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LANKUM

Live In Dublin

limited black LP - £22.99 | Buy
Our 2023 Album of the Year winners are a fiercesome live force, make no mistake - and this live document of their hometown show captures them at the peak of the...
LANKUM

False Lankum

black 2lp + *signed* print - £25.99 | Buy
cd - £12.99 | Buy
Placing such a dark, brooding, and sonorous record at the top of our album of the year list might seem like a signifier of the state of the world right now.
LANKUM

The Livelong Day

heavyweight gatefold 2lp - £24.99 | Buy
cd - £9.99
Drone laden gothic folk with stunning storytelling – the Irish group modernise folk with a sound that stays honest to the darker corners of pastoral tradi...
LANKUM

Between The Earth And The Sky

2lp - £24.99
the Dublin four-piece combine distinctive four-part vocal harmonies with playful trad arrangements of uilleann pipes, concertina, accordion, fiddle and guitar &...
oXN

CYRM

limited 180g red lp in embossed sleeve - £24.99 | Buy
CD - £12.99 | Buy
A doom-laden, drone-focused offshoot of Lankum which finds Radie Peat matching her spine-tingling vocals to weighty folk dissonance.
...And Take The Black Worm With Me
  1. Glistening, She Emerges
  2. Bold and Undaunted Youth
  3. I’d Rather Be Tending My Sheep
  4. The Fancy Cannot Cheat So Well
  5. Only the Diceys

One Leg One Eye (Lankum's Ian Lynch)

...And Take The Black Worm With Me

Nyahh
  • LP

    Released: 28th Mar 2025

    £25.99
    Buy

One Leg One Eye sees Lankum's Ian Lynch taking a fresh approach to musical arrangement, culminating in a sound that is more rooted in the raw aesthetics of second wave black metal than contemporary folk.

The project was born across 2021, a period in which Lynch was able to enjoy the freedom of experimenting and exploring different paths of sound design without expectation or pressure. Seeking out interesting settings to record music and gather field recordings, there are several environments, external and interior, whose respective essence have seeped into the spirit of the music and come to represent Lynch’s artistic approach and development with this singular debut album, '…And Take The Black Worm With Me'.

Rediscovered spaces in Dublin and the familiar enclave of his bedroom are intrinsic to the distinct and sometimes harrowing atmosphere conjured throughout the album’s five enveloping compositions. One particular location, an abandoned factory where his father worked when Ian was a child, provided a space of great inspiration and intrigue during this time. Lynch frequently visited the large abandoned warehouse and sang with his shruti box, contented in his solitude. ‘I’d Rather Be Tending My Sheep’, grew into existence from those initial sessions, eventually finding a home as an emotive centrepiece to the album. The collection of songs (and their chronology) featured on …And Take The Black Worm With Me tell a story unique to Lynch’s experiences with anxiety and recognising his shadow self.

Whilst the album became an outlet of personal expression for Lynch, the overarching themes and subsequent journey to confront one’s internal dichotomy of light and dark before accepting this inherent duality is universally shared. The eerie and often unsettling world contained within the album’s texturally dense opener ‘Glistening, She Emerges’, driven by the captivating drone of distorted uilleann pipes, immediately immerses the listener in this transportive work. It descends with a great heaviness, yet woven throughout the arrangement is a fascinating and indescribable entity that draws you further into this otherworldly dimension. This mood continues as the tracklist progresses and transitions into Lynch’s haunting realisation of ‘Bold and Undaunted Youth’ which further demonstrates a cinematic influence to Lynch’s compositional style.

Sonically, Lynch effectively builds an impressively vast terrain with brilliantly murky lo-fi recording techniques and an unshakable curiosity to move beyond conventional structures and play with the timbre of the instruments available to him. From recording hurdy-gurdy or concertina to tape and experimenting with loops and effects pedals to stitching field recordings together, there’s an intimacy established between Lynch and his audience established through the simultaneously eerie and beautiful tones courting through …And Take The Black Worm With Me. This culminates in ‘Only the Diceys’, the extraordinary closing track in which we reach a place of resolution mapped into the album’s narrative structure.

'…And Take The Black Worm With Me' continues Ian Lynch’s groundbreaking work with Lankum; recontextualising traditional forms and generating new spheres of music in his wake, confirming his status as one of the most interesting and innovative artists working in Ireland today