PLAYLIST with COMMENTS/REVIEWS

Started by GEWALTMONOPOL, December 15, 2009, 09:30:59 PM

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deathcamp

GENOCIDE ORGAN In Konflikt CD (Tesco) Didn't remember how great is this album, very rhythmic with deep atmosphere. Fantastic stereo work. Last track bother me a bit because it sounds very similar to Haus Arafna... Confused is the good word, because this is far from bad.

JAAKKO VANHALA Here Be Lions CD (Freak Animal) Loud, loud, loud noise...

BIZARRE UPROAR Viha & Kiima CD (FA/F&V) Intense & massive assault by BU, one of their best effort for sure. Impressive work on sound textures. Filth yes, violence yes, but add TERROR to the whole concept! It just miss a booklet, some lyrics...

deathcamp

KEVLAR « Totalism » Tape (Unrest) Another excellent act on Unrest! Structured PE at it's best.

UNCODIFIED/WERTHAM « Vindicta III » CD (OEC/ERE) Glad to finally have the final chapter of this monumental trilogy. A must buy : nice digipak, huge booklet with a lot to read. Conceptual dry, dirty and tragic power electronics about honor, murder, jail...

V/A LISTEN AND DIE! 6 LP Box (Urashima) Originally released on tape by Marco Corbelli on Slaughter Productions, this is a massive compilation of American and Italian hordes. Slogun, Atrax Morgue, Discordance, Deathpile, Iugula-Thor, Murder Corporation, Sshe Retina Stimulant, Diktat, Surgical Stainless Steel, Bacillus, Taint and Skin Crime! 
One side per band, which is great, we have time to enter in the world of each entity. Luxuous presentation but keeping the original spirit. Highlights for me are Atrax Morgue, Slogun and Deathpile.

Peterson

Kjostad "Effie" CS (Archivio Diafonico)
        A-side opens to mixer feedback fast-paced pulse and quickly adds in a looped field recording; appears to be early morning bird calls amidst some sort of high-end tone which acts as a kind of "melody." Very linear and simply ends rather than progressing much.
        Second A-side track begins to a beautiful combination of a wooden pounding rhythmic loop and a warbling, melodic bird call, also looped. After another, quieter bird call loop is introduced, some pleasant electronics (?) come into the picture, a sort of PE-ish mid-range drone, eventually fading out quickly to expose some more quiet field recordings (rocks?) and another drone, more round and bassy this time. Excellent static/feedback noisy electronics also come into play after a bit.
        Third A-side track opens to field recordings of machinery, or well-treated electronics, with a background human voice loop that is unintelligible to me. I think here we're seeing some elements of Kjostad and Breaking The Will (Stefan's other project) melding together a little bit? I'm reminded of certain elements of the CD on Terror really from the very beginning of this tape. This track, though, if I had to guess: machinery, big rig brakes, amplified background voice, perhaps some kind of generator, compressor, or some such equipment; a little too hollow to be a jackhammer. Despite overall great elements and some very strong moments, I might say this track drags on slightly.
        What sounds like equalized rig engine rattle opens up the first B-side track, also giving way to debris impact noise – rattling and crunchy, very nice. Little high-end detail makes it's way into the background alongside some heavy acoustic unidentifiable crunch and metallic scraping, often compressing into a nice blown-out bassy sound. There are even some parts that appear distinctly tape-manipulated, though how exactly it's hard to say – you have to enjoy that. After a while of this, some great and cheap-sounding feedback spurts in and out.    
          This is absolutely listenable and tasteful noise, that I'm not going to attempt to describe too much because that would seem to take away from it's purpose. Instead, check this out for yourself, that is, if you enjoy going outdoors. Not down the street, I mean into the woods.    Even if you didn't look at the pictures included on the j-card artwork (which appear to center the release around its' dedication to a late Harry Aune, presumably a very positive influence in Stefan's life), you might label this as "log-cabin noise." Say you're spending a few days in the country somewhere, this is what you might produce when taking some equipment with you. Easy comparisons for the lazy? Lettera 22, Mania (!!), obviously Breaking The Will, Scorpio & Glass. I really think if you've read this far, you should consider picking this up.

Kjostad "Evinrude" CS (Angst)
        Sometimes, "you get what you pay for" is not a value judgement, but a literal statement of fact; in other words, the affirmation of a description. In this case, "lake water churning against an aluminum bottom." This sounds like exactly that, but I'd be worried if this experiment was conducted with a boat that sounds this rickety. There had to be some ingenious setup which captured this sound in such a dynamic and fairly harsh manner, that "churning" part is very apt.
        After some time, skittering high-end electronics seep in in the background and grow almost intrusive before receding while they seem to reach their most menacing power electronics-type tone. Interestingly, the level of activity in the lake water churning sound seems to follow the cutoff increasing and decreasing in the background electronic tone, rather closely. About this time, some very nice bassy pounding starts happening – sounds like some kind of tank being struck, and by now, the background electronics have become brittle, early-90s-Whitehouse type "electrical surge" static. This is pretty goddamned enjoyable to listen to, especially once the resonant bassy metal action becomes more intense. Eventually, all the action gives way to some smaller, rattling sounds; then an abrupt tape cut to windy background static.
        Oscillating backround machinery drone alongside some unobtrusive banging open up the B-side. There is this interesting rhythmic hammering tone in which is extremely hard to place. There is also a sort of tape-speed warped "melody" happening here if one pays enough attention, which is one of the nicer little tricks I've noticed from an already-innovative project. Familiar snow-shoveling (?) sounds also enter the picture, right before things calm down significantly to only the barest elements of the piece; probably back to the initial sounds from the beginning of the track. Things seem tape-cut again here, fizzing in and out as if power-starved.
        At this point, there is some brittle rattling alongside a sort of high-pitched whine which leads into heavier "sweeping" noises – maybe this is ice being cleared off of some surface? Subtler details emerge but signal the end of the piece. Stefan is at the top of his game with those more recent Kojstad releases, so keep an eye on this project if you enjoy what Patrick/Self Abuse has been doing with Scar Crowe or the last Alchemy of the 21st Century CD.

Baglady

TRERIKSRÖSET - Puking Blood C20 (Gothenburg Blood Cult)
Recently found this ripper at a digestible price after years of scrolling through trade/sell lists. Sweaty ugly heavy contact mic harsh noise with all his trademarks. Although not as varied as his other solo recordings, he makes the most out of his single-minded brutish tools, and the length is just perfect. Lovely stuff.

david lloyd jones

no comments yet but Sutcliffe jugend release, 'shame' and anti child league ' holy ghost' are, post gig on my decks.
also recent the Rita urashima releases

HongKongGoolagong

RAMLEH - Live Conquest (10" polycarbonate lathecut, ltd. 50, IWR 007)

No information online at all nor any ordering details about this very obscure and bizarre new release. One side is a storming live version of 'Never Returner', the closing track from their 2015 rock album 'Circular Time'. The other side is Ramleh in PE mode ' Conquest Play II' - a sort of sequel to the track of the same name on their low key 12" single from last year. The first 25 copies of this come in a completely over the top heavy engraved metal case. Sound quality on the pressing is as poor as most lathe cuts. Printed sleeve features artwork reminiscent of Circular Time. 'Dedicated To Larry Cassidy' https://www.theguardian.com/music/2010/apr/11/larry-cassidy-obituary

I received this as I had a hand in supplying the live recording. My guess is that 'IWR' is the New Zealand label Independent Woman Recordings who have also recently put out a Skullflower lathe-cut but I may be wrong.

david lloyd jones

Quote from: david lloyd jones on February 08, 2017, 07:29:56 PM
no comments yet but Sutcliffe jugend release, 'shame' and anti child league ' holy ghost' are, post gig on my decks.
also recent the Rita urashima releases

both sj and acl produce discs that envelope recent  leaves,  and create Sutcliffe whereabouts.
recent sj plugs the gap, and carries on with sj carrier ...?

Deadpriest

Melt-Banana: Cactuses Come In Flocks
Brainbombs: Cheap
Vaginal Pentagram:  Walls Of Urban Decay
Brighter Death Now: Very Little Fun (disc 3)
Uncodified + Wertham: Vindicata III
Sissy Spacek: Contretempo
Black Leather Jesus: Prove To Me That You're More Than Meat
Schloss Tegal: The Grand Guignol
Prurient: Frozen Niagara Fallls
Nicole 12: Playground/Lolita Love
My book of poetry: http://www.histergrant.com/

Leatherface

#6113
"...with COMMENTS/REVIEWS"

Posting a playlist is just useless...

Deadpriest

#6114
Quote from: Leatherface on February 12, 2017, 10:46:44 AM
"...with COMMENTS/REVIEWS"

Posting a playlist is just useless...

it does no harm, I like doing it and I've tried writing little comments before but they were clunky and worthless.
I'm just joining in. I'll do it less.
My book of poetry: http://www.histergrant.com/

david lloyd jones

Quote from: Leatherface on February 12, 2017, 10:46:44 AM
"...with COMMENTS/REVIEWS"

Posting a playlist is just useless...

just read my own comments. they are pretty useless as well.
won't stop me doing it though.
honestly, leatherface? what the fuck is that stupid name for?

Scat-O-Logy

Quote from: Potier on January 12, 2017, 08:28:52 PM
Quote from: Scat-O-Logy on January 12, 2017, 10:10:13 AM
Quote from: Peterson on January 11, 2017, 08:33:04 PM
Quote from: Johann on January 11, 2017, 08:16:53 PM
Valerio Tricoli: Vixit (secondsleep) Sick day today (which always makes me nervous to take even when I truly need it) so I'm trying to clear away some of the flu feelings and anxiety with back to back listening. First up on deck is Vixit, apperantly this LP is edited down from a larger audio piece that was played at Lampo in Chicago and based somewhat on the sound machines of Luigi Rusollo. The A side starts with a very organic crackle and manipulated sounds of water, soon giving way to a outerworldly drone that comes rising up and is punctuated by loud airplane drones panning back and forth, the impact of the sound and mastering are staggering...quiets into what could be rain falling or audio fragments sprinkled in that kind of way, wind chimes and distant trains (none of which are likely what they seem or sound) giving way to a massive drone dripping with acoustic sounds from an unknown room, the tapes begins to speed up and slow down turning into a lush electric haze...B side starts of with a creaking drone that seems to rock back and forth, wet sounds decaying underneath. The  sounds of a broken music box seem to take shape, fragments of everyday reality are mixed with beautiful electronics who's subtle rings consume whole rooms before finding the closet think to an identifiable "rhythm", it won't last though and soon morphs again into ghostly moans before flickering to silence. This entire record has a hauntingly sad yet beautiful quality to it. Tricoli is able to project into the future while having one foot firmly planted in the musique concrete of the past. One of the finest relases of 2016.

Everything I'm a sucker for with only a couple exceptions, damn...Johann, please link me to where I can purchase or check this out further, excellent review!

One of best LPs of 2016!

Tricoli certainly delivered in 2016 - the Clonic Earth 2xLP he did for PAN is even better than Vixit in my opinion.

Finally got this couple days ago and playing now (after playing the 1st record at wrong speed earlier). It's very disturbing, oppressive and complex album. Maybe it's my mind playing tricks on me but I can only think of very dark things when listening to this... Voices in my head type of stuff. Some of it sounds almost annoying with those clear glitch sounds. IMO not as good as "Vixit" but still very skillfully put together. Massive sound and nice attention to details when it comes to mixing.

david lloyd jones

re: wrong speed.
how did this sound?
hope it was good!

Peterson

#6118
Sick Seed "Technological Singularity" mCD (Filth & Violence)
        Well, I certainly wasn't expecting the Residents-meets-Come Org opening track, "Man and Machine," although I probably should have been, considering nobody else is arranging as diverse a take on PE today as SS. I really like that no-wave bass line and synthesizer loop that disappeared a while ago, and the subtler layering going on. Not to mention the vocals – the first couple years of SS had me amazed with how good such "plain vocals" could be; but now it feels so "formal."
        Next one, "Orifice Interface," is something more like what you've heard on The Great Corrupter or Beasts Among Men, but pushing the musicality/ song-structure approach further. With dictator vocals alongside a skronky polyphonic synth loop and some of the junk metal in his signature style, I realized that this side of SS is not so menacing, but more futuristic. While some PE is like a threat against you personally, this is more like a warning of things to come in the future.
        It also sounds like "band format" SS has shifted the approach a lot – the dynamics are all the more noticeable when you consider that things are not just being controlled and arranged by one person. Older stuff had a one-or-two person sense of claustrophobia, while the atmosphere, mixes, and overall sound here reflect a group effort. Things just sound bigger, maybe even better. Actually, no – they sound MUTATED.
       "Guinea Pig," basically follows the formula of the others; bass line, junk rhythm, abrasive rhythmic loop, and some background noises underneath mad scientist declarations. I really like the construction of the 1-2 rhythm, not to mention the modulations each layer is tweaked with, but if I was doing something else while listening to this EP, the tracks might've run together a bit – before everything suddenly switches to ultra-noisy power-tool sounds! There are noise harmonics achieved here through what sounds like a couple of drills, a pair of hair clippers, and some amplification.
       Fourth piece is a version of Jethro Tull's "Heavy Horses," but I wouldn't know unless you told me. I tried to make out some of the lyrics, but couldn't – SS has a way of taking familiar songs and turning them into something else entirely. It's a complete mutation from the original, those who've heard the Guilty Pleasures will know. Once things calm down from the harsh noise, I recognize the bass line and chorus lyrics – it strikes me, Sick Seed has some of the only current Power Electronics I know of that can be said to have a relaxed/soothing sound, which is what I get from this collection of songs. I don't know what else to say about this, except most people have probably heard this already, chances are you liked it. I just hadn't seen any in-depth discussion of it, and wanted to point out some things others might've noticed as well but didn't mention.

Sick Seed "Prison Songs" CD (Filth & Violence, Terror)
       "Cavity Search" opens to a brittle but thick and scraping wall of harsh noise – have to say I'm reminded of Andrea Dworkin's cavity search anecdote, but I'm thinking I'm supposed to be the one with the gloved hand up their ass here. Here goes.
      One thing I quite like about SSis that signature equipment seems to help define the signature sound – I definitely hear some wet electronic noise here that I recognize from several other SS releases. Wind and shoveling noises that comprise a rhythmic loop establish a "chain gang" atmosphere, pretty oppressive. The aftermath of his "Snow Fell" cover, eh?
     Alright, so I know I'm going to draw the ire of perhaps everyone reading by making the comparison to a hipsteresque, cool-person mainstream band, but the second track, "Prison," has a really gorgeous Krautrock vibe. Modulated key synth, tribal drumbeat, and vocal.
       I'm not a father, but I'm no stranger to the disintegration of domestic relationships due to sexual issues. "Daddy Jerks Off" is both a great song title, and an unexpected piece that feels like New Juche or something along those lines, with the SS Ofizier vocals from earlier SS overlaid on it.  Background porn samples, seem tape-manipulated.
   More beautiful but disturbing polyphonic synth opens "Anticosmopolitan," really gorgeous phaser/echo/panning effects on the vocals, delayed noise rhythm starts to intrude into the background.
   Tesco-style synthesizer grit from "Peeping Tom," which gets more machine-gun like as sharp, flexible feedback is introduced with some sublte rustling/scraping sounds. Vocals don't happen until about 7m into the track!
   "Massgrave of Goats" seems like an apt description for the entirety of underground industrial culture or whatever, without sounding too pretentious. "BUY MY SHIRT! BUY MY LIFESTYLE!" Me too. And it's also just a fuckin' killer track.
   "Victory Garden?" There's some pretty dark implications in that title, those lyrics. I sort of would rather not explain, "gardener does his work like he's always done." Ambient rusty PE, providing a nice segue into the more science-ficiton "Cold Mouth," which has a feeling of nodding to the '80's take on PE/industrial, as a handful of other SS tracks have in the past.
   OK, well, no more ass-kissing; if you're reading and curious about Sick Seed, any release is a good starting point, though this might be the best.

Sunken Cheek "Without Rejection" CS (Angst)
      Side A opens to some ambient-ish reverberations amongst really good textured metal work that seems to incorporate a digital looper or delay. There is also some gorgeous feedback notes here and what sounds like it might be actual drum percussion. I think I hear some background tape loops, possibly synthesizer. This is extremely dynamic and musical – really not what I'd call "noise," but ambient or industrial. Amph and Organum immediately come to mind as comparisons. It's certainly that good. Later, it transitions into simpler, spooky-ambient Randy Greif/Christoph Heemann territorry. I'm really glad I saved this for when I could pay full attention. Things evolve into patchier noisy territory only later in the track, just prior to the end.
       Distant revererations open Side B. It's not like a single track cut into two, like many C30s, but this does feel like a continuation of the first side. Metal sounds ping-pong around in the thick and queit reverb, while an old-style M.B. rhythm comes in amongst some wider, bulging synth notes that strain the reverb. Seems to be mostly a wash of distant drones, metal treatments/loops, some cello or viola sounds, and pitch-shifted speech samples. This is pretty much class-A stuff for the tape-music crowd.

The Rita/Suction Melena "Roman Facesitting" CS (Lake Shark Harsh Noise)
      Really interesting mid-range textures open The Rita's side with a bass backdrop that sounds a little "rounder" than the usual avalanche of crunch. This is the subtler side of The Rita, I'm curious if this recording features Arlie Doyle or just Sam. Things increase in sustain for a bit, making the movement more palpable before stalling and then going into patchier territory. Things seem to break through to the surface of the mix only after several minutes in, and add to the tension rather than gaining much in volume – things immediately calm down and become choppier, rather than surging upward as you might expect from older pieces. The  rubbing textures of the sound achieve a rhythm occasionally that is perhaps suggestive of the title having been the sound source, which would explain the presence of both members, if you get what I mean. Eventually, things take on a significant buzz in addition to the crackling and slight gargling textures, which adds a good deal of low frequency oscillation after a point. Things are pretty consistent throughout the track, though, never achieving the sense of climax or crescendo I generally am familiar with in The Rita – disappointingly, the track never actually gets particularly loud.
        Suction Melena's side starts off with a more consistent and electronic-sounding static mid-range burst that blows out into more distorted, crunchier sound in a matter of seconds. There's a distinct PE/powernoise feel going on here with the rhythms standing out over simple textures. At one point, laser-like MS20 rhythms kick in, giving a feeling more akin to certain Dead Body Love or Merzbow than just wall noise. Although this is quite a bit more dynamic than The Rita's side, to say the least, this isn't necessarily the sort of noise I had expected from Suction Melena considering what I'd read about the project. At one point, more "musical" distorted industrial rhythms kick in, which is a little too close to dance-y rhythms blown to shit via distortion pedal, at least to my ears. I really can't say this release has delivered on any of my expectations, and although it's nice to get a break from what one expects at times, both sides are niether especially groundbreaking nor specific to the point of fanatical interest. I don't dislike this, but I can't recommend it to those who aren't already pretty close followers of one or both projects. I'm not sure I'm as compelled to check out further Suction Melena as I thought I'd be. Better luck next time with The Rita, I'll try again eventually with SM.

acsenger

Nord - Nord (2CD, Art Into Life)

Reissue of the first Nord album from 1981 with a second CD containing unreleased material from around the same time. I listened to the album a couple years ago om Youtube and didn't like it, so I was hesitant to buy this reissue, but eventually ordered it, hoping I'd like it -- and what a good decision it was, as I love the album now. The first track is a calm, slow flow of electronics with some voice samples and obscure sounds, an uneasy and slightly menacing atmosphere being present throughout. Tracks 2 and 3 are basically one track, with a drum machine in the background and electric guitar damage in the foreground. Track 4 is quite furious and noisy but nicely settles down towards the end. Somehow this track reminded me a bit of Ferial Confine. The album is a coherent whole and it's worth paying close attention as sometimes several quite different kinds of sounds are going on at the same time. Also, it's very different from the later Nord albums.
Disc 2 has a studio session from 1982 and a live recording from 1981. The first track of the studio recording is the strongest. It has that very Nord-esque hypnotic pulsing that characterises the LSD and NG Tapes LPs (and, I assume, Ego Trip too, but I have yet to get that one). The rest of this session varies in quality (I wasn't too keen on the track with drums) but overall is pretty good. The same can't be said of the live session, in all honesty, as it's basically an unfocused mess, and the occasional shouting vocals only make it worse for me.
While disc 2 overall is perhaps more of a historical document, disc 1 is more than enough to get this reissue for.
A 4LP reissue of the Psycotron - 1 4x tape box has apparently been in the works for a long time. I hope it'll be out soon, and more reissues would also be welcome.

I've also recently bought almost all of the LP reissues on Jazz Village of the classic Magma albums (still missing the second one). They definitely sound better than my CDs from the 80s and the pressing quality and the packaging are top-notch. Currently listening to Les Cygnes Et Les Corbeaux by Christian Vander, which is a fantastic, soaring and strange album.