In a total of 58 minutes you will definitely get the noise you so richly deserve. "Improvisation 1" begins with some kind of field recording with a certain hum and foley noises that sounds like setting up, but the real harsh noise doesn't begin until 2:36, very loud at first, then attenuated downward a bit as levels are set. It goes through a number of permutations with a steady baseline of rumbling sonics then sectional spikes in parts. Sometimes it sounds like wind against the mike, and others like somebody left the water running in the trough. You can tell when equipment/knob fiddling is being done, and though 16+ minutes seems like a long time to spend here, it passes fairly quickly. Before it's all over there is a long fade on not much sonically. "Improvisation 2" is only a couple minutes shorter than "Improvisation 1" sounding a bit like a broken motor boat with growling electronics and a puttering sound. Although the sonics go through various manipulations, it manages to stay on course throughout the piece, perhaps becoming a flying model airplane at the end? Ha-ha!
"Improvisation 3" is the briefest on the album at 2:12 with a baseline of a steady hum drone that seems to break up in the middle as it twists and turns fighting the current. That crackling destruction continues in "Improvisation 4," widening the drone spectrum and adding sub-harmonics, Some of the more interesting sonics occur during this piece, as it seems that Brett is having a really good time with his knob twiddling. (See- you don't need expensive synthesizers and samplers to make cool, noisy sounds.) Although the noise is harsh, it's not full-bore max volume obnoxious, more of a careful curation of bizarre electronic sounds. "Improvisation 5" begins with a typical sounding ground hum, then crackling noises that sound like an electronic gear repair is being attempted on the spot. There is a lot of futzing going on, but I guess that's what makes the piece interesting. Considering the minimal amount of equipment used and the immediacy of the works, this should appeal to noise enthusaist who relish off-the-cuff works.