PLAYLIST with COMMENTS/REVIEWS

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

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Bloated Slutbag

#4875
Mania / Hal Hutchinson‎ – Wreckage
Now this is what I call atmosphere. The atmosphere of decay, mechanical decay. Decayed, decaying, decrepit, decomposing. The broken-down, enfeebled, protestations of poor, abused machine, sickened, as in SICKENED-to-DEATH of being raged against. But broken-down, enfeebled protestations are all it will ever manage, the poor, abused machine utterly beyond salvage. Atmos. Filth-flavored, gutter atmos. Where have I heard this before? It would have to have been in "Tahta Tarla", that pervection of atmos submitted under the combined perv-visions of Giancarlo Toniutti and Andrew Chalk. But, whereas Toniutti n pal allow their collab to meander a fair bit, as one might expect of them, Mr Mania and friend Hutchinson get right into it. Right into it, m'boyo! So yes, still that familiar stench, of corpse being dragged around disused drainage tunnel. But these boys have their shirts off. Waist-deep in filth, plowing on through. A dramatic pause: to flex.  Yes, this is a muscular sound, heavy, thunderous, even, made more so by completely eschewing the barest hint of fuzzed-out, flatulent, feedback. Mania kicks it off with a solo joint, heaving large slabs of precision-cut metals into a nicely composed arrangement of scrapped clunk 'n drag. Surprisingly, um, nice. A perversion that obviously came at some cost and at no detriment to the filth-filled fundament. Ignition initiates the essential Mania-Hutchinson flavor, that of tar-blackened, bass-heavy, agitation through which assorted junks are lugged, hurled, and, occasionally, dropped- onto unprotected toes. The inevitable howls of agony ensue, buried somewhat, but lending proceedings a marked miserablist taint. Things culminate quickly in the definitive "Beyond Salvage", scrapped junks of the shitey-est of viscosity, ripped, rough-hewn fidelity underscored by the sudden incursion of a greased-up, rippled, oscillation and the faintest hints of agonized howling, growing more monstrous, almost manic, before decisively shutting the fuck up at 4:35. And. And that's all you deserve! And what you deserve is your shit-medicine in the most compacted of allotments. At least, until the rather epic "Warhead", wherein all stops are broken out. Slow growth of filth-drowned slog, metal slabs stumbling around the channel pan. Enter miserablist oscillations. Determined frequency overbilge threatens to suffocate the dank, echoed, machinations in slow, sinking, sludge-hole. Grind to a halt, and cleanly scrapped crank 'n clank signals the closing movement, loading capacities to the brim before a grim cycling ambience escorts a play of crunch and screech to conclusion. Almost as an afterthought, Hutchinson unloads the self-explanatory "Factory Of Metalsound  (Corrosive+Treatment)": extended orchestration of wonderfully dense scrapheap molestation, a neverending, ever-collapsing, textured field of fractured heave and toss. Vivenza must wank himself silly over this shit.


Encephalophonic‎ – Regressed Progress
According to the Concise Oxford English Dictionary, 13th edition, "Encephalophonic" is an adjective referring to the "studied and careful composition of fucking harsh noise"*. More specifically, Encephalo is a deservedly rising star by virtue of Commitment. Commitment to all the things that matter. For starters, spasticity. This is the shit that has spasticisms all over the place. For seconders, harshness. An ever ready assortment of scrap-metal sources scours this point home with excruciating precision. And for thirders, well I'm coming to that. First, "Growing Paranoia", a mostly muted entry into the perverted probings of The Bonini: laying out uneasy synthwave atmos, tension ratchets up in slow sweeps and whispered washes. There is an aggression here, bubbling just below the surface, never really allowed to break through. We know we are just being fucked with and thus simply wait expectantly for the inevitable shooting of the wack. Cue title track. Looped knob-bobbing hastens the outpouring of pinpricked l-r panned incision, stop-pause knee-jerk, well-aimed butt-stab. A constant back-n-forth between the bobbing slobber and just plain... slobber. This shit refuses to sit still and verges on fucking irritating. The worst (best!) kind of fucking irritating, natch. Okay, then. Spastics, check. "In & Out Of Reality" is when things really begin to pick up. When the manipulation of sound palette is so overdone as to verge on pornographic. When I decide that The Encephalo is The Shit. Concentrated knife action. Sudden ultra-brief shrieking vocal spasm. Heaving, hacking fits. A slowing of pace. Screaming rippus interruptus. Collapsing metals. Pulling and tugging from one extreme to the next, angling in from this that and every whichever. Spastics, double check! Next, out come the scrapped junk sources, most apropos of "Scars Collection". Rabid slashing fit ensues, frequently settling on a near-percussive regularity, the hacking occasionally opening up to wider acoustic detail. Okay, for fucksake Bonini, I get it. I've had enough! And so we would seem to conclude our first half, making way for "MaximumHeadPressure", which is, of course, exactly that. Heavily distorted pressures snuffing out all surfaces air, vapors escaping in a reverberant hiss... for the first thirty seconds anyway. Then it's more of the same. Distorto-spasti, wacky-jacky, blasting through the fray. Buried again under masses of heavy-handed crunch overload. The "dialog", as such, is great- particularly satisfying when metallic junkpunches slam through, and through. Jump ahead one track to the climactic "Self Destructive Behavior". Here the acoustic iron-filing armada is out in all force, but so too are all the other elements, each competing, in turn, for attention. Agitated synthetic epilepsy. Glittering glass shards. Frequencies seemingly burnt to a crisp, stereos in stuttered decline- exploding back to a perfect, steely, glint. Slow throb out, to make way for extended docu-clip of sweet little girl explaining why she sticks pins in baby brother's privates, the answer unnecessary but provided anyway, thus to cycle, viciously, to the raw, didactic, extremity of closer "Product Of Violence", and HOW DO YOU LIKE THEM APPLES? Regressed Progress indeed. A very well-composed piece of work, start to finish.  This is the thirder, abovementioned, whereby a work may satisfy both in individual chunks and in whole. HOW DO YOU LIKE THEM APPLES?
*pending approval


Kazumoto Endo & Kazuma Kubota ‎– Switches And Knobs
Endo: Heed my words, dear Kubota, heed them to the bloody letter.
Kubota: Yes, master.
Endo: I am to grasp my Knob and twiddle. Harrd. You are then to grasp yours.
Kubota: May I twiddle it?
Endo: Silence! I am to grasp my Knob. Harrd. You are to grasp yours. We are both, indeed, to twiddle our respective Knobs. Harrderr. And then, we Switch!
Kubota: How will I know when it is time to Switch?
Endo: On the eve of the Soup, when the Facial One approaches spasmodic genuflection, we, decisively, Switch Him Off! Do not, and let me make this absolutely clear, do not allow the bladdered vulgarian to disturb. Not a "bloody hell", nor a "fuckin' 'ell", nor, indeed, a fully extended "Yeah!"
Kubota: Yes, master.
Endo: And Kubota?
Kubota: Master?
Endo: None of that ambient crap.
Kubota: Yes, master.
Though billed as Endo/Kubota collab, I couldn't help but notice that, on the cover, Endo is grasping that familiar spring-loaded-washboard-thingy, AKA his Killer Bug. Perhaps he's sanded off the KB label, who knows? In any case, what we get are two long collab tracks, one live, the other live-in-studio. The "studio" track comes first, but I start with the live. Let's hear what these guys are really made of. Given the range of sound material the two gents have covered over the years one could expect nearly anything. But given the inevitable deferral of Kubota to Master Endo, the net makings are entirely Buggered. Thus reigns: spasticity. An unending volley of ultra-sharp metallic cutting. Plenty of dead-air, or what would have been dead air had it not been filled with audience chatter and the impromptu vocal ejaculations of one Kenneth Sanderson. Hold on. "Audience chatter"? How in the hell could anyone hold a conversation with this insane racket going on? These are highly skilled conversationalists to say the least. One wager is we're in fact hearing a slapped-over sampling of post-performance chit-chat. Plus seeming giggles at Sanderson's well-timed, never-quite-complete, interspersals, re-
"bloody 'e-"SCREE-CRASH-STAMMER-SPLURGE!;
"fucki-" KA-CHUNG!SHMEEZEESHMEEZEE-PLONG!;
and "Yea-"KRRRING-PSHAW-FLECKAFLLLJJJ!
Eighteen minutes of this shit, which is probably a few minutes too many. The Facial ejaculate actually renders Le Merde especially fresh, and off-kilter, and suggests such glorious possibility had the duo enlisted a vocalist proper. ("Proper" as in, utterly fucking deranged, of course.) Thus interest may be aroused even during the intervals where it sounds as though our duo is literally grasping at knobs. Not that anyone (least of all Sanderson) cares. Per the better species of live Buggery, our audience finds its lingering doubts clobbered to death under the repeated HACK-STABSTAB-SLASH barrage, lending proceedings a very percussive flavoring. In the semi-coherent words of the Facial One, "Fuck yeah! YEAH! Fuckin' ell! Yeah. Fuckin'.YEAH!" etc.
ENTER THE STUDIO
Endo: Now then, dearest Kubota, can you tell me: what was lacking from our live performance?
Kubota: Umm... ambient crap?
Endo: <THWACK!> SILENCE, BOY!
Kubota: ....?
Endo: !
Kubota: .
Endo: Very good, my quick young study. Now: BEND OVER.
Thus reigns, again, the prime Bugger. More so, even, as the silence, otherwise occupied in the live track, marks in the studio its deafening absence. And yes, these are studio compositions, but clearly the live-in-one-or-two-takes variety. Composed on the fly, as it were. Aquatic ambience? Hell no. Edits, ditto. If Kubota is to be present in this performance, it is largely in spirit. Still I would say a performance most spirited. When deferral to the master apparent falls by the wayside, the pace hets up, the friction almost tangible, successive carvings competing for an attention ever-more-thinly-sliced. At a critical juncture, the attention just about gives up for good and starts to parse. And why not? Each resounding razored expurgence, each ultra-brief spasticism, could itself constitute a single track. Over the full twenty-six minute course one might divide attention into one-thousand-and-one delectable little spazz-outs, the wide-gaping puckers reminiscent in the tasting of Sixteen Different Flavors Of Ass, as properly widened, say, by the earliest of "Metal Dildo" Buggery. Ignore any sense of progression. Enjoy the – again- very percussive shredding of deceased air particles. The violent texture of an attention hacked to bits. The deeply penetrating wham-bam-thankyou-sir-can-I-please-have-some-more. Singular sadistic sodomization of the singularly deserving earhole.
Someone weaker than you should beat you and brag
And take you for a drag

anomalie

Quote from: Bloated Slutbag on October 21, 2014, 08:30:50 PM

Various‎– Hard Panning (The Ultimate Contemporary Cut-up Harsh Noise International Compilation)
It's taken a while, but it would seem that, here and now, as we start to close in on 2015, there are, on the face of the earth, enough legitimately talented noisesmiths in the earful of  "Contemporary Cut-Up Harsh Noise" to fill a whole comp- a comp one is actually quite content to play through, several times. "All killer, no filler" in the lingo. Clearly a lot of thought entered the rather artful sequencing of tracks, each flowing almost imperceptibly into the next, managing to suggest an almost narrative progression.

Need to check this Compilation out!
Here's a trailer:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c5zPAkEora4

anomalie

Quote from: Bloated Slutbag on November 11, 2014, 08:45:58 PM
Mania / Hal Hutchinson‎ – Wreckage
Encephalophonic‎ – Regressed Progress

Need to get these two and Encephalophonic ‎– X.

I've listend to Prurient a lot the last days and I still think these are mindblowing:

Prurient - Black Vase (Load Records)
Prurient - Arrowhead (Editions Mego)
Prurient - Troubled Sleep (Truculent Recordings)
Prurient - The Black Post Society (Cold Spring)

The feedback sessions make want to fuck or kill myself.

FreakAnimalFinland

COIL "Music to play in the dark vol 1" CD
Chalice
Never been huge fan on Coil. Most of stuff I have heard, I have disliked. This is among better ones. Colorful and etherial electronics for most of the part.

LOREN CHASSE & MICHAEL NORTHAM "The Otolith" CD
Helen Scarsdale
Anyone been following this label? I don't think I've seen people mention it anywhere in noise forums, and perhaps because it isn't really noise what they put out. But great works here. All sorts of metallic clatter fusion with eerie tonal works. If I would want to name something what people know, I'd probably say Organum. But this is different, nevertheless. Scraping, slowly oscillating tones what may be feedback and strings or some sort. Always highly hand made feel to everything. Not carefully edited or sweetened with fancy effects. Check out trailer of pieces of several tracks:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXDuhKFitas
Took bunch of stuff from label that appeared to be interesting stuff.

S.P.K. "Paradiso" CD
Therapeutic/Adverse Recordings
I noticed someone mention this on board. So ordered it, and not bad. It's not mind blowing like VOD SPK box set of their oldest works. This is 1987 soundboard recording from live gig. Some songs from Zamia Lehmanni and quite like that spirit. Nothing very aggressive or loud. Many tracks same as on "Oceania - In Performance 1987". But won't complain. Great sound. Great stuff. Few little bit too dancy tracks for my taste, but most of all good atmosphere!
E-mail: fanimal +a+ cfprod,com
MAGAZINE: http://www.special-interests.net
LABEL / DISTRIBUTION: FREAK ANIMAL http://www.nhfastore.net

Zeno Marx

Helen Scarsdale Agency is in that Alluvial Recordings, Elevator Bath, and and/OAR realm.  All solid labels.  They're all working in that same pond of artists and then branch out from there to create their own identity.  Jim Haynes, Matt Shoemaker, Seth Nehil, MNortham, etc.  The type of sounds and projects that would have been prime feature material for ND magazine.  I miss that magazine.  Highly recommend the Spiracle - Ananta 2CD on HSA (anything with Hitoshi Kojo).  I find it funny how they present the label like a modeling agency.  Nice twist.
"the overindulgent machines were their children"
I only buy vinyl, d00ds.

anomalie

Brighter Death Now - With Promises Of Death (Familjegraven)

Yummy.


Hal Hutchinson - Wreckage Installations And Metalworks (Crucial Blaze)

Interesting and very well done.


Jaakko Vanhala - Here Be Lions (Freak Animal Records)

Everything about this album has already been written on this forum. Mindblowing!


Teeth Engraved With The Names Of The Dead - Starving The Fires (Part I) (Malignant Records)

Isolator - Culture & Principal Of Anti-Human Exaltation (Black Plagve)

Dark. Dark. Dark. Endlessly dark.


bitewerksMTB

ORGANIZED RESISTANCE "Day of the Rope" cass., Freak Animal- I haven't listened to OrgRes in a long time. I'd forgotten just how abrasive the material is. Very nice cassette release with double-sided cover & separate lyric sheet

Bleak Existence

#4882
V/A ‎– Wallwhores

excellent Static/Popping/Crackling noises from Insurgent - Un - Missing Girls


anomalie

Post Scriptvm ‎– Benommenheit (Tesco Organisation)

First 2 tracks are okay, then it goes straight uphill.
This isn't dark nor droning. Just boring and uninspiring. Pseudo-cinematic.


Pharmakon ‎– Abandon (Sacred Bones Records)

Pharmakon ‎– Bestial Burden (Sacred Bones Records)

Margaret Chardiets' vocals are great without a doubt, I'd just wish the rest of her music would be a bit nastier.
The pulses/shots/hits are to clean on her records.
Hearing/seeing the same tracks on live footage is a different thing. Better. More intense.
I hope she can put this down on her records someday.


Theologian ‎– The Chasms Of My Heart (Crucial Blast)

This might be my favorite full length Theologian so far. I adore it.
Looking forward to his upcoming on Malignant Record.

Ashmonger

Zero Kama - The Goatherd And The Beast  - Collected Tracks 1983 - 1986 (Athanor Records, 10"): Pretty weird for a 10" to be played at 45 rpm. That being said, this is really good stuff, especially Liber AL I.13. Pity that Zero Kama released so little, though I do respect a man who chooses to stop his band/project when he feels it has to be done, in stead of keeping it a live for reasons of success or whatever...

SPK - Information Overload Unit (LP, Normal): Finally got this, have been postponing it for too long. Really good of course. And I think that in a way it's funny that some tracks, such as Ground Zero: Infinity Dose are most probably still too extreme for most people (mainstream, not around here) and that after 35 years.

Ex.Order - The Law of Heresy (CD, Industrial Recollections): From the people behind Inade, whose album Incarnation of the Solar Architects is great in my book (have heard some others from them as well and I believe they were pretty good as well). Good to listen to Ex.Order, really good Industrial Power Electronics. Throbbing synts, processed vocals and some parts do remind me of Inade and/or a certain background in other kinds of Electronic Music. Should play this to my old man, who owns more Inade stuff than I do, I'm certain he'll like it, haha.

Bizarre Uproar - Purification (CD, Freak Animal): Ugly layout, filthy sounds, ear-pearcing feedback and really good vocals of Mistress Fallen Angel. And still, while it certainly has its good moments, I'm not convinced as there's quite some moments I just don't seem to get into... Will definitely listen to this again though...

Grunt - Long Lasting Happiness (CD, Industrial Recollections): Interesting CD which shows different sides of Grunt. Some tracks rather go into Harsh Noise territory, while another track has Power Electronics over what I'd like to call an Ambientlike background. This is not unique, but not something I encounter often, though I think this works quite well.

anomalie

#4885
Aderlating ‎– Gospel Of The Burning Idols (Black Plagve)

Deathstench ‎– Massed In Black Shadow (Black Plagve)

If you want to call it that way... awesome Black Noise.


T.O.M.B. ‎– Third Wave Holocaust (Black Plagve)

T.O.M.B. ‎– UAG (Crucial Blast)

Somehow my opinion about this Black Noise project is very ambivalent.

Zeno Marx

#4886
King Tubby & Friends - Dub Gone Crazy - The Evolution of Dub at King Tubby's 1975-1979 1994 - reggae dancehall - this is a pretty great comp and listen - best of the handful of King Tubby collections I've heard - I don't care much for reggae, but this, I like.
Muslimgauze - Hand of Fatima 1999 - title track is mesmerizing.
Muslimgauze - Al-Zulfiquar Shaheed 1994 - very good album - uncharacteristically consistent - first time hearing this album - this might prove to be up there with the couple of favorites.
Penumbra - Anoraks 1999 - Zoviet France related -
Penumbra - Skandinavien 2001 - Zoviet France related -

I'm at a loss for words with Penumbra.  I didn't expect to be this floored.  Being a huge fan of ZF, I'm glad I saved this for now.  To be honest, I hadn't heard of Penumbra until last week.  ZF is sacred to me, so I don't dig for all things ZF.  I let them slowly, or even accidentally, come to me.  It's nothing like ZF, but it is of top shelf quality and genuinely deserving of the association.  Others have messed with tones and psychological affect, but this actually achieves that level of deep engagement and space swallowing (Lustmord dreams of creating an album like Anoraks), though I don't believe it was an established psychological experiment.  I'm thinking Adi Newton here as well.  It's subtle.  It's on the ambient side with a sharp dose of experimentalism, and at times, it is catchy in a way that I find similar to the primary rhythm of Kazamuto Endo's "While You Were Out".  I made the mistake of listening to one after the other, and by the time I was into Skandinavien, I'd missed most of it as I was still resonating with Anoraks.  I went back.  I'm not crazy about the opening novelty track of Skandinavien, but because of the quality of the rest of the album, it's easily overlooked.  Penumbra has one other, earlier cassette that I'd love to hear and one exclusive compilation track.  RE:  Anoraks...I don't remember feeling this overwhelmed, and thoroughly satisfied, by an album since maybe Organum's Sorow.

EDIT:  Skandinavien has moments of glory similar to Anoraks, but it is more in line with what you'd expect to hear from Rapoon insofar as a dub feel and plastic elements.
"the overindulgent machines were their children"
I only buy vinyl, d00ds.

Andrew McIntosh

After a night of completely sobriety and academic discussion on gender issues, Luke of Trapdoor Tapes handed me this cassette of his and Harriet's (Military Position among other projects) live PE duo Armour Group, featuring recordings of two live performances. The dub on this copy is somewhat low. I'm told that one of these performances was from the last International Noise Conference, which I managed to see. Its very basic material, synthesisers and vocals and some samples (tapes, I think) and what sounds like bass guitar, which would be right as that's Harriet's main instrument. Side one has more consistency during the sound, with prominent vocals. There's a raw base which supports some of the higher, wider synth sounds, giving them a nice machine like quality, battle sound samples coming over at the start, then hard and echo-ed metalesque vocals (both comrades love their Metal). Sometimes the overall sound is stripped back to a few quick elements, then overloaded again with all hiss and distortion. Basic lo-fi PE grunt. Side two has a slightly higher sound. Blasts of pure synth distortion, very pleasant, which occasionally drop into lower or blanker sounds. A more broken and less consistent piece than side one, though, with a lot more crumbling and contrast, although hardly in a cut-up way. Ends with a very nice sounding delay loop of crumbling low distortion which I would have preferred to have been longer.

Luke's solo project, Mshing, has a 3" cdr out on L.White records that I greatly enjoy. This is more paced, controlled and structured Power Electronics, very heavy and bottom end, moving slowly. Very basic elements of heavy electronics put together, just that simple, raw, heavy sound from tones to pulses, reminding me a touch of both Shift and Deathkey. Totally satisfying. There was only fifty copies of the actual cdr but you can download it if you miss out.

Long time "post-punk" band Primitive Calculators was a group I paid no attention to, mostly due to the name. Not sure if it's time to catch up but it's definitely time to praise the most recent album, "The World Is Fucked". Most of these synth punk groups tend to be a bit too clever for their own good, emphasising a lighter tone. putting the synth before punk. This album is the synth punk I've been waiting for. It's savage, raw (although still studio sounding), heavy and punk as well as synth. The vocals are pure Aussie bogan, the lyrics pure punk simplicity ("Stick it up your arse! Stick it up your arse!", "Why do I even fucking bother fucking getting up in the fucking morning?!", "God loves me, me, me, fucking meee, cunt!"), each song usually based on one simple bass line done on heavily distorted synth with screeching guitars around it and ultra simple, chanted lyrics. There's not a lot of variety in tempo - a live gig with this stuff must be exhausting - but the overall effect is savage and unrelenting, aggressive and suburban-hell bleak. Everything's fucked and is going to stay fucked and there's nothing to do about it but get drunk and whinge about it. Or kill yourself. Whichever.
Shikata ga nai.

Baglady

BACKASVINET - Gevisol / Ivisol - 2xC15
I enjoyed the debut split tape with Phí released earlier this year. Good solid harsh noise. But this is in a league of its own. It doesn't sound very swedish either, more like '90s America. This wouldn't have been out of place inbetween Knurl and Skin Crime on the Americanoise comp. Heavy and thick, constantly moving, harsh noise. There isn't much harsh noise going on in Sweden nowadays either (has there ever been, one could ask...), which make this release even more appreciated to these ears. The chosen tape quality (computapes from the... late '80s?) probably adds alot to the whole "choking in a urine soaked hospital bed"-feel as well. Easily one of the highlights for me so far this year. Released in 10 special copies, but I'm pretty sure there will be more soon, so take note!

Bloated Slutbag

A little over two years ago, I received the following response to my comments on the TNB/K2 collab tape, Oozing Ruin (Banned). Two years is, I think, an appropriate interval in this instance, heh. As I said in my reply, I stand by my criticism of the end-product but concede that blame may have been unjustly apportioned. Thus to allow the record a degree of straightening:

Quote[comments]
'K2 molesting TNB spew. Disappointment is the last thing I expected, but it seems Kusafuka had pretty flaccid materials to work with. Had Rupenus offered a tape of trash cans getting kicked around this could have gone places. K2 tries valiantly to sex up the limp offerings, but... it could have been great is the best I can say.'

[response]
Just to put the record straight: I supplied Kimihide with raw material to use as he liked. He chose to bury it deep in the mix. It's rather bizarre that you passed judgement on the raw material not having heard it!
Someone weaker than you should beat you and brag
And take you for a drag