We’ve updated our Terms of Use to reflect our new entity name and address. You can review the changes here.
We’ve updated our Terms of Use. You can review the changes here.

Reveal

by David Garland

/
  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    Purchasable with gift card

      $8 USD

     

1.
Damn Dreams 02:52
Damn Dreams Go ahead and laugh about it, cry, cry, cry and laugh about it. Close all your eyes, eye all the doors, the doors that direct all your dreams, your dreams. Go ahead and cry about it, laugh, laugh, laugh, and cry about it now. Pull on your wings, wing it again, Icarus toast, burst the damn dam; damn dreams. On a Sunday morning breath in through mouth like you mean it; sincerely exhale. Go ahead and laugh about it, cry, cry, cry and laugh about it. When you’re all grown, groan all you want; want all you bring in the brain valise; dear dreams. On a Saturday night breath in, breath out, look around and say in the darkness let me have my dear damn dreams! la la la...
2.
Diorama 04:18
Diorama Up the granite stairway, through the ancient doorway. The pictures in the museum stare down. Frozen in a diorama prehistoric man builds a fire. Plaster flames in a cave of paper maché. Sort of life-like. Diorama—Frozen ice age— Diorama—text book in tableau. Locked in a darkened display case: fragments of a moon rock. Next to that, pieces of meteorite that once fell to Earth from some far planet that exploded back when the caveman first thought of painting his plaster fire. It was lifted hot, white hot, and brought here from its crater nest. Back in the old diorama, cavemen wait patiently. Diorama—trompe l’oeil background— hold still hist’ry—diorama
3.
My Contraption Here’s the plan for my contraption; let’s build it now. Clear a space on my face for construction; my head is the foundation. Just flip the switch, engage the gears. Pull this lever then I’ll start perceiving. Consciousness is my contraption; it works OK. If there’s a hitch or a glitch in its function, it’s hard to say. Plug me in. Set me up and turn me on. The collapse of my contraption will come some day. But for now I know how to spark connection and how to keep it going Flip the switch, engage the gears. Pull this lever and start receiving. It seems I’m trapped in my contraption, but that’s just my perception.
4.
Under the Blanket He wears his wristwatch, she wears her jacket, under the blanket. They’re never naked. They’ve almost forgotten how. She’d like to touch him. Yeah. All of a sudden, they’re hearing music! Hah! Hey! He’d like to touch her under the blanket. Yeah. His wristwatch has wound down. Her jacket is empty. And under the blanket it’s so warm.
5.
oh my god 02:43
oh my god Oh, my god, is that really you? Oh, my god, is this really me? I thought I knew you. I thought I knew myself. Oh, my god is that really you? ----- Oh
6.
My Tiny Life 04:27
My Tiny Life My tiny life. Circumscribed by a moment or two of the part of a moment when you and I start looking further than just right in front of right here, contained and confined by our fear of containment, confinement, and fear of just being just only just here for just such a tiny time in our tiny lives. Oh, my tiny life. A brief interlude of bad attitude; a short episode in a lachrymose mode; no sooner begun than pretty much done; my glimpse of the sun—my tiny life. Unprepared for the limits so quickly defined by the limits prepared by my mind, with each thing that I’m choosing, I’m losing the rest, forgoing the knowing of an always growing, refining, defining collection of things I’ve not done with just such a tiny time for my tiny life, my tiny life, my tiny life. With just such a tiny time for my tiny life— oh, my tiny life.
7.
I Don’t Want to Know As close as rain and rust Like dust on shelves We intersected, we connected in entropy’s final wind-down, passively, with a sigh. I think what I think I must, we place ourselves into the background, while in the foreground clutter, chores, and appointments cushion the question why. I love when the frame of my life collapses. My ghost loves to look down from way up above. No, no, yeah I don’t wanna know Yeah, no, yeah, no, I don’t wanna know Yeah, no, yeah, I don’t wanna know Yeah, no yeah, I don’t wanna know Yeah, no, yeah, no, I don’t wanna know. I turn my volume down, you frown for me. We’ve got a system with a ticking rhythm making the moments march by, passively, with a sigh. I’d love to be held like there’s a tomorrow. My ghost looks through my eyes from way far away. No, yeah, no, etc.
8.
On the Other Side of the Window The lifting crane, the crowded train, the slap of glue, the rendezvous. The pavement laid, the payment made, the traveled mile, the answered smile. Out there on the other side of the window. Out there on the other side of the window. the letter mailed, the job that failed, the great success, the warm caress. Out there on the other side of the window. Out there on the other side of the window. What was your intention? (repeated) The building lot, the cultish plot, the conference room, the bride and groom. Cross-eyed seer. Van Goghish listener. Insulated toucher. Mute-buttoned talker. (shoe shod shambler) What was your intention? What was your invention? What was your contention? What was your convention? What was your dimension? What was your—don’t mention it! The lifting crane, the crowded train, the slap of glue, the rendezvous. Out there on the other side of the window. Out there on the other side of the window.
9.
Drop By Drop 03:57
Drop By Drop Should you go? No, no, I don’t think so. Stay with me, cool and free, drowning in the sea. Please don’t roam. Please come into my home. Be my guest let me rest this box of books on your chest. More. Drop by drop, pound for pound, the accumulating increments are adding up and adding up and adding up. Hold my hand. Walk with me into quicksand. There’s time to have said I thee wed before it closes over our heads. More. Drop by drop, pound for pound, the accumulating increments are adding up and adding up and adding up.
10.
ESP 02:50
ESP If I had ESP your mind would be revealed to me. Each and every thought within would be as naked as your skin when it has been unclothed. If you had ESP my captive thoughts would be set free. My pregnant pause would then give birth, revealing all for what it’s worth, with depth or dearth exposed. Extra Sensory Perception— it’s a tinselly deception. We are, each of us, doomed to be discrete, locked inside our homes of meat. —please read my mind— If I had ESP, then I could shed uncertainty. But as it is, I have to guess, and your thoughts, I must confess, are more or less unknown. Extra Sensory Perception— it’s a tinselly deception. We are, each of us, doomed to be discrete, locked inside our homes of meat. —please read my mind—
11.
My Pony’s Falling Bright, my herd of buffalo. Dark, my quarrelsome me. Bright on an open field of starting over, saved from extinction only in a dream. I could build, but I’m not building. I’m not finding open fields. I should try, but I’m not trying. I’m in a chasm, not open fields. Bright, my dreams of mountain tops. Dark, my quarrelsome me. Bright at the top above the timberline, where a harsh wind has swept it clean. Clean into the gully, where I live in the shrubs. In the shrubs in the gully awaiting the chance to be hit from above, by the avalanche. Saved from extinction only in a dream. Hey, watch my pony. He’s falling down.
12.
I Am With You I wish I may, I wish I might know what I do and where it goes once it’s done. All consequences can’t be known, Some consequences take their time. They’re on their way. Here they come. I am with you. Take a piece of paper in your hand. Write a message of your secret thought. I am with you. Now try to tear the note in half, and once again tear it in half. One piece still.
13.
One by One 02:41
One by One lyrics and music by Connie Converse We go walking in the dark. We go walking out at night. And it’s not as others go, two-by-two, to and fro, but it’s one by one. One by one in the dark, we go walking out at night. As we wander through the grass we can hear each other pass, but we’re far apart. Far apart in the dark, we go walking out at night. With the grass so dark and tall we are lost past recall if the moon is down. And the moon is down. We are walking in the dark. If I had your hand in mine I could shine, I could shine, like the rising sun, like the sun.

about

Over the years I’ve organized many ensembles of unusual instruments to play my music, but recently I’ve been inspired by some of the wonderful guests on my radio show Spinning On Air to see what might happen if I perform my unconventional songs conventionally. On this recording I present my newly devised, innovative performance format: guy with guitar. All of these arrangements were developed in the last half of 2005, using a 12-string guitar I bought for $99. Half of these songs (1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 9) were composed in 2005, some (6, 8, 10) are from recent years, and others go way back (“I Am With You” is from about 1982). The new songs have already been recorded in different, orchestrated versions for my next studio album [Noise In You]. The final song is by a woman named Connie Converse who, for a while in the 1950s, wrote and performed her songs in New York City. Later, in the 1980s, she was editing a political journal, and at that time notified a few friends that she was changing her life, then disappeared. Except for an unreleased recording by Converse herself, as far as I know no one else has recorded her extraordinary “One By One.”
--David Garland, 2006

credits

released February 1, 2006

(limited edition CD)

David Garland: vocals and 12-string guitar

all songs © 2006 by David Garland, except “One By One,” written by Connie Converse in 1955. Recorded at home, NYC, November 14–22, 2005. Produced by David Garland. Engineering assistance: Kenji Garland. Cover portrait August 2001 by Kenji Garland.

license

all rights reserved

tags

about

David Garland New York, New York

Composer/singer/multi-instrumentalist David Garland has been steadily shaping songs in new ways since 1980.

"Like many great songwriters before him, Garland pushes the limits of acceptable harmony and dissonance, yet never at the expense of beauty. If it's not possible for popular music to reach the heights of the great classical masters, it seems no one has told David Garland."
--Sean Lennon
... more

contact / help

Contact David Garland

Streaming and
Download help

Redeem code

Report this album or account

If you like David Garland, you may also like: