Wednesday Knudsen - Atrium

After two decades in the experimental music scenes of New York and Western Massachusetts, Wednesday Knudsen might be known equally as a sought-after improv collaborator and the vocalist and guitarist for the beloved long-running psych band Pigeons or, more recently, as a member of the New England folk rock ensemble Stella Kola, or the psych kraut super group Weeping Bong Band. Though her forthcoming release, Atrium, is Knudsen’s fifth solo album, it is her first double LP, marking her rich recording history with a stunning masterwork. Channeling the “atmosphere of presence” alongside the legions of Éliane Radigue, Hiroshi Yoshimura, and Joanna Brouk, on Atrium, Knudsen plays it all—alto saxophone, flute, guitar, synth, piano, autoharp, bass guitar, and vocals. Atrium’s tracks are sculptural rather than ambient, with a release into the gorgeous hold of gravity that insists we don’t escape or drift away. This is music for remembering time.

While conceived and recorded independently and at different moments over a two-year span, each piece on Atrium was shaped as an occasion, a space, a timbral architecture exposing and inviting presence. The double LP is a soundscape or tone-portrait of the place they were made—the densely wooded hills of New York’s Taconic Mountains. Each piece is an effort toward a minimalism meeting the pace of nature, without the need for geographic recognition. These hills don’t impose on the listener, reverberating instead like an atrium to wherever and however you are.

Atrium opens with “Fair Aegis, a tone-scape that evokes the mystery of the green trees cathedral of the Taconic Mountains as it simultaneously offers a context and threshold to cross into the remarkable richness of the double album. The side C opener, “Place of Dream, is the sound-portrait of a wonderful demi-daydream, an extremely brief, pleasant vision Knudsen experienced that would repeat itself, as if a spinning moment or a flickering, the spiral motion of certain plants as they grow, moving toward the places of their thriving. Other anchors include “Dear Life, Green Flame,” the tremulous shape of life striving in first gear, the primal pulse seeking its cadence and the yes of breath. The track was recorded live, in one take, unplanned and improvised, unlike most tracks on the album which Knudsen intentionally shaped.

“Paillettes” is the shimmer of leaves in breezes, a drift of rippling rings on a small pond, the glint and glimmering of earthlight, a lonesome splendor, very quiet, mostly unknown and unremarkable except through the aperture of a very fine moment on a very fine day. Inside the piano featured on “Many a Happy Hour,” Knudsen discovered a yellowed card, likely from the mid-century, featuring a springtime robin and a cherry blossom flower, that read: “My Dear One: May you have many a happy hour with your piano. My love to you, Dorothy.” Knudsen describes the found note as “the past touching the present and spinning it forward, ever so sweetly.”

As equally as Atrium is an experience of presence, it is music that reinforces the power of art as resistance. The songs distill our attention in a language that Knudsen calls “the opening of the heart,” reminding us that subsistence and community results from our own actions and engagement with our exterior. Atrium is a refuge, vital in our current moment and imbued with resonant power for our future.

Atrium will be released jointly by SPINSTER and Feeding Tube Records October 24, 2025, on vinyl and digital platforms.

 

Wednesday’s solo work of recent years has not only solidified her as a composer but has dunked her songs in a tonality that she at one time veered away from: beauty, in its sincerity....Her solo records are more tonally akin to her most tranquil of collaborations or to the pure color of a Rothko painting.
— Michelle Dove, Maggot Brain

Atrium Tracklist:

A1 Fair Aegis (7:42)

A2 Conversation, Open Field (6:45)

A3 Paillettes (3:26)

B1 Many A Happy Hour (6:19)

B2 Conversation, Chaconne (5:27)

B3 Dance For Two Bodies (2:19)

B4 Skyline I (3:20)

 

C1 Place Of Dream (9:24)

C2 Dear Life, Green Flame (6:57)

 

D1 Room And Window (7:55)

D2 Skyline II (7:45)

Atrium was recorded at The Bower in Austerlitz, NY, 2022-2024. All songs composed by and instruments played by Wednesday Knudsen: alto saxophone, flute, piano, autoharp, guitar, bass guitar, voice. Album mastering by Chuck Johnson. Cover art and album design by Liz Durette.