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Music Reviews

JORGE CASTRO: The Joys and Rewards of Repetition

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Artist: JORGE CASTRO
Title: The Joys and Rewards of Repetition
Format: CD
Label: Public Eyesore (@)
Over the last few years, Puertorican musician Jorge Castro has offered, as part of the Cornucopia duo, some of the most brutal and intense harsh noise in the (overcrowded?) international scene. But he has also developed a very interesting solo project of ambient guitar sounds. This cd-r (which must have been issued in early 2001) features four long and homogeneous tracks of drones and gulfs of sound which manage to be both abstract and emotional, constantly shifting (the title is indicative, but there IS change within the pieces as well) from lighter, serene atmospheres to hypnotizing echoes and darker moments. If you've had the chance of listening to Steve Roach's recent "Strems & Currents", you can find a similar style here, only even more pushed towards abstractness and impalpability. Definitely worth listening to many times. As usual, Public Eyesore design and packaging are minimal but very elegant and eye-catching, and fit well with the contents of the record. The label has also issued a more recent collection of Castro's works, I'll try to talk about that in the next future.


davaNtage: No Candle Light

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Artist: davaNtage
Title: No Candle Light
Format: CD EP
Label: Black Rain (@)
A cd-ep (5 tracks, 22') featuring exclusive songs and remixes as an advance of the forthcoming new album "Global badlands". I recall listening to davaNtage's previous work, but I can't trace the review right now, so I hope my memory doesn't betray me... I think davaNtage's electro/EBM has become a bit lighter – while "The Warming" has that slow, darker groove, "No candle light" (remixed by Future Trail) and "Defense" (normal version and remix by Future Trail) opt for a relatively fast-paced rhythm and ear-catching refrains, while maintaining a kind of sullen mood. Ok, then there's "Switch Off", a track featuring Cyborg Attack's Sandro F. on vocals – I haven't liked C.A.'s cd and I don't like this one, I think the gruffy death-metal vocals are really dull and over-the-top.


SOPHIA: Spite

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Artist: SOPHIA (@)
Title: Spite
Format: CD
Label: Cold Meat Industry (@)
Distributor: Audioglobe
Sophia is, with Arcana, one of Peter Pettersson's projects and while the second one is more concentrated on classical atmospheres, Arcana has a "industrial/military" sound structure and I assure you that SPITE is really powerful! The eight tracks of the CD (the seventh, "Stained", and the eight, which is an hidden track, have been recorded live in Bochum on December 2001) have got as main structure powerful percussive sounds along brass or strings and are capable of overloading your nervous system because they are: tense, hypnotic and sick. If you have not idea of what it could sound, try to imagine an evil version of the first Laibach: the ones which were shouting songs like "Brat Moj". As reported on the label presentation: "Evolving the theme of spite certainly spawns anger. Here the rhythmical pounding, a bit more tasty clinical than before, spews forth a scary atmosphere and the oppressive walls of heavy string arrangements fuels the picture of an imaginary, personal hell". Really amazing...


DISMANTLED: Dismantled

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Artist: DISMANTLED (@)
Title: Dismantled
Format: CD
Label: Metropolis (@)
Here is the year's newcomer Dismantled. There's been a lot of talking about American immigrated Russian Gary Zon, and after I first heard of him from TG Mondalf at RhythmUS Network, I interviewed him (please read interview in the appropriate section for more info and background). He's only been doing electronic music for a little over a year and yet after an mp3 demo and a couple of compilations, his powerful blend of electro-industrial music has convinced even the talent scouts at Metropolis. Nine blasting songs where strong bombastic industrial beats are the common ground for atmospheric long-chord layers and jumpy ebm textures and an intricate web of sounds, media samples and bass lines. Filtered and vocoded vocals singing lyrics about life, annihilation, extermination and so forth (including a 9/11 tribute). An outstanding balance between robust rawness and melody. Perfect for all lovers of FLA (primary influence), but also :W: (who he remixed), Velvet Acid Christ, Haujobb, F242. Album will hit the streets on June 4th in US and June 17th in Europe. Look out for his first single "Dystopia" also!


VV.AA.: definingTECH

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Artist: VV.AA.
Title: definingTECH
Format: CD
Label: Orbisonic (Manifesto) (@)
Distributor: Green Galactic
Coming the stores June 11th is LA Manifesto records' sub-label Orbisonic's first release "definingTECH", a various artists comp whose primary goal seems to be to set a standard for the nu-new wave, or rather sort of an ultimate record about how older 80es electro has merged with new wave, which obviously isn't being used as a term the same way you're all used to back in the days. Let's put it like this: "definingTECH" is all about the new movement (wave) of dancy old fashioned electro-pop. It's the Kraftwerk playing with a Groovebox. The 80es' all-innovation-and-electronica attitude couples with today's desire to shake the boodie and just have a good time. The sampler has been put together by the authoritative and knowledgeable figure of Summer Forest (collaboration with Annie Leibovitz, writer for a magazine and of a book about the rave scene as well as director of a New Orleans electronic music scene report documentary film) and presents fourteen international male and female sound crafters, manipulators, Djs, bands: FisherSpooner, Memory Boy, Japanese Telecom, Miss Kittin & the Hacker, Shapeshiftr & the Sentinel, Dexter, Innate, Peaches, Bis, Adult, Bug Orchestra, Mr Velcro Fastener, Detroit Grand Pubahs, Felix da Housecat. The final result is a pretty heterogeneous album that keeps a common denominator in the synthetic computer driven patterns, the drum machine beats, the techno fashion with sneak-peaks at more commercial stuff as well as at more experimental things or just plain different approaches you might wanna check out yourself. It's a good starting point if you are new to the genre, and an cool album to have if you are into it already, but don't ever take anything for definitive, just keep exploring for even more cool stuff out there! Go with the flow!