I
promised my friend Rain Jackson that I would review his music, so here goes:
one full week of reviews for Subliminal Stimuli, starting with his first
ambient album, Sajat Somorusàg.
The
fact that ambient music is so easy to produce is both its greatest advantage
and its downfall. Some people take this fact to mean that anything can be
defined as ambient music, provided it has little to no percussion (although
this limitation has also been challenged by some of Aphex Twin's ambient
works). Such reasoning is what gave birth to subgenres like "drone
ambient" and "noise ambient," the results of pure laziness and
musical asininity. Some great examples include NGYN's "Not For Easy
listening" series, AnonyWolf's ambient albums, and just about everything
by Falsewander and Sunn O))).
Fortunately,
there's not much of that nonsense on this album. "Sajat Szomoruság,"
the only Subliminal ambient album that's still available to anyone (unless you
count "My Pain Is Audible," a "noise" album), manages to
mellow me out and also creep me out a little without seeming like it's trying
too hard to do either.
Its
opener, "Újvidék igaz (Lýkur)," discards the atmospheric reverbs and
wispy effects used by traditional ambient tracks, instead running an eerie
vintage-esque melody through a phaser or some sort of pass filter, distorting
it slightly to create the kind of stuff nightmares are made of. Other than the
bassline, there doesn't appear to be much looping to be heard; instead it feels
as if Rain was composing the melody to the very rhythm of his soul. Despite its
impressive length, its harmonic anguish is dynamic enough to keep it from
getting old.
"Hazmester"
is a treat for anyone who's ever wanted to hear an extended version of Boards
of Canada's "Beware The Friendly Stranger."
"The
Moon" and "The Dark Side of the Moon" make an excellent pair.
Their ominous chord progressions and excellent use of harmony are given meaning
by the sound of the crying wolf - or perhaps he is singing.
"Memoria"
is also a great tune, but its short looping melody wears out its welcome after
the first two minutes, and keeps going with little to no progression for
another two minutes.
The
chilling, abrasive effects of "Újvidék igaz (Lýkur)" are respawned in
"Kerjuk Old Engem" and "Ijesztő Csecsemő." Each begins
abruptly with creepy minor chords and toxic sounds, shadowed by pads which
sweep in and engulf the whole atmosphere, like dreams of floating into the
deep, unfamiliar parts of a forest, unexplored for good reason.
There
are a couple short filler tracks which don't necessarily deprecate the
experience for me, but don't necessarily add any value to it either. The first
is "[Rovid Alom]" a 4-note melody played by a MIDI
flute, repeated once and only once amounting to a total of 21 seconds. Whether
this even counts as a musical composition is debatable, but it does serve as a
good divider between the two halves of the album. The second is "Générique
de fin," which is merely Rain singing something to himself, I believe.
"Générique
de fin" may be the "official" ending track, but the version
available at braindanceunderground.bandcamp.com ends the album with a beautiful
live cover of Aphex Twin's third track from "Selected Ambient Works Volume
II," unofficially known as "Rhubarb." Probably the only happy
track on the whole album, "Rabarbara" plays the Rhubarb melody
backwards and forwards, and may seem to drag, but is a pleasant change of mood
and easy to get lost in. In the end, "Rabarbara" gives this dark
story a happy ending.
Favorite
tracks: Újvidék igaz (Lýkur), Kerjuk Old Engem, Rabarbara, The Moon, The Dark
Side of the Moon

It's always flattering to see my project name-dropped to represent a great example of "pure laziness". Cool blog btw ;p
ReplyDelete