THOR & FRIENDS
HEATHEN SPIRITUALS (GHOSTLY CLEAR VINYL) (JOYFUL NOISE)
Like a scene from a dream, Thor Harris stood upon a crowded stage, 13 players deep: tapping, plucking, bowing, blowing lyric-less love songs to a grand auditorium of 325 shining red seats - without a soul sitting in any of them.
This was the creation of Heathen Spirituals, the fifth recorded work by Harris' adventurous ambient ensemble Thor & Friends and the first that accurately resembles the skyward repetition of the Austin-based group's live performances.
It's a century-old concept: cutting a record in an empty music hall. Masterminded by intrepid producer and lifelong Harris collaborator Craig Ross (Patty Griffin, Spoon), Thor & Friends' roster of musically accomplished misfits spent two days wired up, playing free-flowing meditational pieces on unamplified orchestral instruments inside Jessen Auditorium, a stunning Art Deco relic from the early days of the University of Texas' Butler School of Music - the esteemed institution that Harris dropped out from decades ago.
A craftsman, artistically and otherwise, Thor Harris is master plumber, carpenter, and woodworker.
In musical contexts, his name is often followed by the five words: "known for his work with," having been a member of avant rock godheads SWANS and high-minded indie favorites Shearwater, while also factoring into important recordings by Bill Callahan, Amanda Palmer, Devendra Banhart, and Shahzad Ismaily.
In many circles, Harris is equally well-known for being an openhearted mental health advocate with a devilish sense of humor and a penchant for entertaining social commentary (Harris' "How to Punch a Nazi" instructional video got him famously banned from Twitter in 2017).
Heathen Spirituals, arriving May 16th, 2025, on Joyful Noise Recordings, contains three original pieces with a 35-minute runtime.
The rhythmic repetition of opening seance "Anne Sexton's Glasses" evokes a cognitive crescendo, while the spellbinding "Christmas Eve at the Wizard's House" evokes a sense of weightlessness, sucking the listener up into the firmament then floating them back down.
The crashing, choir-backed "Heathen Spiritual," meanwhile, stirs a gorgeous requiem for a dying planet.
In glorious fidelity, the sessions capture the instinctual purity of Thor & Friends' live performances, which thrive on skyward repetition.