ABHAILE
FINOLA MERIVALE & CATHERINE SIKORA
ABOUT THE ALBUM
Abhaile (the Irish for “home”) is a new album for tenor saxophone and electronics by composer Finola Merivale with improviser and saxophonist Catherine Sikora. It is being released on Fort Evil Fruit (Ireland) and Relative Pitch Records (USA). These compositions combine pre-recorded notated saxophones, electronics, field recordings and improvisation.
LINER NOTES BY CATHERINE SIKORA:
It is my great honor to have made Abhaile in close collaboration with composer Finola Merivale. Abhaile–pronounced əˈwalʲə (‘home’ or ‘homeward’ in Irish)–is an album for saxophone, electronics and improvisation. Finola composed saxophone lines and electronics, to which I then improvised more layers. This record wrestles with many different angles of this idea of home, and was made across five years, in which time Finola had to move an absurd number of times, over enormous distances: from France, to New York, back to Ireland, and then to Paris again; during this period, I also moved from Ireland to New York, and then to the high desert of New Mexico. Recordings on this album were made in all of these places, and our collaboration included many lengthy conversations about home and what it means.
In August of 2020, Paris was still feeling shut down; we were halfway through the first year of the Covid 19 pandemic. It was very hot, which seemed to underscore the stillness in the city, and that is where I met Finola, when we were both Artists-in-Residence at the Centre Cultural Irlandais. We started work on “des os” very soon after our arrival. I have a clear memory of that beginning; Finola was inspired by her walks through the Catacombs and the half-abandoned cemeteries of Paris. She showed me her initial sketches for the piece, and from there it seemed to unfurl at an incredible pace, going from 5 minutes long to 10, 12, then finally complete at 18 minutes. We recorded the piece within days of it being finished, and now when I listen to it I am transported back to that summer in Paris, to recording those long parts in the intense heat; we would do a take of one layer of the piece, and then head back across the courtyard where I would collapse on the floor of the air conditioned room and recover, before heading back to do it again. It was bliss! "Des os" feels very magical to me, with its shimmering veils of sound and constant subtle shifts in color and texture. There is a feeling that this whole delicate structure might explode, shattering into thousands of pieces at any second. Finola conjures nail biting intensity using long tones and eerie microtonal shifts; for me, performing this piece feels like being inside one of Rothko’s Color Field paintings, dark yet luminous, with sounds shimmering and pulsating against each other.
The Atlantic coast of West Cork is a place where Finola feels utterly alive, even—perhaps especially—on the wildest of days. I grew up on this coast, and the sounds are the most familiar thing in the world to me. “The Sea Has Hooves,” is a love letter to this place, to the power of the ocean and the sounds and feelings of being beside it. The title comes from an Alice Oswald poem, “Sea Sonnet.” This piece was very challenging for me to learn, with its intertwined, overlapping lines that are full of microtones and tiny, subtle changes from measure to measure. While I was recording it, I was deep in the detail and couldn’t conceive of the whole thing; however, I did have a powerful sense of the place and sounds. I could clearly hear the waves, and the sound of blow holes and rocks rumbling under the ocean on a wild day. When Finola sent me the final work with her electronics, I was stunned to also hear seabirds in the mix, which were not intended by the composer—they showed up by themselves! The effect of the knotty, twisting, swirling lines of microtones is truly remarkable; though the written work was very precisely notated, hearing back it felt to me as though the composer wrote the lines in charcoal pencil, and then smudged them with her thumb. I think it is beautiful.
“Closing Doors,” is a whiplash-inducing piece that reflects Finola’s lived experience of moving between Ireland and her longtime home in New York City. From the beginning of the pandemic—when she had to pack up her whole life in a matter of days and fly home, not knowing when she would be back—there were multiple forced moves, culminating in the ending of her visa and the removal of any choice of her own about whether to stay in New York or leave. This piece explicitly underscores the contrast between these places, and the subway announcement that we hear throughout evokes the slamming shut of this place as a home for the composer. Incorporating a collage of found sounds and field recordings from rural Co. Cork and New York City, Finola evokes the shock of forced movement from one place to another in a profound way.
Finola is a composer whose music may be best described as energy work. She crafts sound into pieces that are great swathes of energy, often very intense, and for the listener it can feel like getting swept up in an ocean wave. This has been a demanding and very rewarding project, and I am very proud of it.
– Catherine Sikora, El Rancho, New Mexico, February 2026
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
The music of Irish composer Finola Merivale (she/her) has been described by The Washington Post as a “wild ride,” by the New York Music Daily as “the showstopper of the night,” and by The Wire as “edgy and discomforting yet exciting and distinctive.” She is currently living in Paris, as a 2025–26 Fellow at Columbia University’s Institute for Ideas and Imagination. Themes that run across her music include socio-political issues, the climate crisis, nature and a sense of place – both real and imagined. Recent accolades include fellowships from MacDowell (2025) and the Civitella Ranieri Foundation (2024), a 2025 Music Bursary from the Arts Council of Ireland and an award from the New York Council on the Arts. In 2022, Finola’s debut portrait album, Tús – a collaboration with Desdemona – was released on New Focus Recordings. In 2021, Finola and her creative team were the winners of the 2021 Fedora Digital Prize for As an nGnách/Out of the Ordinary, a community opera in virtual reality which was commissioned by Irish National Opera. Current and upcoming projects include a double percussion concerto for Ian Antonio, Doug Perkins and the University of Michigan Concert Band, a score for a film by Irina Patkanian, and a collaboration with choreographer Jakari Sherman. Finola has a DMA in Composition from Columbia University.
Saxophonist, improviser and composer Catherine Sikora (she/her) was first electrified by the sound of air vibrating in a metal tube when, as a child, she heard the wind playing tones and overtones in a metal gate. She has devoted her life to researching the magic of that sound with her saxophones. Sikora’s body of recorded work is substantial and rapidly growing, with releases on Relative Pitch Records, Tripticks Tapes, Fort Evil Fruit and others. She has toured internationally, both solo and with Eric Mingus, Eris 136199, Brian Chase, Elliott Sharp and Ursel Schlicht. Sikora was twice awarded residencies at the Centre Cultural Irlandais in Paris, France (2016; 2020), and her duo with Brian Chase received a grant from the Irish Arts Council in support of a tour of Ireland. Her work is regularly featured on “Freeness” (BBC radio), Free Jazz Blog (Berlin), Avant Music News (Chicago) and A Jazz Noise (Barcelona). In addition to performing at innumerable tiny spaces that are the beating heart of improvised music, she has played several major festivals, including the Vision Festival (New York City) the Adelaide Festival of the Arts (Australia), Jazz em Agosto (Lisbon, PT) and Documenta 15 (Kassel, DE).
TRACKLIST
Des os – 18:42
The Sea Has Hooves – 7:74
Closing Doors – 10:40
CREDITS
Produced by Finola Merivale
All tracks composed by Finola Merivale (BMI)
©FinolaMerivale2026
Catherine Sikora—tenor saxophone
Finola Merivale—Field recordings, electronics
Des Os:
Recording and Mixing Engineer: Finola Merivale
Mastered by Eric Mingus
Recorded at the Centre Culturel Irlandais, Paris, August 2020
The Sea Has Hooves:
Field Recordist: Finola Merivale
Recording Engineer: Catherine Sikora
Mixing Engineer and Mastered by Eric Mingus
Saxophones recorded in The Studio of the Lost Realm, New Mexico, January 2026
Closing Doors
Recording Engineers: Finola Merivale & Catherine Sikora
Mixing Engineer: Finola Merivale
Mastered by Eric Mingus
Saxophones recorded in The Studio of the Lost Realm, New Mexico, December 2025
Cover art by Finola Merivale
Liner notes written by Catherine Sikora
RELEASE DETAILS
Digital and cassette release by Fort Evil Fruit (May 1, 2026) – FEF181
Digital and CD release by Relative Pitch (July 24, 2026) – RP1287