When I last encountered Prometheus Burning, it was in the review I did last year for their 'Plague called HuMANity' album last year. While they certainly got my attention, I felt that the album was underdeveloped and somewhat monotonous. It seems as though the deficiencies have been corrected on 'Displacement Disorder' to a large degree, at least on the first disc. We'll get to disc 2 later.
The physical album is 2 CDs in a DVD box, Limited Edition of 500. The electronic download is unlimited I guess. Since the electronic download is considerably cheaper, I'd recommend that, if you were considering a purchase. But who knows? The limited edition could be worth a lot more'¦someday. The artwork on the case by Paul McCarroll is suitably disturbing, which is just the way Prometheus Burning likes it.
On this album we have Nikki Telladictorian (vox, lyrics, keys, audioweevil, electric violin); Greg VanEck (production, modular synths, drum machines, sequencing); Nick Vasculator (additional programming on Disc 2). That's pretty much the same crew as their last album (minus Nick, who did tour support in 2009 for the band), although Nikki and Greg are the responsible parties for Disc 1, which is where we begin. After about 40 or so seconds of sampled dialogue about 'Rites of Passage,' the opening track 'Violator' comes barreling at you full-throttle like your worst industrial nightmare; pounding, pulsating, relentless in it's execution. Nikki's shouted and screamed vocals bitchslap your ears with reckless abandon. WOW! What an opening. 'Suffering in Silence' is anything but silent. Crunchy, pounding hardcore industrial percussion, a spooky synth-line and Nikki's surly vox ' You wrote me a letter'¦you wrote me DEATH'¦.this is how you like me best'¦suffering in silence'¦' This is one noisy, malevolent album, but focused in its attack. 'Mindbenders' is a track that has got to rock the dancefloor and get those rivethead platforms a stompin'. Only sampled dialogue vocals on that one, but it works great.
'Anonymous Death Threats' was inspired by real death threats left on Nikki's blog in 2009. For the life of me, I can understand why anyone would want to post death threats to such a sweet, innocent girl. (Yeah, right.) Seriously though, death threats are uncool, and this was Nikki's way of exorcising them, or at least showing how controversial she might be. From what I've seen of the band on YouTube videos, Nikki has the potential to be the Lady Gaga of the industrial world. She just needs a bigger costume budget. The raspy vocals on this track sound stereotypically industrial, but atypical of Nikki's vox, but there's no other vocalist credited, so go figure.
The beast is unleashed in 'Unpleasant Presence,' left to rampage all over your city like Godzilla. 'Flesh Addict' [Nikki's Big Flapping Vagina Mix] is the most accessible and least noisy track on the album, being somewhat minimal and straightforward mid-tempo dancefloor fodder. Telladictorian's lyrics ridicule goth club divas ' 'Don't trip on those platform boots, Pony falls weighing you down, I can see your makeup is running, You cake it on like a clown'¦Is your corset too tight? Glow sticks making you frown? Queen bitch at the goth club, I spit on your crown!' Hey, Nikki, is this the pot calling the kettle black? I know it's satire, but these kids are the ones buying the tickets to your shows! Still, I like the songs with Nikki's voice on them better than the ones with the other more traditional raspy masculine vocals which just sound like any other industrial band. And there are more of those in later tracks.
There is a lot of raucous, noisy circuit-bending going in some tracks that follow; in fact, aside from tortured dialogue vocal samples, that's about all there is in 'The Ultimate Evil'. We get a reprise of 'Violator' [remixed by Imminent], which is a good deal longer, and even noisier than the first version. Sounded a bit aurally dull to me though and lost some of its brutal impact. Tracks 11 & 12 are just a minute each of blank spaces before you get to the bonus track, 'October'. It's an instrumental that largely consists of mid to high frequency feedbacky drones and overtones. This probably would have been best saved for the second disc, in my opinion.
Speaking of the second disc, which is titled 'Four Pi Movement ' Murder in the Raw,' I was really looking forward to it knowing it was experimental and recorded live using only modular and hardware devices. My first experiences on disc 2 were rather unpleasant, and I couldn't even make it all the way through the first time around. This is nothing like disc 1 and is sure to appeal only to those who are absolute noisecore freaks. Most of the 13 tracks (+9 one minute+ blanks before the 13th) are harsh, punishing. brutal noise pieces from which random synthetic effluvia often emerges like a broken low-tech video game. There is a lot of different stuff going on, and the real noise enthusiast will be rewarded, but at the price of sanity. One problem I noticed was a lack of contrast in dynamics. On nearly every track, when things get going, they're full-throttle, leaving little ambient breathing space. Perhaps this is a consequence of doing it all live, but it wears out the ears quickly. 'Four Pi Movement' is one of the most brutal noise assaults I've heard in a long time. Absolutely relentless and uncompromising with few exceptions. There is sort of a respite on track 5, 'The Shadow People Take Control,' which is somewhat less caustic, but the grinding bass might shred your subwoofer (or cause light objects in the room to vibrate off shelves, if the volume is loud enough). I've reviewed (and often enjoyed) a fair amount of noise artists in my time, but I was hard-pressed to make it through this entire disc. On a purely aesthetic level, it's a remarkable achievement, especially for being recorded live. On the other hand, there are few people with the audial stamina to take it. I would have appreciated more breaks and spaces, dynamic shifts and lower key ambience interspersed with the sonic outbursts, but it is what it is.
I'd give 'Displacement Disorder' 4 stars because for the most part it's a very good industrial/noise album that packs a wallop and is largely focused and somewhat accessible without commercial concession. I can only give 'Four Pi Movement' 2.5 stars as it is a very difficult and problematic listen. That equals out to 3.5 stars. There might be some redeeming utilitarian value to 'Four Pi Movement' though; it could clear out a crowded room pretty quick, and should get terrorists to talk better than water-boarding. In any case, Prometheus Burning have assuredly carved out a niche for themselves in the world of industrial music, and if they ever plan to play any live dates in Ithaca, I'd be sorely tempted go see them. And that's saying a lot, since I don't go out much anymore.