cd/lp/tape etc. REVIEWS

Started by FreakAnimalFinland, December 03, 2009, 11:22:57 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

Andrew McIntosh

#15
PRODVKT, "Serie H"
Turgid Animal Italy
Who was "the monster of Florence", the murderer of dallying couples who's modus operandi was to mutilate the female, in one case sending a piece of breast to the local state prosecutor? To this day, no one knows. Prodvkt, who seems to be based in the Florence area (lucky bastard!) may know, but isn't telling. Better to express those thoughts and feelings in this simple cassette. A cold, controlled vibe, using synths, samples and other sounds. No track list which is a bit of a pity; the second track on side one has a very nice use of sample loop, a sort of ambient-ish, almost backwards-masking type sound that gets gritty and distorted through it's own deterioration. An effective piece. The sound throughout is as murky as one would hope for, but not detrimentally so, which is good as there are some "lighter" moments as well as deeper and darker ones (and somewhat noisier: second track on side two with it's lovely moaning pulse). The main thrust of the unit is rhythmic repletion of sounds, loops, grinding pulses, and a cold, dark aura. A well paced album too, not too short but doesn't drag on for too long. Not a brilliant album by any means, but "not bad" enough to warrant investigating. The tradition of death obsessed electronics from Italy continues.
Shikata ga nai.

Plague Haus

Sektor 304 "Soul Cleansing" CD
Malignant Records

Portugal's Sektor 304 is one of those bands that seemed to appear on my radar overnight, not that I've got my finger on the pulse of everything new and good in the underground, but a release of this magnitude should have at least caught my attention at some point. But oh well, I'm well aware of them now and that's really what I'm here for, to be aware and make you the same.

Sektor 304 plays Industrial Music in it's purest and best form, sighting influences that apparent on your first listen: early Test Dept, Swans, EN, Knifeladder and a heavy dose of Godflesh. Far from being watered down ninth generation versions of the above mentioned acts, S-304 chews them up, digest them and regurgitates something totally their own. I know you've heard this all before, but this is one band that truly lives up to that cliché.

The album kicks off with "Body Hammer". Easily my favorite on the disc with its 55 gal drum percussion, power tool accompaniment and total Godflesh worship bass and vocal attack. This track will immediately stop you in your tracks and have your undivided attention. "Gravity Factor" deals more in industrialized noise with sporadic percussion and phased-out loops. At just under two and a half minutes, it's like a noisy interlude. "Voodoo Machine" keeps up the pace set in the first track with a layer of ominous bass and vocals, heavy-hitting percussion and atmospheric blasts of noise. Next up is the sizzling, almost ambient "Pulse Generator". It's what I'd imagine what working in one of those government radar facilities might sound like. The sounds are subtle with distant clangs of metal and an undercurrent of percussion. "The Beast" pounds and pulses with bass that plods like a mastodon, echoing vocals as well as percussion and tendrils of synth that twist & writhe like a decapitated snake.

Another slow burn is "Power Exchange". Everything revolves around the rhythm, static pulses of white hiss over factory percussion. and underlying build up of pure static noise eventually builds and eclipses all else. "Blood Rush" is another ambient vision, but not that open, airy kind of ambience. This is heavy and oppressive with thick layers of sound crushing the air out of you. A distant tribal drumming begins to take hold, hypnotic, mesmerizing until it builds to a frightening climax and comes full circle, ending as it began. "Death Mantra" is another bass/percussion heavy track that would have been just as at home on Streetcleaner as it is hear. I have to say, the way these guys make use of metal as percussion is just awe inspiring. The disc ends with the "Final Transmission". Strums of bass and layers of atmospheric noise are cut through with an almost Prog Rock injection of ringing guitar. After the heaviness of the previous tracks, it's a beautiful reprieve.

Mastered by J. Stillings of Steel Hook Prostheses and housed in a magnificent 6-panel digipak, this disc is in my Top 5 for 2009. For fans of real Industrial music, this is absolutely a must own. I don't think I've ever picked up a Malignant release I didn't like, but this one has set the bar amazingly high. And I'll definitely be keeping my eye on this project.

Websites: myspace.com/sektor304 | myspace.com/malignantrecords

Link to review

FreakAnimalFinland

That is great CD. With couple little flaws, I still listened 4 times in first day I got it. Despite supposedly very "cliche" old school industrial, it has much more to give than normal release you basically digest at one listening, and might be even bored before it ends, hah.

HAIR POLICE "totaled and stranded" 12"
Hundebiss Records
One sider 12" with label german shepard logo silkscreened on b-side.
It says "recorded in a hotel room after we totaled out tour vehicle and became stranded in the worst snowstorm in Ohio history". And indeed, no drums, no "loudness", more like quiet guitar, quiet hiss of open line... crackles, more hiss, something, but very little. Guitar improvised just for ultra down tuned guitar string sounds. Not drone, not "heavy"...  At the same time as you wonder, what the fuck is this, the point of "jam", quality, if any new ideas etc. But I've listened this like.. 3 times before and once more during writing this. And it has odd charm. It is just so raw without being really noise. It is just so uncompromisinly unappealing to youth gathering in "mosh pit" in front of stage prepared for crazy american noisers. No, you can't mosh this. I doubt is it even cool. It has no goofy oscillations, nothing sounds like circuit bended toys. It is just rotten and miserable. Can't recomment to people who want to be entertained. For creepy torture, perhaps the frustrated wait in room you didn't want to be, but was forced to... could this be perfection of captured mood? (MA)
E-mail: fanimal +a+ cfprod,com
MAGAZINE: http://www.special-interests.net
LABEL / DISTRIBUTION: FREAK ANIMAL http://www.nhfastore.net

Ashley Choke

RE: Hair Police

Totally agree. This is maybe my fave HP release(next to the empty quarter) Really atmospheric and by no way akin to the horrible beardnoise style this band usually gets lumped together with(Prop due to band name, which i actually also think has it's charm)

I play this record all the time when i have girls over. They seem to like and understand it better than most other stuff i play them..

FreakAnimalFinland

THE VOMIT ARSONIST "Wretch" CD
Cipher / Force of Nature
I was quite positively surpriced this. What I recall from moment of first hearing name of project, I checked some mp3 online and filed it immediately under "some noise with yelling" US PE category, hah.. Well, what do you know, infact, this album is much more in field of death industrial afterall. c. 40 minutes playing time feel somehow short. Couple times listening this, and each time it's like "it's over now?" I thought it must be 30 minutes long or so, but it really is 40+.
I think I may like the early part the most. When vocals are just dismal talking over layers of bass heavy rumbling suffocated death industrial sounds.  When level of violence grows, it basically means that band applies distortion and long delay on vocals and starts shouting as loud as possible. The contrast of slow and morbid bass rumblings and eerie drifting songs, as opposed to "hardcore yelling", is something what I don't quite "get". I think it has similar problem as for example Institut LP, where sound is nice, vocals are nice, but they seems to be on very different "layer". Not blending in, giving impression of material performed at the same time. But I'm guessing, that this element is something what sets band apart, or lets say above a lot of gloomy & flegmatic death industrial, adding dose of aggression what may be missing from many in the genre. I do like this. It is above my expectations. I do feel that band has more to offer. Now album is very solid piece in its approach. It offers really no surprices. Range of sounds, range of vocals and such are basically introduced in the beginning and that's the frame he works whole album. Something you can trust with bands like Mörder Machine, BDN etc. But I personally, wouldn't mind that each track would have its own range of sounds. That album could surprice more during its playtime. CD is packaged in cardboard wallet style sleeve with small insert and very minimal artwork. I do recommend this especially to obsessives of the genre. (MA)
E-mail: fanimal +a+ cfprod,com
MAGAZINE: http://www.special-interests.net
LABEL / DISTRIBUTION: FREAK ANIMAL http://www.nhfastore.net

heretogo

Pär Lindgren - Electronic Music LP (Fylkingen)

Very nice Swedish electroacoustic album from 1986. Three tracks, first is "Houdinism". Sounds pop into the surface one at a time, quickly appear and then disspear. Sometimes I hear something resembling a rattling cage. It's like a collection of springs and toys moving around in semi-frenzy. Next is "Rummet" (Room). The appear/disapper act continues, the pace is slightly less hurried, now there is a distant hum in the background. A lot of ambiance and some "chattering" bleeps which sound almost like (comic) human voices or maybe those funny little chipmunks? On the flipside there's "Den Förstenade" (The Petrified One). Things turn more somber now, there's more silence between the outbursts. Some dark thundering sounds and locusts playing in the background. Something resembling an ominous voice is giving doomsday prophecies on top at some point. All very electronic and non-organic but that's fine with me.

Not the greatest thing ever for sure, but something about this makes me very happy. Every track moves at a nice pace and even though it's clearly soaked in academia there's nothing boring or corny here. Just good sounds. And it's easy find + cheap. I wish Finnish cultural tax-money went into stuff as good as this... In the liner notes it says this should be played "at an extra loud volume as well as with JBL 4435 studio monitors or their equivalent." I wish I had those massive "Dolly Parton horns" but this sounds very good on my Tannoy SRM12X's also...

FreakAnimalFinland

WERTHAM "sleaze" tape
EST
First released when Wertham played in finland months ago. Now finally officially released. I can repeat basically same thing I always say: Even if you can criticize EST being so sloppy, slow and irritating, you simply can't criticize them for releases they make. Packaging is usually some of the most special & innovative, while looking nice. You won't get some spray painted piece of trash. Not some garbage duck taped together, but something with is actually "designed", and then put into reality. Always different.
This time piece of heavy black rubber "bolted" together into envelope, what is stenciled with artwork. Inside you find chrome C-20 tape with exclusive material and booklet printed on nice textured special paper with text and images.
Topics are cult xxx icons: Tiny Tove & Bodil Jensen. Information from both from books/internet, nice lay-out with rough images. I have read many of pieces, but still: essential!
Music, continues the power electronic Wertham assult, maybe vocals too buried in efx and mix, but the sound seems to actually grow even better, more complex, more density, more everything. Tasty short spoken word samples on topic...  If there would be louder in your face vocals, this would be closer to perfection in field of perverted PE observations of history of pornography. Anyways, I still underline: get this.
E-mail: fanimal +a+ cfprod,com
MAGAZINE: http://www.special-interests.net
LABEL / DISTRIBUTION: FREAK ANIMAL http://www.nhfastore.net

Samuli

Pedestrian Deposit – Fatale CD (Hospital Productions, Hanson Records)

Great harsh noise made in USA. I have two records of Pedestrian Deposit, this CD and Volatile CD and I can say that Fatale is the better one for me.
This record could be divided to two different kind of approach and I think that this record is far away from a typical harsh noise record. First, there is lot of more experimental sounds going on this record. Wierd sounds, some kind of piano melodies, even some "depressive sounding" stuff, some ambient parts and generally speaking different kind of sounds far away from harsh noise. I think these calmer and more experimental sounds give nice contrast and more power to harsh noise side of this record.
Harsh noise moments of this cd are simply great. Destructive and raging sound, full of anger and power. For me this is clearly one of the records where you can really feel strong emotions through all noise mayhem, not just some random harsh noise blasting. Sound in this cd is very clear and clean and I think it suits great for this record. Overall great harsh noise record with lot of more experimental parts.

heretogo

#23
Leif Elggren - Is There a Smell on the Other Side? (cd, Firework Edition)

It's a strange one, as is to be expected from herr Elggren. Basic material is very simple, short loops of orchestral string music + percussion, repeated ad infinitum, slight variations and aberrations applied throughout the disc. Like a chaotically skipping cd-player from an alternate universe, a mix of sweet nostalgia with utmost bizarreness. On top of this we have Elggren's creaky (slightly distorted) voice narrating stories and texts about mortality, the passage of time, the passage of food through the mouth and out the ass, his biological father as a sewage system worker, the intestines of dead Swedish royalty etc. At some points he gets into a proper frenzy and one can just imagine the spit and foam ejecting from his mouth. Like the deranged guy at the street corner, rambling about crazy things that make TOO much sense for your liking... you just cannot stop listening.

Clearly not for everyone, 60+ minutes of this is not for the faint of heart. But personally I'm totally enthralled by this album. There's something about his voice and delivery, they smack of total conviction and obsession. And even though the texts don't really make too much sense on the surface, they all fit together somehow. There is a theme there, a plot, even if I cannot completely grasp it right now (or maybe I'm just successfully scammed...). And the looped music feels nicely discomforting by itself, like the David Jackman disc we discussed in another thread (though Elggren is not as subtle as Jackman), a fine combination of familiarity and "wrongness". 10/10 points for total mind-fuck.

"why are we shitting and pissing in drinking water? we are not pissing in wine, or coca cola? ... a bit of white froth at the corners of the mouth, almost like a kind of sticky, grey-white, thick grease, creates a certain feeling of disgust, distaste.. but it is also, unequivocally, a physical indication of bodily decay, of death that is everywhere approaching, in every nook and cranny..."

FreakAnimalFinland

BLACK LEATHER JESUS "Yes, Sir (Filth play)" CD
Mask of the Slave Records 2009
Got the promo of this one, but didn't fit into SI #2. I think I probably repeat myself endlessly, when I say that I find Ramirez very good noise artists, but very careless what comes to publishing. Sheer volume of releases he has done, is such a massive, that there are simply good stuff and weaker stuff. And there seems to be no logic what project sounds good and format sounds good etc. This "album", although being real pressed CD, doesn't sound like I would expect BLJ album to be. It sounds just like some random ltd. 10 copies CDR that is meant to be in hands of few lunatics who just need to consume more and more noise. But for those who'd hope CD and LP to stand out, like a lot of past Ramirez works on Freak Animal, Unrest, Tesco, Praxis Dr. Bearmann, Spatter and so on...  This can be disappointment.
Simply looking at otherwise tasty bondage&rubber fetish images, you see lame layout and terrible pixelated jpeg compression junk infested quality. It's like.. what? Doesn't label or band even bother to search good cover for CD they intend to make 500 copies? This disc itself has 4 pieces of noise, and while it is guaranteed routine blast of harsh noise,... well, in other hand it isn't exactly that. If you are satisfied listening the one dimensional rumble and distortion of the pedal, that's what you get. For those who like anything BLJ does, this won't be big disappointment. If you want to hear flat sound of "everything turned at max", that's what you get.
But a lot of time I personally find the sound annoying. When there has been several minutes of decent heavy simple harsh rumble, and suddenly by push of pedal it changes into pretty anoying high pitched "fuzz", which has the type of crackling quality I often associate with lo-res sound, I'm asking myself why? What is this? How THIS should be a CD, while BLJ and Ramirez has shown so much talent from beginning till today. Has shown that there can be great stuff, but it seems like responsibility of label to chose it. To ask for more material, to ask for other session. And so on. Like none of FA releases are just album band sent. Weak material has been removed or updated with better. And I think therefore those both BLJ & Ramirez releases stand out from a lot of others.
This feels as if label got CDR and said "ok, lets press it". Without thinking of any other options what would actually make CD stand out in discography. Not even thinking how easy it would have been to get cover images not blown up/stretched from some smallest on-line images...
While 6 people are listed to be part of this, it sounds like one sound source was used. It has no texture and drive in style of best BLJ. I'm sorry to report, but I would rather suggest to get some of his other projects, like Last Rape or Werewolf Jerusalem. They are of course more wall of noise oriented, but some of releases on that field are top quality with more interesting sounds and textures. This, in other hand, probably weakest of BLJ's pressed CD's. If it was CDR ltd 20 on Deadline, I'd say it suits its purpose. To be almost only real CD release of small european label, it seems like money was invested in totally wrong place. (MA)

E-mail: fanimal +a+ cfprod,com
MAGAZINE: http://www.special-interests.net
LABEL / DISTRIBUTION: FREAK ANIMAL http://www.nhfastore.net

FreakAnimalFinland

V/A ELEVEN NOTES IN BLACK - Various Houston Artists Noise Compilation CD
Mask Of The Slave Records 2009
About same time as I re-issued to me some of the classic old Houston noise tape comps on Industrial Recollections (V/A Tension State Collapsing I+II 2xCD), came out this compilation that was compliled over 10 years later by very same mr. Richard Ramirez and put out on Romanian label. It's curious to compare how things were then and how they are now.
In a way, one could say, things haven't changed that much. Houston harsh noise is still characterized by filthy and rough harsh noise. Basically the landmark sound of "american harsh noise of 90's". No Japanese influenced hifi, no super layered and edited material. Just crude rawness was was originally packaged in C-60's with xerox sleeves.
Melani Riehle (known from Limacon, Baptist Skin Community, Rapecity,..) continues well with the tradition. Simple wall of noise, with enough of texture to keep it interesting. You can spot some tones and random bass rumbles below the surface of fuzz, feedback and crackles. Everything is pretty flat, not very distinctive sounds, but in this case, can be given as positive attribute.
S.P.I.T. is scott houston, known as member of BLJ and Respirator, and his style could be kind of classic houston. It is very harsh, very nasty, but sounds like one take live in studio. Some vocals noise, some feedback, very much same range of sound as "deadline crew" in general. It's relatively dynamic. Like Masonna and Randy Yau, with all the "coolness" and artistic merit that may appeal to "outsiders" removed, and focused on just underground noise filth. I like it.
Loudspeaker is GEorg Markoff, also known from Wasp Honeymoon etc. His sound is the heavy wall of noise. Low bass rumbling, very widely stereo separated crispy high end. It doesn't sound violent, more like creeping & slowly moving wall. It has enough of texture to be interesting, but also compared to tracks before, quite carefully balanced.. making it in the end pretty.. soft? I guess wrong word to use, but it lacks any element of danger and loudness. Still pretty decent track.
T.E.F. should be no news to anyone into texas noise. Also member of BLJ, but his solo work well known. And not without reason. His style could be perhaps compared to analogue times of Thirdorgan and noise works of Monde Bruits? It has fast moving electronic atmosphere, but no aim to create heavy bassy rumble or brutal lo-fi harshness. Track could have been perhaps before Loudspeaker, since when the track before was so fully abusing all frequencies to absolute maximum, T.E.F. sounds slightly silent in comparison. But this is one of the artists that should be published more on LP or CD!
Last Rape, is one of the endless Ramirez projects. It seems like projects have pretty vague concept in style. There is some name, but it could be also published under other name. Like now. This isn't perhaps the similar Last Rape what I have heard recently, but this is great. It's heavy, it's slowly waving, like harsh noise take on death industrial / dark ambient. It's massive and bassy, but also a lot of great detail, density, and kind of subtle tonality what changes nature of sound from "noise" into something else. Of course, no melody, but some sort of obscure harmony. Fucking amazing, one could listen this track for half an hour and just sink into it.
Concerete Violin had unfortunate duty to be the next. And his quite routine short noise blast couldn't really bring anything special after supremacy of Last Rape.
Forced Orgasm originally from Japan, now living in Houston TX, also brings easy slighly droning noise. It has high pitched fuzz what sounds as if computer distortion would have been applied in top of everything, making it crispy, but also somehow covered in veil of flattening effect. When track proggresses further and you start to forget what happened on previous tracks, I start to appreciate this. Not phenomenal, but good.
Werewolf Jerusalem has to unfortunate role again, to be nearly 100% similar in range & types of sounds, but just being inferior in substance. Problem of wall of noise is that it is good if its good. But when its bad, its bad. You known from beginning of track that this it is. There's not going to be changes. And from beginning of this track, I knew it simply won't stand out on this compilation. It's like sound range of Forced Orgasm without substance. Composition close to Loudspeaker, without good sound and interesting texture.
Baptist Skin Community another Ramirez related project. Good name. That's one of the reasons why I bought many of the tapes of project. And they don't fail here either. One could say the track basically walks hand in hand with Last Rape. It's dark, slow, noisy, but not exactly plain noisE. Minimalism of wall is decorated with subtle structures and good sound. No computer distortion like pitch, but suffocating and nasty. End of track is nearly like waves of ocean.. which it might be?
In the Lands of Archers is duo with guys from Last Rape and BLJ, but no Ramirez here. And you can see where perhaps some tonality and certain other qualities of Last Rape emerges. This lacks the crudeness of Ramirez hand, and is more hi-fi, hight pitched, but pretty unique. Below crystal clear feedback & electronics, you hear echoing spoken sounds and tones. Very distinctive sounds. Without being too clean, you can easily spot all the layers and elements that create this great piece. Band only has handful of CDR's done between 2002 till now, I guess mostly on their own label. And probably sold out long ago. I wonder if their full length output matches quality of this track?
CD is completed by White Nurse Black Death. Ramirez and members of Kai-Ros. You can hear the very typical effect boxes Ramirez likes to use, but it's nice. Is it ultra fast delay effect turning sounds to oscillating drone? Is there bass guitar on back? Clashing metals, some high pitched fuzz. Perhaps sound not totally ideal, but the texture is rich enough to carry short harsh noise piece to end with pride.
While I'm not too keen on the cover art or design, I would strongly recommend this. With few weaker points, especially as companion to Tension State Collapsing, it is very good way of getting to know with this whole Deadline / Houston / BLJ scene.  And once again, it simply keeps surpricing me, how little quality control Ramirez has when putting out his own works, and then when he is curator of compilation, he managed to pull out pretty much some of the best things in noise???
Well, conclusion, if you want something from Ramirez or Mask of The Slave label, let it be this compilation! (MA)
E-mail: fanimal +a+ cfprod,com
MAGAZINE: http://www.special-interests.net
LABEL / DISTRIBUTION: FREAK ANIMAL http://www.nhfastore.net

FreakAnimalFinland

RAMLEH "valediction" CD
Second Layer, slr004
This was waited in kind of horror. After atrocious Kleistwahr LP, I couldn't really imagine how would be Ramleh PE comeback album. But I'm glad to say, it is actually good. It is also pretty unusual in context of PE today. It is recorded in studio, which gives it different atmosphere than many others have. It doesn't have the "in your face" blown up tape saturation. Neither the totally maximized computer atmopshere. It has sense of space, and certain amount of characteristics what studio has.
Even if it conquers new territories, it has certain elements of Ramleh. Droning guitar feedbacks, massively delay in vocals, making it almost like layer of noise instead of brutal attack. It fits pretty well to bleak and hopeless lyrics. Approach Ramleh has in writing lyrics differ from .. well, one could say everybody else in PE. I like the most the track #4. All the tracks are untitled. This has the heaviest bass noise together with piercing high pitched feedback. When second layer (hah) of feedback slowly fades in and atmosphere is very dark. Completely instrumental track manages to override many vocal tracks by better definition of sound.
Most certainly the last track is the thing what will most likely go to love it or hate it category. After 30 minutes of kind of "expected" atmospheric PE sound, band suddenly starts the very last track with fast paced bass synth (?) electro beat and fast paced almost melodic vocals. It's all buried in layers of guitar feedback and fuzz and vocals are distorted too, but the overall atmosphere goes very much into fast paced... hmm.. what it is? gothic-electro? Post-punk? I don't know. It is nevertheless something very much unexpected and new. When I first heard it, I was taken by suprice, but it's perhaps just 10% of playing time afterall. And we've heard nearly similar leanings towards music in later days Sutcliffe Jugend too.
CD is packaged in cd size gatefold cover, with 8 page booklet with lyrics. I'm pretty surpriced that quality of many images is pretty low resolution and blurry. Especially visible in inside artwork of booklet. I'd hope this "trend" on blurry www images would go over soon and bands and labels perhaps value not only content of image, but also it's technical quality. (MA)
E-mail: fanimal +a+ cfprod,com
MAGAZINE: http://www.special-interests.net
LABEL / DISTRIBUTION: FREAK ANIMAL http://www.nhfastore.net

FreakAnimalFinland

THE RITA "the voyage of the decima MAS" CD
Troniks, tro-293
Holy shit. tro-293! I wonder what will be tro-300, since that's probably more than most of noise labels will ever reach in their existence. But if focusing on this release instead of label, I must say I was taken by surprise. Where is the WALL OF NOISE? Not here. The Rita has done something I'd feel very much unexpected and perhaps even unique. One could compare this in some ways to Kassettemusik by Sewer Election. From outsiders view, they look like results where artists has felt that they have really proven to everybody what they are about. To such extent, that instead of another "easy" and "entertaining" release, artists simply dives head first into difficult approach, what may or may not appeal to people who heard it before, and may or may not work as "noise release". Where Kassettemusik was full of lo-fi tape loops, basically going nowhere, just muffling crudeness under very hazy vision which isn't particularly noisy, not aggressive, not that harsh. Not very relaxing... more like.. hmm... Dysfunctional & difficult? More like avantgarde art, where there is vision and manifest, but for anyone who isn't really part of the "target group", can't understand what the fuck is so clever about few lines and geometric shapes thrown in piece of canvas. Anyways, The Rita here, he doesn't seem to have slightest intent to create anything harsh and heavy. No fast driving bulldozing noise walls. No constant audio bombardment. This is just c. 1 hour track of almost nothing but slightly crackling sound and loud "tape hiss" of underwater snorkling recordings. It doesn't sound really that much of some underwater movie effects. It sounds more like piezzo contact mics combined with "nothing happens". Of course things do happens. But what happens won't follow the traditions of harsh noise genre. This sounds more like sound installation and avantgarde art. It has concept, which is backed up by artists personal interestest, visual presentations. Hands-on approach in process, and finally it is very very far from rock&roll'ish entertainment. Somewhere in middle of CD, you will hear distant sounds of waves of ocean. Otherwise, imagine piezzo in your hand, queezed once in a while, and very tiny big muff type distortion on it. Lots of high tape hiss style of sound, most likely just amplified "silence" by distrotion pedal. I have pretty hard time relating to this piece. I do admire the extreme stance and utmost personal approach, but as a listener, it's like staring a black square, knowing it's worldwide celebrated piece of art, and seeing pretty much no reason why exactly. But in other hand, I'm very glad on the "return" of difficult music angle on noise! (MA)
E-mail: fanimal +a+ cfprod,com
MAGAZINE: http://www.special-interests.net
LABEL / DISTRIBUTION: FREAK ANIMAL http://www.nhfastore.net

FreakAnimalFinland

MIKE IX  7"
chrome peeler records
Vocalist of Eyehategod fame doing his solo poetry reading over electronic bacgrounds. A-side is pretty good. The long piece, possibly already used in his book(?), is printed in insert, same text read loud and clear without any effects. On the back Ryan McKern does electronics. It's at the same time powerful, well made and contributing to the reading. I'm not even sure what the text means. It is just flowing obscurities through your head. Listened it few times, and as much as I like it, I can't really point out what exactly is topic and what this text is about.
After such a good piece, I find it little disappointing that b-side is nothing but re-release of Bloodyminded song from "Giftgivers" album, where Mike contributed vocals. It is the typical Bloodyminded improvised wall mandatory "helicopter noise" synths with multiple layers of screaming, growling, yelling and howling, where vocals of Mike are on front of everything. I think idea was good on True Crime, but it became old pretty fast. Gift Givers was already pretty dull listening experience after all. And comparing material now on split 7", it just underlines conclusion.
Splatter vinyl, full color sleeve and supposedly booklet & poster, but that means one poster, which includes slightly extended 7" front cover on one side and text on other side. I don't really qualify folded poster as "booklet". For this one song, I guess it's worth paying the money of regular 7", but I don't think worth spending any unusually high price on it. (MA)
E-mail: fanimal +a+ cfprod,com
MAGAZINE: http://www.special-interests.net
LABEL / DISTRIBUTION: FREAK ANIMAL http://www.nhfastore.net

harald mentor

COLD CAVE — Cremations CD
Hospital Productions HOS-248
It´s pretty rare to find a classy combination of late 70´s to early 80´s spirited new wave electronics and noisy industrial these days, but this is exactly it. Tracks are mostly short (20 songs here), maybe too short in some occasions - with this recipe some tracks should last forever for my taste. Synthetic sound is cold and the feeling dark all the way, vocals vary from clean dark gothic style to speeches to fx filtered ones where you can´t hear everything, but get the message. Material from ´08 ep, ´09 tape and ´07 lp + couple more songs compiled in one compact disc by Hospital Productions, very much appreciated since I didn´t know this project before. Recommended for those into dark, cold, minimalist and rhythmic electronic music. Also available in vinyl format.