We have finally cleared out the backlog of great music and present some new episodes.
Episode 711 features music from The Jesus and Mary Chain, Zola Jesus, Duster, Sangre Nueva, Dialect, The Bug, Cleared, Mount Eerie, Mulatu Astatke & Hoodna Orchestra, Hayden Pedigo, Bistro Boy, and Ibukun Sunday.
Episode 712 has tunes by Mazza Vision, Waveskania, Black Pus, Sam Gendel, Benny Bock, and Hans Kjorstad, Katharina Grosse, Carina Khorkhordina, Tintin Patrone, Billy Roisz, and Stefan Schneider, His Name Is Alive, artificial memory trace, mclusky, Justin Walter, mastroKristo, Başak Günak, and William Basinski.
Episode 713 brings you sounds from Mouse On Mars, Leavs, Lawrence English, Mo Dotti, Wendy Eisenberg, Envy, Ben Lukas Boysen, Cindytalk, Mercury Rev, White Poppy, Anadol & Marie Klock, and Galaxie 500.
Skolavordustigur Street in Reykjavík photo by Jon (your Podcast DJ).
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High Place’s second proper full-length album is a gutsy and daring surprise, as Mary Pearson and Rob Barber have cast aside much of the childlike innocence and fragility that characterized their earlier releases in favor of a darker, more muscular new direction. While I still prefer the quirky, blurred pop from their past, the shift towards a sharper-focused, more visceral sound works far better than I expected.
High Places vs. Mankind begins on a promising note, as layers of dubby percussion and burbling synthesizers coalesce into an odd and irresistable groove. Mary Pearson’s vocals sound a bit tougher and more adult than usual, but “The Longest Shadows” has a cool melody and a great guitar riff going for it, so it all works beautifully. In fact, all the necessary elements for a perfect indie pop masterpiece are present, but it frustratingly just misses the mark by going on for almost six minutes and having an odd middle section that doesn’t feel like it belongs in the same song. Nevertheless, I still find myself listening to it quite a lot, as the music is extremely enjoyable despite its minor presentation flaws.
Fortunately, the second song (“On Giving Up”) gets everything just right. It has all of the same positive attributes of its predecessor (catchy guitar riff, unexpectedly heavy beat, strong vocals), but is structured much better and is about half as long. It was at this point that it dawned on me that I was listening to a very different High Places than I was used to. The only clear link between this album and the past is that Barber’s passion for unusual rhythms and appropriation of exotic sounds and instrumentation remains a driving force, but the beats have gotten much heavier and have been joined by relatively straightforward guitars. Also, Pearson’s characteristically warm and sweet vocals are pretty rare, as she more often sounds intense or sultry (particularly during the “tonight is going to be the night” chorus). Notably, she has also dropped the omnipresent nimbus of reverb and delay from her voice and tries her hand at singing with very little production enhancement. For these first two songs, High Places sound far more like eccentric New Wave revivalists than the introspective dreampop ethnophiles I was anticipating, but they do it so well that I don’t care.
Then an interesting thing happens, as the third song ("She’s A Wild Horse") takes things back to gentler, more languid times and it actually sounds pretty boring after the album’s thumping, infectious start. The fault lies mostly in the songwriting though, as it sounds like a half-baked and sketch-like retread of their past (plus it is not helped by fairly mundane guitars and the intrusion of a disproportionately exuberant beat). The next track (“The Channon”) is equally exasperating, but for different reasons: the music is warm, shimmering, and beautiful, but it just ends after about 2 minutes without ever adding vocals or evolving into an actual song.
Thankfully, the second half of the album eventually bounces back from the 3- or 4-song lull in the middle, though it never quite hits the highs of the opening tracks. However, there are still a lot of great ideas tossed out and some very good songs: “Constant Winter,” “The Most Beautiful Name,” and “When It Comes” all have very likeable and propulsive grooves and the lurching, minimal “On A Hill on a Bed on a Road in a House” is endearingly strange and imaginative.
As a whole, I have fairly conflicting feelings about this album, but they’re generally positive. It is a bit hamstrung by intermittent bloat, filler, and somewhat weak material, but there are also several great songs that make it a worthy addition to their oeuvre. Also, it took some gravitas for Rob and Mary to make an album like this: they already had a distinct sound and a fan base that loved it, so it would have been much safer to stay the same. There are still some kinks to work out (the guitar parts aren’t always a good idea, the songs are a bit too reliant on drums, and Mary’s lilting vocals are sometimes an uneven match for the heaviness of the rhythms), but High Places remain a very charming and unique band. They may be a bit less tender and intimate now, but the sound of two introverts trying to get a kick-ass party started is still very appealing in its own right.
Rather than the work of ironic hipsters or bandwagon jumpers, the duo of Sean Hewson (of Eternal) and Chrisian Savill (of Slowdive) is the real deal. Given Savill’s genre-defining guitar sound the two bring a classical sense of pop know-how and the ability to craft undeniably catchy songs that could be from another era, but make for irresistable listens in 2010.
The moment I heard the opening moments of "Bored Beyond Oblivion," I knew I was in for something good: a stiff drum machine beat, treated vocals, and chugging distorted guitar. It called to mind the Jesus and Mary Chain of the later '80s, and a little bit of A Place To Bury Strangers, but with the focus much more on creating catchy pop rather than volume levels that can do structural damage. There's very few combinations of sounds that I find as good as an unhinged guitar and a dated drum machine, so hearing them here brought an immediate smile to my face. "Silver Knife" has a similar tact, hiding gentle melodies under the brittle distorted guitars augmented by some extremely subtle keyboard playing.
Good old fashion synth pop makes an appearance as well: "Down, Down, Down" has chintzy keyboards and electric pianos taking the lead, burying the guitar low in the mix as a textural element and even tossing in some synth strings. It's just the right mix of schmaltz and compelling to keep it stuck in the head for hours afterward. The stripped down structure of "Everyone Is A Ghost" slows things down: its combination of arpeggiated bass synth, analog leads, and an ancient drum machine rhythm (yay for 808 handclaps!) isn’t far removed from the earliest of synth pop. "Fall" and "The World Collapsed" modernizes the electro pop a bit, with the lush (and sometimes cheesy) synth arrangements channeling just a bit of Erasure.
A few of the tracks strip away the electronics almost entirely, instead opting for laconic acoustic pop. Both "How the Dead Live" and "A Place in the Mountains" are just vocals and acoustic guitar, and "In The Morning" mixes in drums, giving it more of a 1990s alternative feel than the decade prior exercises around it, but is just as catchy and endearing as the rest. Personally I think "In The Morning" is the best of the acoustic-focused trilogy, with the other two just feeling too sparse, and doesn't allow Savill's trademark hazy guitar sound to appear. Oddly enough, the sore thumb on the disc, "Help Me Make It Right" features synths that are much more modern in sound, distortion on the drum machine and heavily vocoded voices that sound far less conventional than the rest, is probably my least favorite track here. Not that it isn’t good, it just feels more experimental in an otherwise catchy, earworm laced disc.
There is definitely an undercurrent of nostalgia, but not one that’s satisfied to simply mine the same sounds as before, but instead relocate them to the present day to create an album worthy of the band's legacy. It is unfortunate that on their fourth album and tenth year, they haven't reached the level of notoriety that other similar projects have managed to garner. Perhaps this will be the breakthrough release for Monster Movie...it is certainly strong enough to be.
Although many of these songs were made available previously on an identically named and highly limited edition album from 2004, this is not technically a reissue as the material has been reworked and the album has been quite expanded compared to the original. The quiet white light at the core of the music has been refracted and split into a rainbow of strings and woodwind, all arranged by Maxim Moston (best known for his work with Antony and the Johnsons and Rufus Wainwright). The sweetness of the songs become even more pronounced with its small orchestral backing, although Moston does not over-clutter Dee’s songs and allows her singing and piano to take center stage.
The bawdier side of Dee’s songwriting is absent from A Book of Songs for Anne Marie, instead here she opts for some of her more introspective pieces. It is easy on her other albums to get caught up in the fun of albinos and a mother-bashing Jesus but with such tender beauties as “Love’s Small Song” and “Unheard of Hope,” it is a joy to be reacquainted with Dee’s serious side. “Who writes a song must love to hear it sung and gentle hope has my song a reckless one” she sings on “Endless Night” and this sentiment rings true throughout A Book of Songs for Anne Marie; Dee always sounds like she is approaching a song for the first time, full of a joyous trepidation like a fawn taking its first steps.
“Black But Comely” is one of Baby Dee’s defining songs, biblical allusions and mystical romance colliding in an elegant dance. Its latest incarnation sees her dream-like harp drifting on a bed of violins like a cloud under a cupid. From here, it would be easy to falter but Dee never wavers; each song is crafted masterfully. The new songs not originally included on the first version of A Book of Songs for Anne Marie are not mere off-cuts included to get die hard fans to buy the album again. Each of these new songs capture the same warmth as the songs from the original set. “As Morning Holds a Star” in particular stands out as being another classic.
If A Book of Songs for Anne Marie was just a regular reissue of the original album, it would be a welcome release for sure as that short album contains some of Dee’s finest songs. With its polish and its renovation, the album now does the songs more justice and makes it sound like the music has matured in the last six years. Unfortunately the book included with the original has not been replicated but I appreciate the efforts made on the music much more in any case.
TenHornedBeast’s third album for Cold Spring Records is titled “Hunts & Wars”. Recorded over a three year period from 2006 to 2009 this album introduces subtle changes to the established TenHornedBeast sound with shorter delicate interludes separating longer tracks that rage with heavy distortion and doom-drone barbarism.
“Hunts & Wars” progresses the established TenHornedBeast sound using leaden, sub-tuned bass guitar to create rhythms and riffs that dominate a battlefield of vast ritual percussion and droning walls of electric dissonance, creating epic and expansive textures that by turns burn with frost and freeze with fire.
Heavily influenced by the oneiric visions of Robert E Howard and Lord Dunsany. ”Hunts & Wars” seeks to evoke the elemental, anti-modern fantasias of these writers and is presented in a lavish digipak designed by noted American graphic designer Kevin Yuen (Sunn O))), Wolves In The Throne Room) to its full grotesque glory.
The days have come when the steel will rule. Titans arise, monuments fall. Ballads of victory and defeat are sung aloud as from the highest steps we are swept on to the eternal Hunts and Wars.
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The tracks on Daas have been carefully picked to form a provoking, haunting journey. What the tracks have in comon is a sense of nostalgic graininess. As with the music of Philip Jeck, The Caretaker or William Basinski, these tracks are full of degrading melodies and dusty ambience.
'Daas' is the previously unreleased opening track of the album, and feautures contributions by the great Richard Skelton. This track was made as a reaction to the piece 'Koploop'. 'Flotter', 'Koploop' and 'Grom' were previously available on small run self released 3" CDRs. Sold out for some time now, these tracks deserved a wider audience. These three long tracks also seem to come from the same galaxy, making perfect sense when put together. 'Onkruid' was a track previously released on 'A Room Forever', as an expensive and extremely limited 12" boxset, now brought to a wider audience.
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This is one of the cases where the artists’ environment clearly comes across in their recorded output. Hailing from Norway, the duo of Pjusk weave digital soundscapes that are cold and icy, yet have an inviting warmth to them, like a fireplace heated cabin amongst the frozen tundra. Their second album is a gloriously minimal piece of subtle melody and texture that reveals more the closer it is listened to.
Immediately upon its opening, "Valldal" tosses sheets of torrential rain in before pulling back, leaving just the most barest of ambient pastiches intermingling with low bit rate percussive crunches, soft static, and electronics pulsing away. While it has a sparse, frigid quality to it, it is still compelling and inviting. Weather makes its way into the short track "Juv," with its lo-fi ambience, static, and icy winds, and "Vidde," where it is heavily panned and has a metallic, almost industrial quality to the sound.
My personal favorite moments come with the more textural studies of sound, like the warm, campfire like crackles of "Skygge" that glow amongst digital buzzing that’s panned around, acting like a bit of chaos next to the relative calm. Similarly, there is some great rhythmic textures at the end of "Glimt," which proceed a wide variety of sounds, resembling massive church organs, chimes, bowed cymbals, and even a bit of lonely guitar that shines through. "Demring" also has a slight rhythm, but it is obscured by thick clouds of sound, echoed rattles intertwining with what sounds like a Hammond organ.
While it never reaches any level that it could be danced to, some of the tracks do show tinges of conventional electronica. The clicks that resemble horse gallops on “Sus” develop in complexity but are wrapped in gauzy ambience and lush melodic passages. Melody also dominates "Skodde" and "Skumring," with the latter underpinned by deep percussive pulses, static-y distortion, and lonely piano notes. On "Dis," soft and gentle female vocals appear alongside piano and swelling oscillators, creating a spaciousness that is sparse, but at the same time captivating.
Like a warm refuge in an arctic winter, Pjusk creates inviting digital ambient music with a shimmering natural glow. Even when the sounds of the cold Norwegian environs appear, they never take on a dark or unfriendly character. The result is a beautiful combination of subtle melody and texture study that is a very diverse, yet coherent work on its own. Now that spring is rearing its head in the northeast US, it’s a fitting soundtrack, but I know I’ll keep this one near when the days begin to get shorter again.
Hz was initially a series of six EPs, released monthly, then compiled into a six disc box set, and later a two disc compilation. In my opinion, the then-duo of Robert Hampson and Scott Dawson reached the highest peak in their quest to take the sound of the electric guitar as far as it could go. Evenly split between astronomical ambient abstraction and a nascent take on post rock, this set was the final one where the duo’s history as Loop was still shining through. The result is two hours of the best experimental rock and ambient drone in my own personal collection.
First, a bit of history. My first exposure to Main was an impulse purchase of the Motion Pool album at a mall record store on my 16th birthday. Looking back now, the idea of music like that being found at a mall (and at a mall in the crappiest reaches of Central Florida, no less), is hard to fathom, but it did happen. I bought it because I knew of Hampson’s connection to Godflesh (who I was a big fan of at that time), and I was also beginning my journey into that post-industrial metal scene of Scorn and God, along with the short lived Isolationist movement. Buying it, I didn’t know what to expect, but I did like what I heard. That album (arguably the most traditional "record" the band ever made) followed a similar blueprint as Hz: approximately half of the tracks featured booming dub bass, heavily treated circular guitar riffs, and Hampson’s voice echoing from far off in the distance. The other half were spacious tonal drones that splintered the sounds of the electric guitar as finely as possible, only to rebuild them into organic, breathing pieces of music that were as alien as they were tangible.
A friend of mine at the time was over while I was spinning that disc, and somewhat angrily remarked how "boring" it was, but I was undeterred. Within a few months I’d tracked down their backcatalog to that point: the much more "rock" oriented Hydra-Calm and Dry Stone Feed EP (both of which featured drum machines, which were dropped afterward to focus even more on the guitars), and the first two installments of the Firmament quadrillogy. The former two were my favorites, because I always loved that alien rock sound that was pioneered there. Finally, once the Hz box set arrived, I eagerly ripped open the shrinkwrap and threw in the first disc.
In its original six disc configuration, each disc is a distinct piece, broken into separate parts for convenience, but clocking in at around 20 minutes and standing on its own. Like their body of work up to this point, the discs are divided thematically: "Corona," "Maser," and "Neper" are the extremely abstract takes on "rock" music, mostly just in the form of hidden vocals and dubby bass, while "Terminus," "Haloform," and "Kaon" opt for total astral abstraction. Each stands on their own quite well, but in the context of all six pieces, feel more unified.
The two track "Corona" begins with shimmering sustained processed guitar before heading into a repetitive bass/riff motif. The riff may be heavily processed saxophone, or that might be used elsewhere. Nearly 15 years after the fact, I’m still not entirely sure. Hampson’s heavily effected voice echoes in the distance, constituting more of another instrument than actual vocals. The more pronounced elements retreat about half way through the first part, leaving percussive rattles and wide open ambience. The second part brings on even more unidentifiable sweeps of sound and rumbles, never resembling the electric guitar they were sourced from, before launching back into post-rock territory.
"Maser" also follows this blueprint, mixing Hampson’s distant vocals with layer upon layer of multifaceted guitar noise and the requisite bass loop. There isn’t as much resembling "riffs" on this one, compared to "Corona" and the tracks on Motion Pool, but it is still extremely dynamic, with percussive elements deep within, heavy ambience and squeaky loops towards the end. "Neper" is the final piece of the "rock" Main, both in this set and in their career. Opening with scattered guitar notes and what sounds like fragments of radar sweeps, eventually the bass and vocals appear, alongside metallic space and what sounds like a treated, unamplified electric guitar, before falling apart like the last sounds of a spaceship that’s gone too far to be recovered.
The other three pieces are more focused on the ambient and minimalist side of Main. "Terminus" begins with surging waves of sound, almost like comets trailing across the sky, leaving vague notions of guitar in their trails of stardust. Over hollow metallic drones, layers of rhythmic static and maybe bass guitar can be heard far in the distance, crafting a track that is as unconventionally rhythmic as possible. "Haloform" continues this with crunchy percussive elements, and what is likely guitar playing right at the bridge, building to a collage of sound that somehow manages to retain its organic guitar sound while being torn apart. The latter part stretches out into swelling waves of ambience, with sustained and layered passages creating more of a pretty, rather than isolating sound.
Perhaps the most revealing of this set is the five track "Kaon." Recorded live to two track, it is unsurprisingly the barest sounding recording here, but it never feels TOO sparse. Instead the duo uses the simpler mix to create sparse and expansive space, punctuating it with anemic buzzes and distant echoes and the occasional melodic element. The latter moments open to near silence, with only the most subtle pings and pulses there to be heard.
During his time in Loop, Hampson made no bones about his love and appreciation for the films of Stanley Kubrick, which really manifested itself in the work of Main. Through the use of samples or track titles, Hampson and Dawson created sonic landscapes that were alien and isolating, a la 2001 or The Shining, yet left small amounts of humanity to lurk around, such as vocals or traditional instrumentation. The result is harrowing, but fascinating. After this release, Hampson and Dawson parted ways and Main continued in the ambient/abstract direction, with the more "rock" elements never to reappear. Recently Hampson has abandoned the instrument as a raison d’être: his recent Vectors album on Touch is sourced from other material, yet his penchant for architectural sound is still prominent. Main did many other great works after this, and the Vectors album is evidence that he is still pushing sound into the farthest reaches of cosmic space, but Hz is one of those works I still keep coming back to.
An obvious choice for a single, "Keep Slipping Away" is one of A Place to Bury Stranger's most immediate and gratifying songs. Live, it provides a little relief from the Strangers' onslaught, but keeps things upbeat and, maybe more importantly, provides an easily remembered hook. On 7" it's the A-Side to "Hit the Ground," a killer punk-rock/surf-rock hybrid that probably deserved a place on Exploding Head.
As far as immediate, red-hot rock songs go, A Place to Bury Strangers is among the best bands out there. Hell, Exploding Head could have been a punk record if it weren't for their shoegaze affiliations and songs like "I Lived My Life To Stand In The Shadow Of Your Heart." But, songs like "Hit the Ground" are good evidence that Oliver Ackermann still has a little hardcore in his heart, as it drives forward with stacatto eighth note rhythms and a pounding chorus that stomps the floor more than anything else. The lead melody reminds me a little bit of Dick Dale, but when Ackermann lets his guitar go nuts and the bass line takes over melodic duties I'm reminded just a little bit of Hüsker Dü, though not because of any similarity in their songwriting. "Hit the Ground" just sounds like a big, beautiful mess, much in the same way most of New Day Rising does. Sloppy, completely electrified songs with a lot of forward movement, big rhythms, and no small amount of testosterone are among my favorite things, so this song hits the spot. I'd like to see this thing pop up on a collection of B-Sides somewhere down the line as I could easily wear this 7" out from overplaying it.
Miguel De Pedro continues to find ways to make his already motley discography more diverse and unpredictable. After manipulating and distorting the sounds of Mille minimal techno, glitch, techno, rave, and having an almost intimate encounter with ambient something-or-other, Kid606 is now taking a stab at analog noise. Without his signature beats and usual goofiness to aid him, Miguel sounds a little lost. But, even with its numerous lulls and head-scratching moments, Songs About Fucking Steve Albini is one of the better things the Kid has released in the last few years.
Nothing about the music on De Pedro's latest record suggest that this is even a Kid606 album. The album and song titles and the fact that Kid606 is printed on the cover in big pink letters is all anyone has connecting this noise to that person. The closest Miguel has ever come to textured noise like this is on his Mille Plateaux releases, which featured at least some beats and remnants of the characteristic 606 sound assault. There's none of that happening here, unless some fractured glitch noise and fuzzy static are to be counted as the sole property of Miguel De Pedro. On Songs About Fucking Steve Albini I hear the clear influence of guys like Markus Popp, Pan Sonic, Jan St. Werner, and even a little Terry Riley. I guess somebody could argue these musicians have always been an influence on Kid606, but they've never been as clear as they are on this album. If they were all hiding under Miguel's bed in the past, now they're outside running around, playing keep away from Kid606 with his laptops.
Cyclical melodies and chopped up fragments of already fragmented sound make up about 99% of the Kid's arsenal this time around, which means that there are long passages of repetitive junk audio and seemingly aimless noise tangents to be found everywhere. Some are pretty annoying (see "Die Rumpled Ego"), but others are delicate and surprisingly beautiful (check out "Periled Emu God"). I figure without recourse to even a single break, Miguel just loosened the reins, choosing to let the audio lead him instead of the other way around. For the most part this actually works to his advantage, but in the places where Miguel gives up on any and all order, the album falls apart and quickly loses my interest. Thankfully, the Kid sticks to producing lovely slabs of interlocking glacial noise and melody for most of the record. Sometimes single samples churn and buzz away in cardiac-like rhythms and sometimes layers and layers of strange oscillations work together to form an indistinguishable mass of throbbing electrical meat. It's hard not to think of Harmonia or Cluster during the first few songs. That same simple, child-like approach to melody and loops is present from the beginning and survives until very near the end, where it's finally mangled beyond recognition. When Miguel checks himself and builds concise, metered music he simultaneously produces his best, most alluring work. When he loses control and ends up churning out electrical farts and headache-inducing buzz, I'm nearly always tempted to reach for the stop button. Had he saved his prankster audio tendencies for an album where it would fit more convincingly, I'd probably be gushing a little more about Miguel's Albini fucking ways.
Still, how any of this relates to Steve Albini is completely up in the air. Maybe Miguel's use of a bunch of analog equipment is sufficient reason for referencing the king of analog tapes, but I was half-expecting static-filled remixes of Big Black when I first heard the title and saw the cover art. If not that, then I was hoping for at least a little vitriol. After getting over the fact that there wasn't even one consistent beat or a single Big Black sample anywhere on any of the songs, I was able to sit back and appreciate the record for what it is. In the time between I was left wondering why Miguel would choose this album title instead of 606 Diskont or maybe Miguel De Pedro and the Phantom Band Play Mika Vainio's Pool Party. Reproducing the artwork for Songs About Fucking is cute, but it works against Kid606: the music is already odd and unexpected enough, it doesn't really need a misleading title to make things more difficult. Besides, naming songs after broken up anagrams of your own name is pretty lazy. The Important website tells me that Miguel spent a lot of time recording and putting this music together (many years, apparently). I wish he would have spent more time personalizing the project, because the music definitely deserves something more unique.
Scorn's third album was a groundbreaking and seminal release, as Napalm Death’s former rhythm section finally shook loose the last vestiges of their metal past to attain the sinister strain of dub that they came to be known for. Unfortunately, it was also one of the last times that things went well for the project, as Mick Harris would soon be hit by the mercurial Nick Bullen's departure, creative differences with Earache, and a precipitous decline in the popularity of the isolationism genre.
It is uncanny how much influence Napalm Death has had on both my musical evolution and that of the underground in general (both directly and indirectly).No one could have anticipated that the anarcho-punk-loving trio of Mick Harris, Justin Broadrick, and Nick Bullen who recorded Scum in 1986 (an album that holds only passing interest for me) would eventually split into such disparate and pioneering entities as Scorn, Godflesh, Jesu, and Lull.I remember both Evanescence and Godflesh’s Streetcleaner both making such a splash upon their release that they even managed to appear in publications that were mainstream enough to reach me in the cultural backwaters of central New York (this being before widespread Internet use, of course).As such, they were both gateways to a whole world of unpopular musics (dub, dark ambient, noise, etc.) that I may not have discovered otherwise.
Listening to Evanescence 16 years later, I am surprised by how well much of it holds up.The heavy shuffling beat and deep bass groove of the opening track ("Silver Rain Fell") still explodes out of the speakers and elicits involuntary head-bobbing.Nick Bullen's vocals are still as confounding as ever though: they are incomprehensible, amelodic, and buried very low in the mix.In retrospect, they seem very unnecessary and like they were a grudging afterthought, but I suspect that being a "band" with a "singer" and "songs" was probably an important factor in Scorn's relative popularity in those days.That said, Bullen's bass playing is awesome.Even though later Scorn releases like Gyral are arguably better than Evanescence, I definitely miss his presence.Apparently he is a baker now.I suspect that I will eventually hear about him again in association with some sort of extreme and genre-smashing type of new bread that stuns the bourgeoisie.
Of course, "Silver Rain Fell" is not a fluke.In fact, "Falling" is even more propulsive and substantially more psychedelic (and probably the best song on the album).Bullen's vocals are almost nonexistent on it, relegated to just a heavily processed background sound, yielding the foreground to the incredible and complex beat and a swirling barrage of disorienting synthesizers and samples.This was a good move."Days Passed" is also a pretty brilliant track, as it sounds like Harris and Bullen decided to take PIL's Second Edition sound and tweak it by making it heavier and removing the obnoxious vocals (I think Keith Levene and Jah Wobble would be very impressed).Also, Harris's atmospheric sampling collages are particularly inspired and surreal here.The thumping, didgeridoo-inflected "Exodus" (featuring Bullen's most melodic vocals) and the warped and shuddering ambient closer "Slumber" are also quite excellent.
That said, Scorn is a band that is best taken in song-sized doses.Mick Harris is extremely good at what he does, but what he does is very narrow.The Scorn sound can basically be summarized as "a cool groove with some trippy stuff happening over it."In a 5-minute dose, that can sound amazing, but it yields diminishing returns over the course of an hour.Also, some songs don't age well, like the bombastic "Automata," which sounds like it could have been an out-take from The Mind Is a Terrible Thing To Taste-era Ministry.The horror movie piano of "Silver Rain Fell" and "Night Tide" also sounds a bit heavy-handed with the passage of time.Despite its flaws, however, Evanescence is an album that was very, very much ahead of its time.While dubstep and artists like Burial enjoy quite a bit of popularity and influence today, making dark and noise-damaged dub music in 1994 was decidedly not the cool thing to be doing.
(Note- Earache has recently reissued Evanescance as a double-album with Ellipsis)
Bill Fay says David Tibet is probably the only person who would have released this 2CD set. The first disc covers demos and live material from 1970-1971 with Fay’s singing, piano, guitar, bass, and drums combining at times to astonishing effect. The second, lighter disc, recorded at home in 2008, begins with Fay's vocals added to a Michael Cashmore instrumental from The Snow Abides and ends with a song written by his brother, John Fay.
Several of Fay’s songs on the Piano, Guitar, Bass & Drums 1970-71 disc were either on his lushly orchestrateddebut Bill Fay, or the more stripped down follow up Time of The Last Persecution. The album is made up of tapes found in various locations and approved for release by musicians who obviously had a tight bond. That trust in each other enabled them to keep the music simple. So the sweet, ticking drums, the scattered piano notes, and unfussy bass all make for a perfect unhurried atmosphere in which Fay’s unusual voice flourishes. Additionally, Ray Russell’s wildly brilliant guitar playing adds a barnstorming edge to some of these lovely and deeply personal songs.
At some point Bill Fay must have acquired some conviction that life on Earth would eventually be interrupted by the intervention of a higher spiritual power; an intervention prophesied to fix the folly and misguided actions of humans that had wrought widespread war, false idols and misery. His images interpret the book of Revelation yet he conveys a gentle vulnerability and humanity which make apocalypse and salvation all sound rather comforting. That he also sings of not kneeling in "dead cathedrals" and complains of a spire "that blocks out the sky" is rather appealing. The versions of “Plan D” and “Pictures of Adolph Again” are love songs to the joy of existence albeit with a backdrop of horror and delusion. I hate to compare Fay to anyone else, but the warmth generated by his voice and Russell’s guitar on “I Hear You Calling” put me in mind of the late Ronnie Lane at his most soulful. Fay’s genuinely touching love of nature, his appreciation of his landscape of origin, and his love for his family both balances and compliments his other concerns. His honesty is unmistakable since he obviously sings about his own back yard. I also can’t think of another songwriter who mentions trees quite as often and treats the minutiae of everyday life—door keys, dustbins, your team losing, old school friends who have passed away—with such a matter-of-fact reverence.
I have never heard anyone sing or tell stories quite like Bill Fay. His phrasing and dialect are, if not unique, then certainly unusual, and his lyrics are disarmingly direct. It’s as if a character from Adam Thorpe’s odd rural epic Ulverton has come to life and is regaling us with history, observations of nature, and heavy portent. There is a consistently humble quality to Fay’s voice and yet it manages to be mesmerizing. I say humble, but when he speaks the words to “I Will Find My Own Way Home” he seems to be acknowledging failings (perhaps a crisis of faith) but sounds as determined and cocksure as if he were auditioning for the role of Brian Clough in The Damned United.
The second disc, Still Some Light, is lighter and several of the tracks seem a bit over-sentimental at first. Maybe they are, but what emerges is Fay’s loyalty to his natural mode of expression. For example, “Hello Old Tree” is enveloped in the feeling of returning again and again for reverie to a favorite spot in his landscape. That song makes me think of John Cooper Powys’ notion that all of creation, including trees and stones, has a soul. Equally, the song “Diamond Studied Days” revels unashamedly in a strong feeling of grateful nostalgia that mirrors its topic: the love Fay’s parents gave him as a child. He merges several of his main themes, nature, peace and spiritual redemption, on the hymn-like track "There Is A Valley". His singing (of his own words) on “My Eyes Open” defies the truth that they were written quite separately for Michael Cashmore's originally unrelated music, so good is the match. Like most of the second disc, the piece is quiet and lush. By contrast, “I Wonder,” the final track written by John Fay, has a pleasantly rough production and a ragged acoustic edge that some might associate with Syd Barrett.
Fay's brother did the cover and booklet paintings and there are some completely natural looking photographs of Bill Fay and his close family in which he seems happy and contented and his hair looks like it hasn't been combed maybe since his mother tried to do it when he was a schoolboy! In the booklet he writes one of the longest thank you letters I've ever read. With almost forty years betwen these recordings the over-riding feeling is that there's no pretense and, depite some of the grand concerns, no preaching. I find some of the songs less successful than others but mainly enjoy the lovely imperfections of these marvelous demos and home recordings. This is the sound of someone recognizing danger and fears, but hoping and trusting for the best. Bill Fay’s proceeds from this album will go to “the major charities active in the poorest places of the world.” Including, I believe, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières.