The Portcullis draws on dungeon-synth textures, medieval ambience, and the imaginative pull of folklore. Taking the listener on a focused journey through shifting eras, symbols, and atmospheres. It plays like a lost fantasy soundtrack, inviting the listener into an adventure that feels both ancient and newly invented.? Released on Fire Records, 'The Portcullis' sees composer Graham Reynolds on an ancestral journey back to Launceston Castle. "For The Portcullis, I took a deep dive into the history of my family's patrilineal side. Starting with my grandfather, an ironworker who built the Hartford Cathedral, to my great great great Grandmother, who was a galley cook on a Welsh sailing ship, to the enlightenment era celebrity portrait painter, Joshua Reynolds, and finally to twelfth century know Richard Reynell (before the Reynolds spelling was standardized). Reynell was the Sheriff of Devon and the custodian of Lauceston Castle. While King Richard I was away on the crusades, Reynell made his name defending the castle from the usurper Prince John. I started making sketches of the scenes and stories I imagined. The Portcullis follows Reynell from castle to castle, sequentially as they were built after the Norman invasion. On Reynell's chest and shield is the symbol and crest of the Reynolds family: The Portcullis."
- 1. Pevensey
- 2. Hastinges
- 3. Warwic
- 4. Douera
- 5. Lincolia
- 6. Exonia
- 7. Grantebrycge
- 8. Eboracum
- 9. Dunelmum
- 10. Oxeneford
- 11. Wintonia
- 12. White Tower
- 13. Lauceston
- 14. Portcullis