Martha and the Muffins‘ Mark Gane’s ‘Garden Music’ Is a Meditative Journey Through Sound, Soil, and Sonic Memory

Mark Gane—co-founder of iconic Canadian band Martha and the Muffins and the mind behind international hit “Echo Beach”—has released his first solo album, Garden Music, a collection of experimental instrumental compositions inspired by plant names and imagined inner worlds. Released May 1, 2025, Garden Music is a sprawling, deeply intuitive project that took shape over decades and now arrives as an ambient, artful meditation on memory, nature, and sound.

The Toronto-based composer, visual artist, and sonic experimenter first began dreaming of Garden Music years ago, spurred by a suggestion from his partner and creative collaborator Martha Johnson. “She said I should do a solo project that combined my three great loves—music, painting, and gardening,” Gane explains. “Eventually, I started asking: If plants were people, what would their lives sound like?” That seed grew into a rich, textured album composed from over 50 years of collected studio, field, and found recordings.

Each of the 11 instrumental pieces is named after a common plant—Bee BalmFeverfewCreeping Charlie, and the haunting Love Lies Bleeding, which includes the lone sung lyric: “Honey Bee you’re gone for good, and so I sing this song…”. From miniature sonic sculptures to lush ambient collages, Gane’s compositions defy genre and reward close listening. Reviewers have called the album “a film that passes before the eyes of our ears” and “a whimsical wander through the landscape of the author’s imagination”.

Though highly conceptual, Garden Music isn’t cold or calculated. “My approach was almost entirely intuitive,” says Gane. “I wasn’t trying to force anything. I just let each piece evolve from sounds I’d archived—live recordings, field sounds, tape hiss, voice fragments. The presence of the human voice showed up unexpectedly and stayed.” That presence takes many forms: a chopped-up interview with Delia Derbyshire, a 1951 Valentine from Gane’s mother, a ghostly late-night phone call in Deadly Nightshade.

Originally set aside while Martha and the Muffins projects took precedence and both artists dealt with health challenges, Garden Music was resurrected in 2022 during COVID lockdowns. “Finishing it felt like gardening,” Gane says. “Meditative, grounded, outside of time.” Even after mixing wrapped, the album sat quietly for two years—delayed not by doubt, but by a reluctance to re-enter the promotional machine. “When faced with the choice of building a website or working in the garden, the garden always won,” he laughs.

Gane recommends listening in the dark, lying down, allowing the music to wash over like dusk wind through lavender. Mixed with Ray Dillard and mastered by Graemme Brown at Zen Mastering, Garden Music is a testament to Gane’s lifelong practice across disciplines. His history spans avant-garde performance, collaborations with sonic pioneers like Laurie Anderson and John Oswald, and design work ranging from album art to urban gardens.

Though best known for pop brilliance with Martha and the Muffins—including co-producing albums with Daniel Lanois and David Lord—Garden Music reveals a different Gane: a solitary gardener of sound, sowing strangeness and beauty in equal measure. “It was most interesting to have no idea what was creating the sounds I was hearing,” wrote Kevin Staples of Rough Trade. “So otherworldly… quite literally wonderful”.

Garden Music is available now on all major streaming platforms. For listeners of Brian Eno, Pauline Oliveros, or Boards of Canada—and for anyone who finds solace in the hum of life’s quiet corners—Mark Gane’s long-awaited solo debut offers a richly immersive world to disappear into.

https://markgane.bandcamp.com/album/garden-music

https://www.qobuz.com/us-en/album/garden-music-mark-gane/qfb9b9mkpl4sc