
Sculptures, the third solo offering from Portland-based composer and multi-instrumentalist Derek Hunter Wilson, gathers, darkens, releases, and clears in intimate, elemental cycles. Framed as “an ode to the ancient and contested shorelines of the Pacific Northwest,” the album’s six pieces trace the quiet, uneven topography of grief after the passing of Wilson’s father. What first appears gentle soon reveals itself as something patient and transformative, a slow-burning catharsis shaped by recapitulation, erosion, and the fragile courage required to let go.
Built on looping foundations in collaboration with harpist Joshua Ward, the music resists linear time. It circles, returns, hesitates, then presses forward again, mirroring the way mourning rarely obeys a straight path. Piano and synthesizer drift together in mutual trust, one offering structure while the other dissolves it. The result is a softening of resistance, a quiet agreement with impermanence.
The patterns of “Fort Stevens” move with a tentative grace, unsure whether to hold fast to the present or recede into recollection. Synth tones float while the piano steps lightly beneath, each note placed with the care of someone afraid to disturb what remains. With “Battery 247,” the sound narrows its focus, carving out a space where healing can begin to take shape. Arpeggios flicker like distant lights, guiding rather than commanding. Mirabai Peart’s viola enters as a kind of interior voice, suggesting that sorrow, when held long enough, becomes a chamber rather than a wound. Within it, something tender begins to bloom. Hope arrives as a gradual reconfiguration, a blade that learns to soften into a petal. Peart’s presence deepens further in “Deception Pass,” where the music turns inward, almost translucent. Here, absence becomes palpable, filled with unsaid things refracted through stained glass, each color hinting at meanings that resist direct expression. There is a quiet tension in the way phrases unfold, as if the music were attempting to speak a language it has not yet fully learned.
“Salish Sea” expands outward, reaching into the unknown with a sense of fragile yearning. It evokes the act of listening for something just beyond perception. There is a childlike hope embedded in its repetitions, a belief that distance can be bridged if one just waits longs enough. In that bated suspension, the boundary between loss and continuation blurs. The question of whether anything persists after death is not answered, yet the act of asking becomes its own form of solace.
The descent into “Cape Disappointment” feels like a return to ground, though not in defeat. The music glows with a dim, steady light, reminiscent of a lighthouse seen through fog. Pianistic motifs rise and fall with a quiet insistence, illuminating the contours of the coast without betraying its mystery. By the time “Benson Beach” arrives, the album has shed much of its earlier tension. The waves that once pressed heavily now move in sync, their motion no longer threatening but restorative. Raymond Richards’ pedal steel glimmers across the surface like sunlight breaking through cloud cover, offering a sense of warmth that feels hard-won.
Throughout Sculptures, the cinematic quality of Wilson’s work invites listeners to populate its montage with their own memories. The album becomes a kind of shared terrain, where personal histories cross-pollinate. In this way, it transcends its origin, transforming individual grief into something collective, echoing beyond the boundaries of a single life. All of this suggests that mourning is not a detour from living but an integral part of it, a way of learning to see more clearly through the veil of impermanence. If anything endures, it may not be memory in its fixed form, but the capacity to feel deeply, to open oneself even in the face of absence. In that openness lies a quiet, unsettling truth. Perhaps what we call loss is not the disappearance of something, but a transformation of our relationship to it, an invitation to listen for what cannot be heard and to find meaning in the fleeting, luminous act of being present at all.
Sculptures is available from Bandcamp here.








