Matmos – Supreme Balloon


Just a quick one, hopefully, to add some momentum following the slow blogging month of May. Matador Records charge a lot to send singles to the UK. Being increasingly fond of modern punk rocker Jay Reatard, I am buying his singles as and when they become available. Matador seems to employ a flat rate for shipping costs when it comes to first item, though, as they stick about $22 on the top. That’s rather odd for a $3 single, so I decide to make that $22 mean something by ordering an album to accompany it. While I am a slight rube, it is always an album I intend to buy anyway (last time was the rather underwhelming Times New Viking record), so I figure I’m getting an item shipped for free. Just don’t put me in charge of the economy or we’re (more) fucked.

As you can see from the second picture, there was some slight damage in transit; such is the danger of sending (two) 180-gram slabs of vinyl hurtling over the ocean like some kind of hipster Frisbee. Level Plane records have a better idea: extricate the record (in sleeve) from the packaging so as to prevent it from doing an Oddjob on the surrounding loveliness. And as evinced above (and below), the loveliness in this particular case is great, emphasising the tragedy of its besmirchment. This is my own personal Rape of the Lock.

For the record, Relapse Records is another baddie when it comes to this gatefold immolation; conversely Robotic Empire is thoughtful and thorough in its packaging methods. Shilling complete; free stuff please.

The music itself is lovely. Matmos apparently mentioned Jean-Jacques Perrey and Terry Riley as influences, and while influence of the towering In Sound From Way Out! is audible, my personal aural memory drew comparison with Boards Of Canada‘s Hi-Scores E.P., all melody and levity pre-Yawntology and seriousness.

I tend to divide the electronic music I encounter into four categories, easily symbolised by areas of human anatomy: head music, as I’m sure you can gather, is the theory stuff which spans a wide region from concrete through IDM even the earnest young bucks of Dubstep; feet, which is dance music obviously*; heart, which is the rarest of electronic musics, but I’d include Vespertine, a lot of Manual‘s output, as well some H****ology/Ambient stuff like Porn Sword Tobacco, Hulk et al. The last category is the overtly melodic. Perhaps we can call that small intestine music or something. The early Moog stuff was very melodic, as was a lot of BBC Radiophonic Workshop; I suppose it’s rather like early video games, the technological limitations thereof forcing developers to focus on ‘pure gameplay’ rather than the bells and whistles of today’s full-motion-interactive-movie culture.

Funnily enough, some early electronic music was pretty much just bells and whistles.

I digress. I loved this. Didn’t quite get it all listened to – I appear to be saving the twenty-four minute title track for a rainy(er) day – but the three sides before that splashed gently over my ears in a delightful and delighting manner. Beyond the initial gimmick (the sticker on the packaging shouted about ‘SYNTHS ONLY! NO MICS OR OWT!’, which reminded me of the intentional and baffling self-limitation of the likes of Rage Against The Machine (‘ALL MUSIC PERFORMED BY US GUILTY PARTIES IS LITERALLY JUST A BASS GUITAR, A REGLIAR ONE, SOME DRUMS AND A DUDE’S VOICE! ISN’T THAT AMAZING. NO, WE SIGNED TO SONY SO WE COULD BRING THE SYSTEM DOWN FROM THE INSIDE, SERIOUSLY’) or Iron Maiden (‘NO SYNTHS AT ALL! WE’RE LIKE THE OPPOSITE OF WHAT MATMOS WILL BE 28 YEARS FROM NOW. ERR, UNTIL 1986, WHEN WE’LL BE ALL ABOUT SYNTHS. AND SYNTH GUITARS. SORRY ABOUT THAT ONE; IT’LL SEEM LIKE A GOOD IDEA AT THE TIME’)** the music was delightful.

I’m going to have to start a new paragraph now. That one kinda got out of control, despite asterisking control techniques. It should go without saying that I am no subscriber to any single member of the bodypartronica states, the more regions a particular music can straddle, the better for me. So, while I cited Vespertine as heart music, it also resides within the areas of head and small intestine. Not so much the feet, though. LFO is feet, small intestine and no small amount of head, but not the most heart-based of musics I have heard.

Supreme Balloon’s strength lies in its combination of the four. The old breadth/depth trade-off comes into play here, but the original conceit (and execution thereof, aided ably by the likes of Riley and Jay Lesser) is rather head-ly; the most prominent mode of communication here, due to the inherent nature of synthing it up, is small intestine; this retro-activity combined with lovely melodies brings it into heart territory; finally, the sheer unabashed effervescence of the whole brew*** makes one want to dance about the room in wordless joy at the wordless wonderment emanating from the B&W speaker boxes.

Apologies for the lack of content here, though my publication of this particular literary misadventure suggests my apology is not honest. Just wanted to say this is really good, and to share the nice artwork. And also to mention that some of the songs on the record(s) reminded me of Japanese video game soundtracker Koji Kondo, not just in the well thought out construction of the melodies and arrangements, but due more to the fact that they evoked vividly-coloured, rather abstract vistas in my mind. And that those vistas were more naively edifying than the kind of detached cool Rez-scapes that an Amon Tobin or Venetian Snares might cause to bloom in my mind while my eyes are closed and I lie somewhat serenely on my back.

I like both the innocent Technicolor-with-bold-outlines-on-a-sunny-day and the too-cool-for-me-to-legitimately-actually-be-into motifs, so I win either way. Anyway, this is the innocence. But it’s a simplistic innocence masking an endo-skeleton of wires and brains all attached to each other, which is really good because it means I am likely to get more and more out of it the more I listen to it. Which I plan on doing, so this is an exciting time.

* Post-90s, feet music is a preferred mode of musical communication among the electronic music cognoscenti; after the self-proclaimed Intelligent Dance Music clicked and cut its way into something of a cul de sac, it was once again agreed at the electronic village meeting that feet music was more legitimate due to dancing taking precedence over thinking among the no-mates music dorks (of which I am admittedly one) whose sudden self awareness revolted them. It’s the Fear Of Pretension, don’t you know. Extending this aside somewhat, I always considered ‘it’s pretentious’ to be the single weakest criticism of art in Christendom. Or Mohammedom, Buddhadom or [insert religious figure here]… As Type O Negative said (or more likely quoted): Functionless art is merely tolerated vandalism… we are the vandals.

** Or A Reminiscent Drive. Remember A Reminiscent Drive? (t)He(y?) were all about the ‘SYNTHS ONLY. NO GIRLS ALLOWED’ mantra way back in the 90s. Mercy Street: eleven years young!

*** Despite talk of ‘brews’ in relation to body parts should in no way be construed as either tacit or articulated endorsement of cannibalistic behaviour. [/disclaimer]

Live Review: Genghis Tron, 11th May 2008


Joseph’s Well, Leeds.
Support: Nachtmystium, Middleheim

I attend loads of gigs nowadays, relatively speaking, but I was looking forward to none as much as this one. And – though Nachtmystium and Zoroaster come well-recommended – the excitement building in me was for one band: Genghis Tron. I had attempted to see them in 2006 but, after attempts to secure tickets in advance failed, I was turned away from the door of what turned out to be an all-dayer. Damn you, scenes just large enough to fill the upstairs of a pub but sufficiently below-the-radar as to prevent my finding out details!

Fortunately, advance tickets were available for this one, though it did turn out to be another card stacked with bands one would otherwise resent parting with any money to see. Fortunately, I turned up fashionably late enough to miss all but the last three bands. Unfortunately for me, Atlanta’s Zoroaster had pulled out of the tour, so those of us who dared step into the Well’s descended pit of a venue suffered the indignity that was Middleheim.

Not sure what to make of this one. Were they a joke band that were investing a weird amount of effort for so little punchline (as a wise man once said, the line is a dot), or a really deluded bunch of honest suburb black metal kids? I’m hoping it’s the latter, as the one thing worse than a shit band is a shit band that thinks it’s funny. Playing to a backing tape of drums and the occasional synth-phonic flourish, our frontline was a chubby gathering of eager World of Warcrafters, the vocalist decorated with mullet-beyond-irony and some form of battle vest.

Vocals were standard BM shrieks and though it was nothing Cradle Of Filth hadn’t done dozens of times better by 1996, there were moments when a particular riff would hit the spot. Not enough moments, though, and it’d have been far more satisfying had the vocalist’s betwixt-song pronouncements been in BM shriek, rather than monotonous Northern mumble. In conclusion then: pretty awful, but they get a bonus point if they actually meant it.

Shortly after this, the divide between Local Band and Proper Band was evinced in fine style. To compare Chicago black-thrash titans Nachtmystium with Middleheim would be like comparing Hyerion to a sat- well, you get the idea. There’s a bit of a gulf in music and presentation. Not that Nachtmystium (sorry, I just love that name sop shall type is as often as possible. Nachtmystium) were at all ostentatious in their black metal. They eschewed Immortal/Dimmu Borgir-style corpsepaint or Middle Earth S&M costume in favour of rocking the kind of lost-in-time long hair-and-sleeveless-tee look that can only be pulled off by the sort of person who could (and probably would) bite ones nose off and replace it somewhere very uncomfortable.

They were more musically straight forward than I had imagined, too. I had listened to their music, but long ago during the depth of winter in 2006, and had come to the conclusion that they were atmosphere-based (like a Southern Lord band), when that was not actually the case. In hindsight I probably confused them with Khlyst, or perhaps Xasthur, other USBM entities whose names are endlessly entertaining to intone. While this band is certainly evil in its sound, it’s more of a heads-down kind of evil, a marauding horde of Norsemen steaming toward the village you suddenly realise is woefully under-defended, rather than spooky-ooky atmospherics that make you think a djinn is knocking about in a dark corner of your attic.

No, this is more of a Wino-inspired, High On Fire-peered rock ‘n’ thrash take on black metal, rather reminiscent of mid-nineties Entombed, but more straight faced (and perhaps a touch less shit-faced). The songs would be catchy if I were more familiar with them, and they certainly hurtled along with sufficient energy and stoned enthusiasm to make me wonder if I can secure one of their albums on twelve-inch for what would presumably be an insanely inflated price. If you want your black metal to be more metal shred than eerie blackness, the thunderous grooves of Nachtmystium are for you.

Rarely does a metal band split opinion like New York’s Genghis Tron. You have bands that people either like or haven’t heard of, like Converge, or bands that people either really dislike or pretend to like (come on, is Pelican anybody’s favourite band in the world?). Of course you obviously have, given metal’s broad church, sub-genres that are not to the liking of some: there is also the rather moot point of metal non-fans not liking metal, but that’s neither here nor there for the purpose of this report.

Genghis Tron is a band that manages to rub fans of fast, frenetic metal the wrong way – even though that is their primary modus operandi – and absolutely enrapture certain other fans of the aforementioned metallic freneticism. It is not even particularly obvious why this would be the case, though the simplest reason for this might well be the bands reliance on electronic (as opposed to merely electric) sound production. It is a sad thing to say in this day and age (twelve years after Pitch Shifter released the seminal Infotainment?, sixteen post Godflesh’s Pure opus, about 65 million since the Young Gods were knocking about), but people seem quite uncomfortable with an extreme metal band involving Aphex-circa-’96 bleepcore melodies.

Maybe it’s because these sans-metal sequences represent a lull in the mosh-pit frenzy. That usually requires a level of pit action to actually be happening which, for whatever reason, is becoming less and less likely. Let us not mention that the only way a pit could break out at an Isis or Nadja gig is unintentionally; only the other week the furious rock of Boris was met with the kind of freeze frame statue action that had me thinking the Terracotta Army had been smuggled into Manchester for one night only. I can happily report, though, that this particular gig was blessed with the sight of people dancing.

Perhaps, in this enlightened era post-slamdancing, the beats and breaks of the Tron are precisely what is required to get the beardy, bespectacled metal fan dancing. One thing’s for sure: they certainly know how to make with the funnies. Between songs early in the set, main man Mookie had them/us rolling in the, err, Well with his judicious (over)use of a particularly energetic ‘YEAH’ sample. But rewind for a minute, because the start of the set was arguably the most interesting bit.

As with any band pleased with its most recent album, GT started the set with the song that starts their latest record. In this case, it was ‘Board Up the House’, from the album of the same name, a song whose synth mantra spirals up into a psychedelic sky, Boards Of Canada’s deoxyribonucleic acid unravelling and devolving into little fluffy mushroom clouds. While the ears were engaged with the ever-building arpeggio, the rods and cones were occupied with the super-neon lights erected behind the band that danced and flashed like exploding electric eels.

This is what a good gig is all about. Can’t be more than a couple of hundred people in the Well on this Sunday evening, but the band puts on a show. It would later transpire that they weren’t really feeling it (hence no encore. While I usually oppose such fellatious practice, I wouldn’t have minded this time, more on which later), but if you don’t see them often you’d be forgiven for thinking otherwise. I can barely imagine the delights of this trio in full flow. So the house was built up before boards went up, and the structure was scintillating. Though this new material was nowhere near as familiar as the tunes off Dead Mountain Mouth, it didn’t have to be. The performance nourished the fondness, until it was hard to resist expressing unabashed physical joy at what was being heard.

This frustratingly brief set was dominated by the current album, almost to its detriment. It was great to hear songs like ‘Things Don’t Look Good’, and especially the titanic slow-burner that is ‘Relief’ (still their statement song after the dust of recency has settled a tad) in all its glory, but perhaps more of a nod to the bands brief history would have improved things.

They played DMM’s ‘Chapels’, a taste of the debut full length that only roused my appetite without bedding her back down. Less of the melody on this one, as Tron brought the zeroes and ones in full force, alternating like Dr. J and Mr. H between electro overload and grind bastard madness. There is a riff near the end of it that is one of the more visceral in recent years, up there with Old Man Gloom’s ‘Valhalla’ or ‘Stoked’ by RTX; it is a change of pace from the thrash, that sounds positively elephantine in comparison. Its own take on Hadrian’s herd marches along the Alps that are our synapses before a gargantuan pick-slide engulfs them in an avalanche of white noise.

Also aired was ‘Asleep on the Forest Floor’ which, far from the foliaged idyll suggested by the nomenclature, starts with an anxiety attack of palpitating keyboard notes before the meat of the song reminds the audience of Misery Loves Co’s destructive ‘My Mind Still Speaks’. Immensely enjoyable as this brace was, modern classic ‘White Walls’ was a glaring omission. Samples/synthsman Michael Sochynsky later let slip the fact that they actually played it as an encore the night before, which was vexing to say the least.

Still, it was promised for next time the band tours this isle (November, according to their guitarist), and I shall not let them forget that. Nevertheless, heartening was the fact that the band holds so much stock in the current album. Rightfully so, as its high quality becomes more evident with each passing listen. Genghis Tron came. They saw. They even got people dancing, and hopefully made a couple of new fans (though I wonder how many turning up to the Well on a school night would be floating voters in the first place) in the process. Larger venues, and longer sets, surely beckon in the near future so this taster of metal to come, while frustrating, was appetite whetting in the extreme. Are there better live metal bands out there? Summer gigs from the likes of Melt-Banana and Converge should prove interesting indeed.

Be Your Own PET! – Get Awkward

Those crazy kids from Tennessee are back! With their second album! Why all the exclamation marks?! Why, because that’s the kind of effect this lot has on you! But what’s this – they’ve expanded their sonic palette? Oh. But we’ll get to that later; all you need to know right now is that their debut was pretty much the most furious record of 2006 (outside Genghis Tron and Converge, like). Not just that, but it managed to balance the angst with a sense of melody and exuberance not seen since I Get Wet.

What was most exciting about this record was the news that, like their beloved Bad Brains, some of the songs off this record have been Banned in D.C. (and the rest of America). ‘Threats of violence and murder’ abound, apparently, and I wonder what’s been so wholesome about Slayer these last two decades of major labeldom. It has to be said, there is a new air of menace to Jemina’s vocals, those super-pop melodies snarled and spat out while she meditates on knifing classmates. It’s all about as serious as prime Misfits, and just as anthemic at times (‘Zombie Graveyard Party’ suggests this isn’t an accident).

The music varies between really fast and slightly less fast, with nothing as close to a ballad as ‘October, First Account’ off the debut. But within that super-tight remit of fuzz and fury is a micro-managed sense of dynamics. While the band doesn’t paint with the broad brush of the tired quiet-loud scene, this loud-loud aesthetic carries enough variety to prevent the record from flagging over its fittingly brief life. Over these fifteen songs, two are over the three minute mark, but the musical shapes range from Donnas-on-PCP pop rock to demonic thrash, with that Ramones/Misfits sense of the fifties and early sixties looming large throughout.

Shackleton – Death is Not Final / T++ remix


I swear the wait was forever between SKULLS 07 and 08, those being the Villalobos ‘Blood on My Hands’ mix and the Appleblim & Peverelist single. And before I know it, the next one is out, this time the latest in an apparently constant flow of quality from one Sam Shackleton. Visually this stands out from what went before, the dense, intricate inking snaking over the whole cover.

Speaking of dense ink, the sonics share that same attribute. This is very much the next step in a very steady process of evolution for the label, a chemical marriage of the dank air of releases past and the more recent flair for the Middle Eastern that worked so well on the crisp ‘Hamas Rule’. Shackleton has harnessed the power of sluggish smudge-core for the forces of good, which sits surprisingly well with the clever percussion in the mix.

The beat itself is very interesting: numerous strands and strains forming like Voltron – or are they all just being sucked into the singularity, fragmenting away from the whole before the structure’s atoms are rent into a million pieces? Arguably more entertaining is the remix on the flip, which peaks when the bass-line falls away and you’re left with the sound of decaying ambience: it’s like the air is being sucked out of everyone in the room. Inevitably it returns, but the effect is fantastically simple.

T++ injects energy to the slightly lethargic original; now the Soundboy seems to have finally been disposed of, the denizens of the Skull Disco have dropped the skunk joints for a minute to shake a leg. And it’s actually not that anachronistic, possibly due to Villalobos schooling the slow-step massive for eighteen blood-soaked minutes last year. Whatever the motivation, this is another fine slab of tuneage from Skull Disco: their ever-expanding troupe of sonic adventurers consistently bring the slightly deranged goods.