★★★★

A few years ago I was living in Coventry, England. Though I had a room in a share house, I barely used it.

I preferred to live and sleep in the freezing cold shed out the back. I’d sit out there chain-smoking, trying and failing to decide what I was going to do with my life.

Then, one day, a fox appeared in the garden. He spent a few days testing me out, evaluating me. Eventually, following whatever strange whim it is that guides the business of foxes, he came into the shed.

During the day, he’d sleep in there. I would sit and watch him. He didn’t like me smoking – he would leave as soon as I sparked up a cigarette – so I stopped. He’d rouse around dusk, give me a quiet, gentle stare, and then saunter out into the yard. And every morning when I awoke he’d be back, curled up in the corner. Until one morning he wasn’t. And I never saw him again.

That’s what Illirion is. It’s a strange, tender, beautiful thing – unexplainable, the servant of no master. It is Lubomyr Melnyk’s finest album, but it doesn’t even feel like an album. It’s just this thing that enters your life, shares a little room with you, and then moves on, leaving the tiniest scraps of beauty behind.

Lubomyr Melnyk‘s Illirion is available now through Sony Classical.

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