Quote from: Zeno Marx on September 13, 2024, 12:26:07 AMQuote from: Andrew McIntosh on September 12, 2024, 01:48:13 PMQuote from: xdementia on September 12, 2024, 09:05:24 AM2012 - Sutcliffe Jugend - Blue Rabbit CD - First known exploration of "quiet power electronics" where typical pe concepts and lyrical content appears over electroacoustic atmospheres and marking a new shift for the legendary project.
Yea, I'll back this suggestion. Didn't sound like a lot of other material at the time, at least in my experience and as far as I recall now. Not exactly Death Industrial but something a little different, a little newer, I though anyway. I think you can hear the influence of this sort of thing in later projects like She Spread Sorrow.
I don't follow SJ with much dedication, so I've only heard this album a single time. The vocals, dramatics, and overall dark and brooding vibe had me thinking of Contrastate, which is of the highest order of compliment, while also having me scratch my head about only going to it once. Some of the organic acoustics (dried woods and stones?) had me in that JGrzinich or Seth Nehil frame too, which is another high caliber association.
Oh, thanks for the reccomendations! I have yet to listen to Contrastate, which is a project I strongly value based solely on what I've read about it, but didn't know the other artists mentioned. It is hard to keep up with everything Tomkins and Taylor have been releasing for the past two decades (I mean, shit, don't they ever rest? Each time I find out about a new release I remember the one I still need to listen to).
Sutcliffe Jügend – Blue Rabbit (2012)Guess I've already written on some thread about how Blue Rabbit is a cult-classic for me, yet with little to none influence on further artists within the zone. Not that I've heard of. And of course, you got plenty of Electroacoustic experimentation being crafted really well, but nothing that actually sounds like it was influenced by afromentioned album. Maybe 'tis me to release such music when I can.
I believe that good music has a unique quality of sounding fresh even after thousands of listens, and that's exactly how I feel whenever I blast any of the Whitehouse albums from Great White Death onwards (except for Peter Kürten). For me, they're unparalleled and genuinely the best power electronics project out there. There are other albums that evoke a similar feeling, but not as much with SJ. In my view, most of their albums feature a mix of really great tracks alongside some weaker ones, which disrupts the overall experience—though Death Mask, and of course, Blue Rabbit, are exceptions. Blue Rabbit is perfect: a surreal blend of electroacoustic exploitation that feels like a dream (or perhaps schizophrenia), unlike anything else. It definitely has tracks with a similar vibe—"Death of a Post-Christian Humanist" is a masterpiece—but the experience of listening to this album for the first time was unmatched. I remember being awake at 5 a.m., smoking because I couldn't sleep, when "Solace" began. It was such an experience that I couldn't believe what I was hearing.
That being said, since the goal of this thread is not just to gather opinions but to keep the canon true, maybe Blue Rabbit doesn't belong here at all. I don't think it's due to its volatility. It might seem logical that fans of academic musique concrète wouldn't be interested in serial-killer-worshiping maniacs experimenting with a vast range of styles—or vice versa, where fans of traditional noise and analog recordings see modern Whitehouse and SJ as mere 'techno' laptop acts. On the contrary, it seems to me that there's significant acceptance for the incorporation of different musical styles within the scene. So, it's strange to me, even though this release has received a lot of praise. Perhaps, as time goes on, we'll see if it becomes a cult classic.