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Troum, "Sigqan"

Desolation House
Deep beneath the ocean is a world of mystery, wonder, darkness, anddanger. Even if it weren't for the cover art of this German duo'sbrilliant new album, there is unmistakably no other place in theuniverse that has influenced the sounds and movement of what isrepresented within. These drones are not passive in the least. Thedepth and volume are all encompassing, and moving slowly but steadilylike an ancient and lonely large whale through the graveyards ofshipwrecks, at the very beginning of the food chain in which all livingcreatures depend. Recorded live in the studio without overdubs, thefirst two parts are based on live performances the band was touringaround with in 2001, the first being a dark blue rumble, heavy on thelow end and marked by patient melodic movement, the second withswirling guitar strums and leads like the sun coming through in bendedbands of beams: flickering, reflected, and refracted. The intangibleoverwhelming feeling of weight and pressure is unavoidable andinescapable, like being frozen in a dream, unable to move, but calm andcomforting all the same. Around the half-way mark, it dips back intothe darker regions as pitch and pace slow down deeper and deeper anddeeper and deeper yet into the cold, black unknown. The third part wasrecorded as an afterthought, and is described as a new ending. Itsbrightness and chugging backwards-sounding guitars brilliantly accentthe feel that it is a journey which is reaching its end. At this point,it feels that the central figure in the journey seems to be a vessyl ofsome sort, and the 16-minute Part 3 is thematic of a gloriousresurfacing, reintroduction to the bright light of day, and returningto solid ground. But, as the brightness comes, so does an ominous sensethat all might not be right. The world looks different than before, theplaces are familiar but everything's seemed to have changed. Thecredits may roll but this is certainly not the end.

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