H.P. Lovecraft's The Shadow over Innsmouth 4XLP set now on sale

Cadabra Records has just started pre-order sales of a beautiful 4XLP set of H.P. Lovecraft’s tremendous novella, The Shadow over Innsmouth.

Andrew Leman gives an unbelievable performance of the story with expert precision and astounding dynamic range which brings the story to life in ways that completely enhance the already masterful work so clearly on display throughout Lovecraft’s text.

It was an extraordinary experience to score the soundtrack and work off of Leman’s pitch-perfect rendition. I played a variety of analog and digital synthesizers along with providing electronic string arrangements, electric guitar and a variety of processed field recordings in an attempt to tap into the aquatic horror elements of Lovecraft’s story. Ben Harowitz contributed amazing and highly atmospheric saxophone arrangements. Once again, Barry Knob helmed the music production with stellar results and also provided essential live drums, electronic bass as well as additional sample arrangements.

Jeremy Hush’s art for this release is nothing short of completely mind-blowing, matching the tone and feel of The Shadow over Innsmouth in ways that elevate the overall experience to such a great extent. Josh Yelle’s haunting and stunning calligraphy work yet again brings the whole package to another level.

H.P. Lovecraft scholar and weird fiction expert, S.T. Joshi provides a detailed essay as part of the 4XLP set.

Cadabra label head, Jonathan Dennison has once again worked tirelessly to ensure that this production is an epic one on every level and for that I’m enormously thankful.

Here are more details from the Cadabra press release:

H. P. Lovecraft's The Shadow over Innsmouth 4x LP set - Read by Andrew Leman, score by Chris Bozzone

THIS IS A PRE-ORDER - SHIPS IN OCTOBER

Oversees customers can order from Psilowave.com
 

Details:

* Limited 4x LP pressing on 150 gram colored vinyl

* Full unabridged reading of H. P. Lovecraft's masterpiece

* One time pressing of this edition

* LPs housed in 4x panel "M Pack" gatefold jackets

* Essay by weird fiction scholar S. T. Joshi 

* Liner notes by composer Chris Bozzone

* 24" x 36" promotional poster

* Newly commissioned art by Jeremy Hush 

 

About:

In the pantheon of Howard Phillips Lovecraft's writings, perhaps no work so explicitly expands the Cthulhu mythos as that of his 1936 novella, The Shadow Over Innsmouth. Narrator Robert Olmstead's relation of an unplanned excursion to the forgotten and dying New England town of Innsmouth reveals much of the Deep Ones and Dagon, and a not a little of Cthulhu and shoggoths.

Thus is this full-length, unabridged reading by Andrew Leman so involving. Whereas Leman's reading of At the Mountains of Madness primarily saw him taking on the voice of Dr. William Dyer, here he voices multiple characters, in many different states of mind and sanity. Going from the patrician, high-minded tones of Olmsted to the whiskey-fueled, New England-accented remembrances of Zadok Allen shows the full flush of Leman's talents, and gives The Shadow Over Innsmouth the feeling of a full cast performance. The continuous decline from our narrator's initial thrill at exploring the highways and byways of rural New England, right through to his horrific final discovery and decision, never lets up, either, resulting in a listening experience which makes this major entry in Lovecraft's bibliography feel new and exciting once more.

Said excitement is also due to the work of composer Chris Bozzone's score for this adaptation. Much like the composer used the tones of wind blasting across the Antarctic tundra for his sound design of At the Mountains of Madness, so does he here lean into the damp decay and squelching wetness of the town of Innsmouth. The sound of waves washing upon the shore is never far away, even as insistent chimes, ringing bells, or frantic piano plays over them.

While the bulk of Bozzone's score is in washed sounds or in high-pitched but still-quiet tones, it is when narrator Olmsted is forced to make his escape that the music ratchets up in volume and speed. As he attempts fleeing the Gilman House and then, the town, the score becomes akin to something like a cross between an action film and horror, not unlike the more terrifying portions of It Follows. The bass tones are so faint as to be inaudible, yet so powerful that one feels them in their bones. The sounds have force to them, no matter what the volume.

The resulting combination of words and music means that The Shadow Over Innsmouth is a recording which excites and delights, while still evoking the pervasive sense of unease so integral to a Lovecraftian tale. As Olmsted asks in the waning moments of the novella, “Where does madness leave off and reality begin?”

Chris Bozzone