Tag Archive for 'krautrock'

Zomes — Zomes (Holy Mountain, 2008)

Following the good example of his bandmate Daniel Higgs, Lungfish guitarist Asa Osbourne recently released his first solo album with the psych stalwarts at Holy Mountain.  Departing from the long, epic prog-scale psych behemoths so common in Holy Mountain’s catalog (namely, Wooden Shjips, La Otracina, The Shining Path, etc.), Zomes‘ sixteen tracks are each deletable snack-sized Fig Newtons of grainy krautrock, together sounding like a collection of lo-fidelity psychedelic sonnets.  At forty minutes, the album is brief, and its short, digestible tracks leave the album feeling even shorter.  With one or two exceptions, each track builds upon a single delectable electric guitar, drum or effects loop left on repeat. Zomes‘ looping, repetitive quality gives the album the endearing feel of a handcrafted, late-night attic composition.

‘Membranous Plane’ best exemplifies Osbourne’s reliance on simple looping melodies.  The track’s rubbery electric guitar melody pairs with a handful of lonely snare cracks, cycling together over and over again.  Slight changes in inflection liven up the loop, but these changes are nearly imperceptible.  At long last, as the body’s neurons begin to short-circuit in response to incessant repetition, an abrupt static interruption upsets the loop, and evolves into a brief decayed reprisal of the familiar arrangement.

Membranous Plane

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While imparting some urgency and a film-cut quality, Zomes‘ repetition does leave the album without any recognizable dramatic arc; the album’s sixteen tracks sound isolated from each other, each its own independent patchwork of colorful, snackpack loops.  Without cohesion, or long, focal tracks to establish theme, the album could pass for a compilation of film compositions.  Oddly enough, this kraut/psych hodgepodge not only works, it astounds.  The album’s layered attention-deficit disorder — each track isolated from the others, each track itself spun from tight internal loops –is it’s most endearing feature.  These soundtrack cuts evoke scenes ranging from the sideburns and tire smoke of Steve McQueen’s Bullitt (‘Crowning Orbs’) to the slow-motion contemplation of Jean Painleve’s underwater exploration films (‘Clear Shapes’, ‘Petroglyphs’) and the barren, post-apocalyptic tarmac of Mel Gibson’s Mad Max (‘Black Magic Band’).

Crowning Orbs

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Petroglyphs

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In the end, Osbourne’s Zomes amounts to a sort of cross between a Radiophonic Workshop collection and krautrock in the vein of Amon Duul II or Can.  The unique blend of the familiar Holy Mountain psych/kraut fare with the soundtrack aesthetic amounts to essential listening, an album begging for repeat listens.

Steve Hauschildt — Rapt for Liquid Minister c20 (Arbor, 2008)

No Fun Fest — New York City’s annual, earth-scorching, three day noise music event — is the sort of hedonistic celebration of niche-noise that could only flourish in an handful of cities across the world.  It’s here that Emeralds made their first major east-coast live appearance in support of Solar Bridge, the group’s proper release debut; the Cleveland trio of Steve Hauschildt, Mark McGuire, and John Elliot performed on stage alongside the luminaries of noise, kraut, electronic and drone, including canonized genre pioneers like Cluster, Thurston Moore, and Tony Conrad, and celebrated contemporaries like Keith Fullerton Whitman.  After two years toiling in relative obscurity, with dozens of limited run releases on microlabels over the past two years, Emeralds have now released one of the year’s best drone albums, and performed admirably alongside the genre’s giants in New York.  With Rapt for Liquid Minister (Arbor, 2008), an album of sparse dronescapes and heady moog jubilation, Steve Hauschildt proves perfectly capable of enhancing an already sterling reputation as part of Emeralds with stunning music of his own.

Krautrock and analog-synth adulation abound here; ‘Cybernetic Inevitable‘, the album’s ten minute climactic closer, bears an uncanny resemblance to Popol Vuh’s unforgettable 1975 album Aguirre (specifically, Aguirre II), opening with an ethereal chorus of vocal drones.  Aside from Rapt’s additional layer of familiar tape fuzz, the Popol Vuh and Hauschildt tracks, recorded generations apart, mirror each other wonderfully, and together echo No Fun Fest’s testament to krautrock’s enduring vibrancy.  Just as S.H. seems to be settling into a familiar foggy drone piece five minutes into ‘Cybernetic’, the track departs abruptly from Aguirre and the vocal chorus with a blinding, colorful orchestra of analog-synths.  Too brief Cluster or Göttschingand scale analog-synth jaunts, like those found at the tail end of ‘Cybernetic’ and enveloping the album opener ‘Indoor Travel’, prove to be Rapt’s most alluring feature.  Rapt for Liquid Minister is balanced nicely with an equal serving of abundant open, droning soundscapes, best represented by the album’s modest title track.

Aside from its unfortunate brevity, the album is a complete pleasure.  With only twenty minutes total running time, the album does feels somewhat stunted.  Considering Rapt isn’t presented as a full, proper album, however, these complaints are easy enough to dismiss.  The album’s brevity does, on the other hand, make for easy and enjoyable listening in short sittings, a rare quality in drone music.

Rapt for Liquid Minister is long OOP at Arbor, but there may still be copies in stock at Fusetron Sound and Mimaroglu Sound for the next few weeks.  Expect remaining copies to disappear quickly; aside from an earlier release on Emeralds’ house label Gneiss Things, Rapt is Hauschildt’s only proper solo-release.  Fortunately, three new releases, two cassettes and an LP, are on the way, so Steven Hauschildt — performing independently, and as part of Emeralds — should be increasingly visible in the coming months.  With any luck, Rapt for Liquid Minister will receive the attention and wider release it deserves.  Kranky would fit nicely.

cybernetic_inevitable.mp3

Emeralds @ No Fun Festival, 2008

Cluster @ No Fun Festival, 2008

picture: No Fun Fest 2008-42 by flickr user donatellodoesmachines (please don’t sue me)




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