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Pop / Rock 08 May, 2021

Olafur Arnalds Releases Short Film Capturing Nature's Microscopic Secret Life To The Song New Grass

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New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Ólafur Arnalds in collaboration with photographer Benjamin Hardman, has today released a beautiful short film to his song New Grass. Using a macro lens, the pair captured the 450 million-year-old secret life and natural phenomenon of Icelandic Moss, discovering that when exposed to water the moss responds with bursts of movement and appears to dance. The premise that dry moss "dances" when watered inspired Benjamin and Ólafur to build a narrative from the microscopic movements.

Jeffrey G Duckett of The Natural History Museum says: "Mosses can survive for many months, or years, in dry condition. It is unsurprising therefore that drying and wetting of mosses are accompanied by major changes in the morphology of the plants. These changes are manifest in the plants by extensive movements of the leaves and twisting of the stalks of the spore-bearing capsules."

Gordon Rothero, Research Associate at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh further explains this natural phenomenon: "Mosses photosynthesize but have been around for some 450 million years, over that time they have adapted to different habitats. When water is available to them it is absorbed, and the moss photosynthesizes again. Mosses like the Racomitrium lanuginosum in the video grow in a habitat that frequently dries out and respond very quickly to re-wetting so they can start photosynthesizing. This is what is happening in the video - a dry moss is dancing in response to re-wetting. Ecologically important and fascinating as well as beautiful."

Although the video for New Grass presents like a time-lapse, the footage is slowed down, capturing the soft intricate movements of the dancing moss. The one-centimetre patch of rock moss looks like a wide drone shot of an alien landscape - a world within our world. Benjamin was introduced to the phenomenon by a friend who came across some volcanic rocks covered in moss on a construction site and decided to save them taking them back to his cabin to care for them. One morning when watering the moss-covered rocks with a spray bottle, he noticed the moss reacting to the moisture uniquely. It began to dance with fast and sudden bursts of motion as the water absorbed into its leaves. After hearing this story, Benjamin decided to visit the lively rocks in person and observe the process up close with a macro lens.

"New Grass represents revival, growth and exploring new paths. So when Benjamin showed me some experiments he had been making, exploring how moss reacts to water, I instantly thought: We have to make a music video out of this. The challenge was to try and tell a compelling story within this minuscule environment - to change our perspective and see it as a huge world, full of life and possibilities." - Ólafur Arnalds

"The video is an ode to the incredible world of Moss. In Iceland we have a volcanic landscape covered in various types of moss, collectively surviving the brutal Arctic elements in a magnificent macro world that exists at a scale too small for us to notice. It was an unforgettable moment when it dawned on me that the entire landscape of moss around Iceland and the world could be dancing just like our moss rocks, endlessly reacting to the changes in weather and seasons. What a beautiful world live in, it deserves our love and care. " - Benjamin Hardman

As part of Universal Music Group/Decca Records, Mercury KX is focused on progressive instrumental music, crossing borders between electronic, modern, classical, alternative and ambient. It offers the most exciting post-classical artists the opportunity to develop without genre restrictions, creating entirely unique sound worlds.






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