as the listener becomes untethered from geography altogether. The Quiet Drift belongs more to the liminal spaces between life and afterlife, memory and fantasy, landscape and dreamscape, than any mappable locale. Describing her formative years, Hollie says âAs a dual US/Canadian citizen who spent my childhood in a rural town one that I havenât returned to in many years I have a sense of not entirely belonging anywhere. When I was a teenager my close friends were male musicians, so I was also an outsider to the degree that they were wild and anarchic in a way that I wasnât. I was a quiet book reader and avid music listener who enjoyed being around a creative group. I was also a radio DJ for alternative and punk music throughout high school.â In this light, The Quiet Drift attests that creativity is placeless, and calls into question the stereotype of artists as scene-centric city dwellers. Having come of age in the absence of metropolitan sensory overload, Hollie learned to spot the muse in nature, and within herself, instead of the echo chamber of a frenzied peer group. On The Quiet Drift Hollie Kenniff wholly escapes from such pop-culture feedback loops into transcendent, shimmering realms, and she brings the listener along with her. In this age in which we have all been called to reevaluate our relationship to indoor spaces, and seek refuge in the great outdoors, The Quiet Drift provides an apt soundtrack for such rebalancing.
Director David Lynch once said âI long for a kind of quiet where I can just drift and dream. I always say getting inspiration is like fishing. If youâre quiet and sitting there and you have the right bait, youâre going to catch a fish eventually. Ideas are sort of like that. You never know when theyâre going to hit you.â Inspired by this quote in both name and spirit, Hollie Kenniffâs The Quiet Drift is an ambient gallery of cloudlike synths, seraphic strings, echoing guitars, and other celestial textures guided to cohesion by Hollieâs own wordless singing. Though the album certainly creates (and originates from) the kind of space where Lynchâs proverbial âfishâ can be caught, The Quiet Drift is a fitting title for Hollieâs own history, both recent and distant. During the course of the albumâs creation, Hollie and her family moved cross-country from an island in Washington state, to an island in Maine before ultimately relocating to Canada. âAs a child I visited Ontario year-round,â she explains in her own words. She continues âMore than any other landscape, I think the lake, rivers, and woods there left the most enduring impression on me. The landscape and pace of life of these places will always stay with me.â But the reverberant spaces Hollie crafts need no physical headquarters. Instead of conjuring views of nature at the ground level, her sound more readily evokes a top-down perspective, with the distinct features of the land shrinking underfoot as the listener becomes untethered from geography altogether. The Quiet Drift belongs more to the liminal spaces between life and afterlife, memory and fantasy, landscape and dreamscape, than any mappable locale. Describing her formative years, Hollie says âAs a dual US/Canadian citizen who spent my childhood in a rural town one that I havenât returned to in many years I have a sense of not entirely belonging anywhere. When I was a teenager my close friends were male musicians, so I was also an outsider to the degree that they were wild and anarchic in a way that I wasnât. I was a quiet book reader and avid music listener who enjoyed being around a creative group. I was also a radio DJ for alternative and punk music throughout high school.â In this light, The Quiet Drift attests that creativity is placeless, and calls into question the stereotype of artists as scene-centric city dwellers. Having come of age in the absence of metropolitan sensory overload, Hollie learned to spot the muse in nature, and within herself, instead of the echo chamber of a frenzied peer group. On The Quiet Drift Hollie Kenniff wholly escapes from such pop-culture feedback loops into transcendent, shimmering realms, and she brings the listener along with her. In this age in which we have all been called to reevaluate our relationship to indoor spaces, and seek refuge in the great outdoors, The Quiet Drift provides an apt soundtrack for such rebalancing.
Original: $23.11
-65%$23.11
$8.09Description
Director David Lynch once said âI long for a kind of quiet where I can just drift and dream. I always say getting inspiration is like fishing. If youâre quiet and sitting there and you have the right bait, youâre going to catch a fish eventually. Ideas are sort of like that. You never know when theyâre going to hit you.â Inspired by this quote in both name and spirit, Hollie Kenniffâs The Quiet Drift is an ambient gallery of cloudlike synths, seraphic strings, echoing guitars, and other celestial textures guided to cohesion by Hollieâs own wordless singing. Though the album certainly creates (and originates from) the kind of space where Lynchâs proverbial âfishâ can be caught, The Quiet Drift is a fitting title for Hollieâs own history, both recent and distant. During the course of the albumâs creation, Hollie and her family moved cross-country from an island in Washington state, to an island in Maine before ultimately relocating to Canada. âAs a child I visited Ontario year-round,â she explains in her own words. She continues âMore than any other landscape, I think the lake, rivers, and woods there left the most enduring impression on me. The landscape and pace of life of these places will always stay with me.â But the reverberant spaces Hollie crafts need no physical headquarters. Instead of conjuring views of nature at the ground level, her sound more readily evokes a top-down perspective, with the distinct features of the land shrinking underfoot as the listener becomes untethered from geography altogether. The Quiet Drift belongs more to the liminal spaces between life and afterlife, memory and fantasy, landscape and dreamscape, than any mappable locale. Describing her formative years, Hollie says âAs a dual US/Canadian citizen who spent my childhood in a rural town one that I havenât returned to in many years I have a sense of not entirely belonging anywhere. When I was a teenager my close friends were male musicians, so I was also an outsider to the degree that they were wild and anarchic in a way that I wasnât. I was a quiet book reader and avid music listener who enjoyed being around a creative group. I was also a radio DJ for alternative and punk music throughout high school.â In this light, The Quiet Drift attests that creativity is placeless, and calls into question the stereotype of artists as scene-centric city dwellers. Having come of age in the absence of metropolitan sensory overload, Hollie learned to spot the muse in nature, and within herself, instead of the echo chamber of a frenzied peer group. On The Quiet Drift Hollie Kenniff wholly escapes from such pop-culture feedback loops into transcendent, shimmering realms, and she brings the listener along with her. In this age in which we have all been called to reevaluate our relationship to indoor spaces, and seek refuge in the great outdoors, The Quiet Drift provides an apt soundtrack for such rebalancing.













