It was Edgar who coined the term ‘inner Geographies'... and it instantly struck a chord!
At the time it was relevant to the continuous thread of the album cover story through the booklet planned to accompanying it. Edgar had sent me a raw track during the album's creation titled ‘Belle of Trevelyan’, and also titled the album ‘Break the Dark’ … by return I sent a response in the form of an idea for a film to accompany the track in which a walk through an ancient forest climaxed with reaching the edge .. breaking the dark, and revealing the vision of a future! But really, ‘inner Geographies' meant so much more to me ‘…an emotional recognition of subliminal feelings created from up through time and along history now attached to a place either real or imagined…’
I never questioned Edgar how he came to use that expression because I didn't want it to mean anything other than what I felt about it.
Edgar’s visual ideas along with my own I submitted into Phil’s ongoing adventures into image editing … and wonderful things happened..
https://www.cherryred.co.uk/product/edgar-broughton-break-the-dark-cd/
There is so much more.. it's just a beginning!
In Phil’s work I saw our parallel story through a mutual submersion into the post-industrial landscape… and so our work merges here in a shamelessly visual feast that writes a story within a story and then some .. I hear sound..
'Meniscus' .. a merging of collaborative forces in the realms of post-industry :https://www.ianrpearsall.co.uk/product-page/meniscus-book ..