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V/A - Like Music to their Ears

Mechanoise Labs - 2003)

V/A : Like Music to their Ears Vol 1 - 2003

- Dusk of Hope : Expériences Sur Matériel Humain
- Inoculation : Dead End

 

> Industrial.org :

France seems to be a hot bed of industrial and noise activity as of late and like a pedophile banker lurking outside a daycare center, apparently Belgium is close behind. Mechanoise Labs certainly have taken note of these recent developments with this CDR displaying the excellent results of their apparently 10 month in length collations.

The disc kicks off with a match of stereo ping pong from Rudra Vena, wet silverish pads lapping at the listeners feet as the cleanly machined bass samples do their damnedest to stay dry. It's a nice, almost minimalist setting which acts a perfect staging for the following track from Hirochimiq, a duo-tone melodic bit of melodrama that could have been a black metal song in a previous life but here is a plodding neo-classical exploration which has more than enough building tension to keep the waterfalls in Valhalla flowing. The water does finally run out with Dusk of Hope's track, the last rivulets of after-life slowly draining into the blackened void with the resulting low pressure having an unsettling effect on the listener's sense of balance. "Strong and Athletic" returns again to the classical fold, somewhere between ancient Egyptian funeral dirge and Bollywood influenced emotional despair, the track has me picturing an army of the recently widowed on their way to a Nile song intro. Next we find Stelladrine in a surprisingly defensive mood, the tone mostly the usual but here as if heard muttered underbreath - the resonant sweeps and processed vocals so distant and reserved. Sobria Ebrietas finds themselves in a similar set of circumstances but with different tools in hand, one grasping a vibrato coated version of Howard Shore's "Crash" theme and the other a most Hushush sounding isolationist manual covering topics ranging from found sound to clinical drones. To clean up the first half of the disc Mourmansk 150 fires up the diesel engines, letting them idle for quite a bit while the crew grumbles over the final demolition plans.

The 8th track "with knives at their throats" backs up the previous arguments with an abrasive bit of saturation that oscillates between high end electronic sizzle and clanky metallic delay, very mechanical and including the disarming addition of sinusoid song birds and cranking calliope to create a weirdly cheerful dose of pure industrial music. Ripit is in his usual form with the QY700's cries of pain barely discernable amongst the constant distortion and MIDI initiated (but beatless) fallout. Chupacabras plinks away for a bit out in deep space somewhere, the voice of god admonishing the suitably anguished listener while an analog to the "The Andromeda Strain" soundtrack blares just out of camera view. Personal favourite mad scientist Tin.RP continues the illicit software testing with a gritty set of dissolving repetition and intricate operater overloading which is somewhere between Nexsound type digital deep freeze and Japanese style miniturization (like reading between the lines of inventory barcode). Another Mechanoise act Giscard le Survivant then slowly drags itself out of bed, an orchestra of Vromb samples recorded from the vantage point of a busy freeway acting as a decoy for Zerogoki's entrance. "Overcome" seems a bit of an anomaly in that despite having none, there is quite a strong sense of rhythm to it which creates a striking almost physical impact since there seems to be so much undulating form supported by nothing but electricity and ghosts. Impressive. The final words are given to Inoculation via a 6 plus minute noisescape which has been remorselessly forced through a culvert opening whose diameter is much smaller than the original frequency spectrum. Raw, primitive blast then has been sawed off leaving an understated violence like the constant unseen crush of a large scale hydro project.

Straight-up, "Like Music to their Ears Vol. 1" is one of the better compilations in recent memory that I have had the pleasure to encounter. Instead of clamping a specific thematic chain around listener's wrists, the intent seems far more general in nature, a dark interlocking puzzle perhaps whose completed visage displays a goodly portion of the independent French and Belgian scene. The key to why this disc sits so comfortably between the ears is how it always seems to be moving in some way, even when trapped in a seemingly stangant ambient eddy little trails of interaction and struggling effort can be seen just beneath the surface of the murky water. It's an excellent and most atmospheric collection and it seems almost an afront that it was limited to only 100 copies. And no, you cannot have mine.