A Loaded Spring
offering release
About two years back while sitting on a 3-hour flight heading to beloved wilderness for a few days, listening to Corvus Corone’s ‘Abandoned In Spring’ brought me unbidden tears, a grief unspoken I know not for what. What I write is personal; I don’t do it for a living. I may not express it well but my words carry something of me. Some of my posts do that more than the rest. This is one which does. Many are discomfited when confronted with what is personal to someone else. There is neither good nor bad in being impersonal or in opening up. If you belong to that category which gets uncomfortable, then perhaps abandon any further foray into this post. But I would still strongly recommend listening to the music and for that you could jump to the last parts of the post where the links are.
What is your guiding, perhaps overriding, emotion; one that you feel the most closely bound to? Mine is grief and my tie with it has grown stronger as I have aged. It might well have been anger instead and it was in my youth till the extreme expression of it one day shocked me to a stop. Mercifully. Better tears than blood, better gut-wrenching music than muscle torn and laid bare. Having said that, my bond with grief doesn’t make me a gloomy person; quite to the contrary. It helps me value the beauty around us, often in little or common things that most would ignore. The knowledge that it will not be forever, neither that object of my wonder nor I, fuels both grief and a deep appreciation of existence. “The Sun Shall Die With None To Mourn” as Corvus Corone laments on this album may not have this dual thought in mind in its creation (or maybe it did; I wouldn’t know) but the sorrow at what may come to pass is expressed in it to stunning effect. Every single song in the set - three epics bookended by what to my mind are a prologue and an epilogue - lends credence to my belief that pain and sorrow produce the greatest art. The music is created with strong feeling but it is also carefully crafted. It is precisely composed music that is essentially instrumental where the human voice too comes in as an instrument at the right time to add texture and gravitas and to release the deliberately built-up tension. Even without explicit words to cloud your mind, you feel the depth of emotion.
In my head, this album’s full title - and I mean no disrespect to the band - ought to be
‘Born In Winter, Abandoned In Spring’.
‘Abandoned In Spring’ is a deep, slow, long lament, a thing of excruciating beauty. It’s an album which is that increasingly rare thing, a deeply personal work of art that though created by someone else becomes fiercely your own in expression. Different from Hammock’s ‘Mysterium’ in sound but similar in effect. Not everyone will get that, of course. This is not music that you will likely feel for if sorrow hasn’t coloured your life. And I am genuinely happy for you if that is true. But for those that do, I hope you find catharsis, a relief and release in this.
The subsequently released ‘The Finality Of Winter’ the following year in 2024 followed recently in December 2025 by ‘Buried In The Autumn Shade’ as a thematic continuum are both beautiful albums. I wonder if there will be a summer for Corvus Corone. And if there is, will it scorch?
Please do listen to this outstanding piece of music! But be warned that it can affect you in ways that you may not want, as laments are wont to. You can stream or buy it (I hope the latter as well) on Bandcamp. If you like this, you might be interested in the other releases of Canadian independent label, Syrup Moose Records too.
You can stream the album here (there are other platforms too but these three pay artists better than most):
Qobuz: https://open.qobuz.com/album/pya1fg4y0ipwa
Tidal: https://tidal.com/browse/album/269859245
Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/in/album/abandoned-in-spring/1662999845
(and fuck Pottify)
Note: This is an edited/updated version of a piece which first appeared in my music blog dyingnote.com so don’t let your mind ping “plagiarism!!!” if you’ve already read that.



I am glad you wrote about grief in a way which does not sound dark, which is what most people would think. It’s also an emotion which comes to me very often and over the years I am figuring out ways to accept and honour it.
Exploring the music you have shared. Always a pleasure finding new artists and their music.
I'm glad you put these feelings into words. Grief is not often explored openly in today's Western culture.