PLAYLIST with COMMENTS/REVIEWS

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

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k.p.g

Quote from: Bloated Slutbag on September 29, 2025, 05:22:09 PMA little bird told me that he (unfortunately) got a life. And to leave mofos hanging in the stratosphere. Talk about irresponsible.

What a dick!
Dead Door Unit
French Market Press
etc.

whiteheatnoise

This disc is so good. Molten, white hot liquid harsh noise.

Quote from: Fistfuck Masonanie on September 26, 2025, 12:25:38 AMSkin Graft / John Weise - Accessible World (Helicopter/Troniks)

God damn! This one is a scorcher. Something about Wyatt's sound is very dark, necrotic, and high-energy.

A successful Wiese collab is often him taking the best elements of his collaborator and elevating them with his excellent editing. There is a certain sense of almost "curation" there, of choosing and editing the best source material and "Wiese-ifying" it.

This is the rare instance where it feels like John is trying to keep up with his collaborator! Accessible World feels like Wyatt is in the drivers seat and pulling John along for a ride! It's a total avalanche of crushing sounds, and it's a damn near perfect album.

Got to put on some more Skin Graft and revisit some of my favorites like Hell in the Blood and Final Judgement.

k.p.g

#9482
Spykes - Live Frying (American Tapes)
Date for this one is February 7th, 2007.  You can hear the total MSBR fandom Olson had running through this run.  It's just a total spacy sputter affair; plenty harsh.

Bloated Data - The Aesthetic of Death (Minimal Impact)
Leave it to the Aussies to crush it here.  Heard about this one from Oskar on yesterday's WCN episode.  Tons of metal crushing you down, loops of raceways and some sort of metal bell cracking?  I will have to check more out from this project; falls in line with the great scrap metal lineage of acts like Mania, Hal Hutchinson, Macronympha, etc.
Dead Door Unit
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etc.

moozz

Thirded! No ambient or quiet moments, just harsh noise forever. I think it sounds more Skin Graft than John Wiese (what does he even sound like, he's done such varied stuff) but it just blasts on the perfect pace.

Quote from: whiteheatnoise on September 30, 2025, 04:38:31 PMThis disc is so good. Molten, white hot liquid harsh noise.

Quote from: Fistfuck Masonanie on September 26, 2025, 12:25:38 AMSkin Graft / John Weise - Accessible World (Helicopter/Troniks)

God damn! This one is a scorcher. Something about Wyatt's sound is very dark, necrotic, and high-energy.

A successful Wiese collab is often him taking the best elements of his collaborator and elevating them with his excellent editing. There is a certain sense of almost "curation" there, of choosing and editing the best source material and "Wiese-ifying" it.

This is the rare instance where it feels like John is trying to keep up with his collaborator! Accessible World feels like Wyatt is in the drivers seat and pulling John along for a ride! It's a total avalanche of crushing sounds, and it's a damn near perfect album.

Got to put on some more Skin Graft and revisit some of my favorites like Hell in the Blood and Final Judgement.

Fistfuck Masonanie

#9484
Kyle Flanagan - Dolly CDr (Self-released)

Very heavy and rich synths. Stereo panned rusty metal scraping. No notes of any kind come with the release. Sounds like MS-20s, metal, and tapes were used. The piece explores further into an even more trippy domain, but still remains in dark territories. Kyle weaves some very heavy tapestries.

The second track is harsh, but at times psychedelic, metal scraping works. Edited or recorded in a really interesting way, which I can't put my finger on.

The third track puts us back into trippy synth territory. Like having just outrun a scrap metal tornado and popping a tab of acid and melting into the grass for a long sleep. Relief...

This should be widely distributed and not just a limited self-released CDr. Excellent listen. This is probably my single favorite release from Kyle.

There is a rip on YouTube if anyone is curious enough to check it out.

DBL

Hypomania - untitled
Cassette, Enfermo Distro, 2020. Limited to 20 copies.

This tape was one of the first releases by Portuguese Hypomania, a noise project of Enfermo Distro's label head. It offers 24 minutes of rough wall noise dubbed loudly on both sides of a C50 cassette (at least on my copy, I'm not sure if all copies used similar tapes). There's a big middle finger on the front cover and a photo of a grimy toilet on the inner flap, so you know this isn't trying to be anything more than what it is. I see nothing wrong with that though, especially since this is a tape by a starting project. That said, it's a pretty enjoyable dose of rough and rugged wall noise, and the tape's sound is a good mixture of crisp crackling and rugged dirt.

Bandcamp: https://enfermodistro.bandcamp.com/album/hypomania

Hypomania / Fuhrer Duhrer - Seduced By Their Studs
Cassette, Enfermo Distro, 2021. Limited to 30 copies.

This split comes with a crude and simple, but also pretty neat fetish photo collage on the cover. That's pretty much all the visuals you get too as there are no infos on the cover besides mentioning the label and project names, not even track titles although the tracks are titled on the label's bandcamp page. Well, this works fine without any of that too, so no worries. This one's a recycled tape that's dubbed LOUD, all in red.

The first Hypomania track is fairly standard wall-ish rough noise with some spoken samples pushing through. The overall sound is pleasingly rugged and dirty, and the track works quite nicely especially in the moments when the samples break it further. It's a shame the track tones down into more formless gloomy murk by its end. The latter track is more of a hoarse mid-frequency flow than a constant low-end rumble, and I found it less interesting of the two. This preference might've been partly effected by the lessening sound pressure between the tracks: the opener hits you hard, whereas the latter one does not.

After Hypomania has gone with two tracks in 13 minutes, in comes the also Portuguese Fuhrer Duhrer with the same numbers. Their side starts very interestingly, with some "submerged" droning ambience that's coupled with a fairly narrow but tastily crude stream of rugged noise harshness. The track has a great atmosphere, sounding like something subdued is on the verge of bursting out. It evolves very little, but stays interesting for its six-minute length. Instead of something subdued, the follow-up track's fairly minimalistic rough screeches and crackles are backed by some semi-abstract (possibly vocal) sounds that carry a heavy reverberation of a wide echoing space. It makes for a nice counterpoint to the previous track, like being freed (or longing to be freed) from the thematic BDSM shackles, but soundwise I didn't find it as interesting. Similarly to Hypomania, both tracks have their merits, but the first track on the side makes the greater impact.

Bandcamp: https://enfermodistro.bandcamp.com/album/seduced-by-their-studs

Hypomania - In Longer And Longer Circles Swinging Towards The Depths Of Our Own Being
Cassette, Enfermo Distro, 2021. Limited to 30 copies.

About 8 minutes of noise dubbed loud on a recycled tape, with suitably crude but stylish collage art by Musrattus who also made the cover art for Hypomania / Fuhrer Duhrer split. There's very little infos here either (including no visual artist credit which I picked up from the label's bandcamp page), and I'm not actually sure about the tape's title either but at least something along those lines is written on the cover. This is some fairly slow-moving harsh noise with a murky and desolate feel, with occasional pedal squeaks and stubbornly present electric crackling giving the rumbling pedal noise harshness some extra textural details. So, no wall noise this time. The harsh flow is backed by industrially echoing room sounds and speaking, I think. It creates a backdrop of being left alone in a horror movie-vibed mental institution (I'm letting the cover art quide me here) and as such works fine together with the main meal of rugged distortion, even if by itself it wouldn't be that interesting to listen to. The very loud dubbing works wonders for this sound too. A short, sampler-like tape, but a good one.

Bandcamp: https://enfermodistro.bandcamp.com/album/in-longer-and-longer-circles-swinging-towards-the-depths-of-our-own-being-real-hard

Fistfuck Masonanie

Karen Constance & Dylan Nyoukis – The Final Fumes From The Soup Bowls (New Forces)

I'm enjoying this tape immensely. This has tickled my fancy more than anything in quite a while.

I've known of Nyoukis and Constance for years, but never purchased and listened to a full release by the pair. Fashioned in the audio collage/old school tape cut-up category, which I'm sure most are aware of. However, what really surprised me on this tape was the immaculate attention to detail and pairing of sounds.

This has sent me down a rabbit hole of exploring older Nyoukis/Constance releases as well as their previous moniker, Blood Stereo. I'm also really enjoying Karen's solo releases.

Love these moments when you discover an artist that just clicks, and being able to delve further into their immense body of work.

FreakAnimalFinland

EX.ORDER "Shuchu Ryoku" CD
At some point I was thinking there may be saturation point of "heavy electronics" type of stuff. Possibly it is still true, but it doesn't mean I would not like the style. Just keep wondering how it seems to be damn easy to do the synth oscillation and little processed vocals or samples.. but how difficult it is to do the same with some sort of own identity?
Ex.Order CD, not their best, but had not listened this for long time and decided to give it a spin. Cleaner than the oldest stuff, but it has its merits!
What we have here, is the classic heavy electronics sound. Never ultra aggressive, but dark and bleak.

Grey Wolves "Catholic Priests" CD
Soon new reissue on Tesco is available again, but this one I was listening is the Hospital reissue CD. Anyone who compared original LP with the CD, will find out how vastly richer the sound of CD is. Tracks pulled from original tapes. Even if the LP that wasn't too long, was of course GREAT, and true milestone of genre, yet also has that "vinyl treatment" on the overall sound courtesy of GZ DMM vinyl cut... In contrast, CD sounds like songs originally were, heavier and more detailed. It also displays how unique GW is. Like it always was. I liked the old catalogues that always announced it like... "industrial - power electronics - atmospheric - noise" or something like that. Describing both Open Wound distro in general, but GW as a project as well. "Catholic Priests.." is indeed all that. We tend to call them power electronics, for some reason, yet this album way more industrial. Including even beats! And surprisingly melodic... or harmonic? Couple hard hitting anthems you can easily rate among PE. No matter if I have heard these songs countless times since LP came out and also listened this CD many times, I am still kind of puzzled when thinking: what the hell is this really? And furthermore, how in world full of imitators, nobody has been really able to imitate GW? Rarely hear vocals like that, rarely such diverse mix of sounds, and songs on this, there isn't really another album like it. Of course I do not mean there should be GW imitators, but hard to really compare this with anything else when you really think about it. It would be great to hear new acts that do clearly industrial-noise/PE, but sort of escape the possibility to compare and set into specific era, plus like this album, having distinctive songs with pretty unique structures.

Yesterday, besides listening these, was visiting on couple galleries and museum. At small exhibition, there was female painter who had paintings titled as "melu - noise" and other one "A man is the bastard". Not accidental, but indeed references to exactly what titles suggest.
At the bigger museum, while liking some of it, I am almost amazed how the experimental sound presented in this type of environment is always so... samey? If you think guys smashing metal junk and rewinding tapes and recording it to analogue tape is "all the same", god damn, what is with the museum sound-art pieces? It really appears as if there was "museum soundtrack muzak generator" with very limited spectrum of ideas and sounds, that it has to be this, to qualify into museum. Absolute rubbish in every room that had "experimental soundscapes" and video art...
E-mail: fanimal +a+ cfprod,com
MAGAZINE: http://www.special-interests.net
LABEL / DISTRIBUTION: FREAK ANIMAL http://www.nhfastore.net

k.p.g

#9488
Zero Percent Interest - Evening of Amateur Spring (not on label)
A saxophone and a clarinet battle it out in distorted realms for 40 minutes.  It's certainly one way to wake yourself up in the morning!  Good predecessor to the likes of Wasteland Jazz Ensemble & Crazy Doberman.  I was always curious to hear this Olson group too, as he mentioned once in an interview that Aube wrote him back a letter when trading the AM Tape he did of this stuff, saying "Your band holds Zero Percent Interest in me."  Man had standards but he also had puns.
Dead Door Unit
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k.p.g

Karen Constance & Dylan Nyoukis - The Final Fumes from the Soup Bowls (New Forces)
I wanted to get to listening on the latest New Forces has to offer but lost sight of that goal over the last month.  Well, let's try it again.  Starting with this one, which I have heard nothing but infinite praise for.  Side A was a fine display of field recording collage rather than tape soup.  Some moments verge on "yeah, you can really record EVERYTHING with an iPhone," but I never found myself veering towards the negative. If anything, the recording started to bleed into life happening around me on the city streets, which seems appropriate.
Side B is much more active and soupy, with so much of the expected tricks of tape manipulation on display.  Find myself fully immersed in this one.  Despite some more jarring cuts, it maintains a cohesive narrative throughout.
A good way to start this batch listening.   
Dead Door Unit
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etc.

k.p.g

G.I. & the Spykes/Humectant Interruption - Yellow Eyes via Michigan Dust (American Tapes)
Picked up this early American Tapes relic in the mail yesterday and had to throw it on as soon as possible.  The lathe on it is a split, while the cassette attached to the anti-record is a collaboration cassette.  Starting with the cassette, the sounds these two make play well off of each other.  According to Joel, it's Olson mixing his sounds, but you could've fooled me; sounds like those two are in the room together.  It has some "dragging on" moments to it, but I really enjoyed it.  Tons of tape mangling and anti-record destruction at play.
The lathe is a split and is far and away the better half of this release.  Both artists locked into a collage of nasty sounds.  No indication of which side belongs to which artist and I prefer it that way; excellent.  I was wondering to myself "how did they fit so much noise onto such a small lathe?"  It feels like both sides are 10 minutes long, and yet the sound quality is pretty damn clear.  Nice.  Even the needle running off onto the label on the end of one side was pretty damn harsh.

Wolf Eyes - Undertakers Pt. 1 (Since 1972)
Classic, split stereo murk of the Dilloway/Olson/Young era ... perfect soundtrack for the sun rising on another work day.  The pre-coffee daze of my working days often is a good time to play something this dreary.

Primitive Isolation Tactics - All Pressures Past (New Forces)
Continuing my dive into the latest New Forces offerings.  I think a lot of us know this guy pretty well!  On top of his wonderful services as a distro, Mr. Geddes recordings some dense noise as... well, yeah.  Enough introductory crap.  This tape is a delightful listen.  Label describes it as a continuation of Canada's textural masters, but the word that jumps out to me initially is "hypnotic."  There's sputter, there's crackle, but these elements are constantly in motion.  It feels like running down an endless tunnel.  Great stuff.
Dead Door Unit
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etc.

k.p.g

Wolf Eyes Drolls Vol. 1-5 (Disciples/Lower Floor Music)
Great collection that reimagines and edits the best parts of this classic American Tapes series.  I always found that the Droll tapes captured the trashy atmosphere the Wolf crew mastered best back in the Dilloway days, and this box showcases it gloriously.  Often found myself nodding in deep concentration to this joint.

Perfected Grave Vault - Wilderness & Industry (New Forces)
Completing my run of the 3 brand new tapes from New Forces just as Stefan decides to drop some discs on us.  Great timing.  It should be no secret that this duo is great; their compilation disc on Oxen was phenomenal.  This one continues the trend of gross harsh noise.  Plenty of contact electrifying power to boot, but I tend to prefer the moments of odd percussion and minimal sputter where the tape hiss overtakes the signal.  It makes for a lovely creep.  Great work to be had here.
Dead Door Unit
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etc.

DBL

Quote from: k.p.g on October 09, 2025, 10:28:08 PMPerfected Grave Vault - Wilderness & Industry (New Forces)
Completing my run of the 3 brand new tapes from New Forces just as Stefan decides to drop some discs on us.  Great timing.  It should be no secret that this duo is great; their compilation disc on Oxen was phenomenal.  This one continues the trend of gross harsh noise.  Plenty of contact electrifying power to boot, but I tend to prefer the moments of odd percussion and minimal sputter where the tape hiss overtakes the signal.  It makes for a lovely creep.  Great work to be had here.

You got my interest with "gross harsh noise" and this seems really good indeed. Ugly, harsh, heavy, fast and loud stuff, and has a lot going on simultaneously in both channels. Hadn't heard of this name before but got to keep it in mind now.
The tape's on bandcamp for the other curious ones: https://newforces.bandcamp.com/album/wilderness-industry

Citalopram Shunyata / YANA - untitled
Cassette, 2025. Edition of 50 copies.

This split was recorded back in 2021 I think, but due to all sorts of mishaps its release was delayed until 2025. Well, luckily this type of harsh noise doesn't become dated that fast. Both projects offer about 20 minutes of material. The well-dubbed tape comes in a small plastic pouch with rough and colorful collage art on either side, and features no infos aside of the project names.

YANA from Finland is somewhere between harsh noise and industrial this time. Their side often feels quite bleak, but in the spirit of coming down on some substance rather than being depressed. It just seems hazy and nocturnal. The very rugged and rough distortion that's often prominent in the mix is broken and low-end heavy in a manner that should be very much to the taste of anyone into Amek-Maj. The recording has great dynamics, so although this blow-out rawness is allowed to take up a lot of space, there's still plenty of room on the spectrum for more quiet and subtle samples, field recordings, violently beaten yet often distand or heavily effected sounds of metals, and phasing buzz of unspecified electronics to move and operate in. Surprisingly there's one or two porn samples here too which is quite rare for YANA. Perhaps they were used in honor of the more porn- and perversion-focused split partner, heh. I think I have heard nearly everything YANA's published, and it's pretty much always good or great, and most often something different from any of their other recordings. This one is no exception.

I have been aware of Germany's Citalopram Shunyata for years but haven't really checked it out properly. Here, their side of harsh noise seems quite light-spirited, forward-moving and energetic, especially so in comparison to the gloomier vibes of YANA. It also has a more traditional feel of cassette saturation to its sound. It's not properly blown out or lo-fi by any means, but has that rugged charm tying the sounds together. Some likely VHS era porn samples are used, but very sparingly, with the actual noise remaining the main deal. The tracks vary their focus, letting the rumbling distortion, feedback, as well as the more watery electronics have their time in the spotlight, and the tracks move between and within these elements with a free spirit. I think it doesn't go quite far enough into any direction though, or at least I was waiting for it to become either sleazier, harsher, wilder, more energetic... just generally to go further into any or all of the directions. That said, this is still very good and I appreciate its restless liveliness. It just seems to give a promise that something stronger is to come. It also reminded me that I have the project's Moist Nobility CD that Dunkelheit Produktionen published in 2022, so I'll have to look into that one next.

minimal.impact

Judgedreadlock - JDL (Chemical Imbalance)

Longer form improvisations. Really interesting to hear this from two people I'm reasonably familiar with, although separately. Lots of sampled audio ranging from unintelligible spoken dialogue (though this may in sections be live spoken word??), to some form of hardcore punk riff/vocal loops.

Tape additionally features material from related project "Frosty Fruits", recorded in 2012.

CC - Black Coffee (self release)

Squirling feedback worms it's way through paper cones. Really exemplifies the possibilities of a simple solo set up. The constant changing feels as though the electronics are genuinely alive. Tonally similar to my memory of a live CC set I saw some years back at Alchemix Studios, though this feels like a direct line recording of such a set.

CC has played supplement to myself on a couple of occasions (see Subaru Is Somehow Related to the Pleiades CDr, and the live set at The Cave Inn in late 2023 to be uploaded and released by net label Sophistication). While perhaps not underrated (locally) so much as elusive a noise artist as CC is, I look forward to hearing the other two hand assembled tapes I was sent to see what other sounds are conjured.

Earth O.D.

GENOCIDE ORGAN "Nordaustlandet" LP

A razor-sharp and clear sounding document. "Captagon Army" and "Why Do You Exist" hit harder than on the album mostly due to more clear and direct vocals, and "It´s Over" is a particular delight in its heaving aggression. One probably knows already if they need more live GO in their lives, I for one sure do.

JIM HAYNES "Inconsequential" CD

Once again a tailor-made recommendation from a friend. Constantly evolving, powerful and properly brooding industrial noise with cinematic scope that never loses the plot. Pretty much a new name to me, so any further Jim Haynes recommendations are welcome.