Tresor (Treasure) is Gwenno Saunders’ third full length solo
album and the second almost entirely in Cornish (Kernewek). Written in
St. Ives, Cornwall, just prior to the Covid lockdowns of 2020 and
completed at home in Cardiff during the pandemic along with her
co-producer and musical collaborator, Rhys Edwards, Tresor
reveals an introspective focus on home and self, a prescient work
echoing the isolation and retreat that has been a central, global shared
experience over the past two years.
Tresor diverges from the stark themes of technological alienation in Y Dydd Olaf (The Final Day) and the meditations on the idea of the homeland on the slyly infectious Le Kov (The Place of Memory). Tresor
evokes the waters that shape the Cornish experience, whilst being
musically far reaching with influences spanning from Ryuichi Sakamoto to
Eden Ahbez and William Basinski. As psychedelically tinged as her
previous work, Tresor embeds found sounds ranging from Venice to
Vienna, layering cultural and historical atmospheres, decoupling the use
of Cornish from any geographic determinism, allowing for an expression
of imaginative spaces that are truly free.
Although
Tresor is a project birthed from introspection and
intimacy, the implications of the messages are much broader. Ultimately
Gwenno is asking what are other ways of understanding and being in
relation to one's self and to one another? What are our roles in both
shaping and being shaped by the cultures we move in, in a world that is
ever changing, and where we all have a place?
Tresor does not
provide easy answers, for Gwenno shows us that we exist in paradox, our
threads of place and story entwined like knotwork, our many selves
shining as beautiful entanglements.