tirsdag den 27. februar 2024

 Mila Cloud - Long Way Back From The Familiar Places We´re Never Been



It´s actually very rare that I get to review anything from Poland. When I think of Poland, metal music usually pops up in my mind... not noise, experimental, or industrial music as such. Mila Cloud is a kind of thing, in between (in its own way). The easiest way to describe it would be dreamy/ethereal drone-metal, not that far away from the early recordings by Earth and some of the instrumental guitar work by the Red House Painters. Here is another charming note from the Bandcamp site, regarding the only member of Mila Cloud:

Mila is the ghost of a housewife from Warsaw, Poland, who plays and records instrumental songs in the dronegaze / doomgaze / cloudgaze style. Mila likes smoking on the balcony, playing ghostly songs, and watching short YouTube videos like "5 Terrifying Waves Caught on Tape" or "10 Biggest Waves Ever Recorded". She likes fuzzes, delays, phasers, and other quirks. Sleepwalking.

This album actually has a sort of theme/concept attached to it. The album is about Warzaw in the 90s. Mostly about blocks of flats, night busses, junkies, parks and backyards. I don´t actually know how Warzaw looks now, but it might have changed? Old buildings are torn down, and sterile square-figured buildings shoot up from the ground like mushrooms. Much the same thing that just happened in my own town of Viborg, somehow the ghost of old houses... lingers in the air. But anyway! The album comes out as an AWESOME-looking textured digipack all wrapped inside a transparent and white folder. Nice bleak but futuristic artwork as well. The album (or should I say) mini-album is a 6 tracked one, about 27 minutes in total. 

The first track is called Cloudgazer, and that is exactly how the track feels and sounds. Cloudy early morning, waiting for the rays of the sun to appear... but sadly, they don´t appear. Instead, you get these various smudgy colors of grey. The track starts with a heavy distorted, and reverbed guitar. Lots of cool pedal effects and stuff, very mesmerizing and atmospheric. Takes me instantly back to early Earth, just with a tiny dose of... I don't know, the melody has a kind of depressive black-metal feel to it (just a lot slower), if this was done on a synth... then it would/could be a winter synth. You give it a listen, it´s a very good one I reckon (already listened to the album 7 times now!). 


The second track Sweet Mommy is a short one. It continues where track one ended. More of a melancholic ambient and guitar track, lovely how so much expression can be squeezed into 1 minute and 46 seconds!

The third track Some Warzaw Junkie is not that far away from the first track, just a bit more heavy and slow. You can almost sense the tired and slow movement of a used-up junkie, there are some light tones in there as well... a sense of hope perhaps?. Or perhaps not, much in the same way we hope to see the sun every day. 

The fourth track The Coldest Boy, is beautifully icy. Love the layered and spacy effects here, and I love the way the track slowly builds up... very focused.

The fifth track is a bonus track (only on the CD) called Message From Bird Birds Sniffer. Being (maybe) the darkest and most harsh track here. Starts really dark, and ends with the feeling of... could it be the bloody sun?! Some warmth here, and the revered guitar work here almost has a synthy sound!

The rest of the album follows the sound of the chosen theme/mood, making this album a highly enjoyable and aesthetic album. It feels like a long and adventurous journey, which gives the album a focused soundtrack sort of feel. You don´t even notice the tracks, but you will accept the whole album as one long track... much in the same way it works when watching a movie. Highly recommendable stuff from Poland here, an act to follow and check up on here! 

       

tirsdag den 20. februar 2024

Spiteful Womb & DJINN - Euthanasia Is Not 

The Answer 


The second time we get to review the enigmatic mind behind a veteran in death-industrial/ambient soundscapes, this time he (DJINN) times up with a U.S-based act called Spitful Womb. Not knowing much about Spiteful Womb, Discogs and Bandcamp reveals the band as the sole workmanship of Nora Eglof. She has had releases out on labels like Signora Ward Records, Old Europa Cafe, and Death In Venice (just to name a few!). 

This limited split CD-R release from 2022 is actually a re-issue from a release that first came out in 2019. A nice, beautiful-textured, and thick cardboard-paper cover housing the CD inside. Front showcasing the album title and the track titles with a nice blood-splattered color on a white background. Almost resampling vomited red wine on a white sheet. If we open, we will see a big and nice picture of the two artists. Both with masks on. 5 tracks, about 30 minutes in total. So let us go! 

First, we have a go with Spitful Womb with her first track called Palliative. If you don't know what palliative is, then I can reveal to you that it´s about using drugs to relieve the suffering from... well dying I guess. Which is (in a way) prolonging the death = slow death. The gush of looped cold winds, and some metallic machinery banging in the background. Lots of spirits in here I can tell! In a way, it kind of takes me back to some of the (almost) erotic ambient tracks from the first Ordo Equilibrio album... just a hell of a lot more menacing. There is also that screeching flesh-scraping sensation usually there in classic death industrial, some interesting synthy drones fade in and out. Multilayered voices, talking like in some huge cathedral. A VERY good first track, seems very promising so far!

The second track with Spiteful Womb is called Groningen Protocol. And I'm here again, lecturing again! What is the Groningen Protocol?!. here goes : 

The Groningen Protocol is a medical protocol created in September 2004 by Eduard Verhagen, the medical director of the Department of Pediatrics at the University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG) in Groningen, the Netherlands. It contains directives with criteria under which physicians can perform "active ending of life on infants" (child euthanasia) without fear of legal prosecution.

Sounds like some sort of gas escaping from a tiny tube, ghostly (slightly) melodic looped drones of spirits engulfing the listener further into the abyss. Strangely disturbing, but also strangely pleasant to hear. There is also a subtle thumping of ritualistic drums way in the background. I really like the way how this track builds up, it starts with you being in some of a pleasant dream trance but then you start realizing... you are In bloody hell... but for some strange reason... it´s still... well pleasant! Get the picture! Industrial drone-ambient stuff done very well, I don't have anything to put my fingers down on.


We continue with DJINN and with his first track called No Life...No Death. We are in an operation theater. The sound of machines peeping, whispering talk, and painfilled human voices being involved in the whole bloody mess. Lots of nifty distorted synthy bass stuff going on, the whole track has that... Hamburger Lady feel if you know what I mean? There are also some nasty sounds of tubes, sucking stuff in (probably blood) and some old people coughing because they have smoked too much. Excellent creepy-crawling hospital-themed track! 

The next track with DJINN is called The End of Hope! A weird sort of falling sound going on, and a high-pitched sharp sound as well. Is that the sound of a pile driver I hear? Sampled voices here and there, and a nice and looped sound of a... something.. sounds cool. The whole bloody track is a paradise for people who enjoy rhythmic sampling of industrial sounds, I loved it... I am guilty!

The last track with DJINN is called The Last Day. Hypnotizing synth and a sample of some talking about getting out of those straps. Looped death-industrial electronics and eerie ambient soundscapes. Actually, the soundscapes move between the speakers, which I like! Which ends the track!

And that ends the split album. An American & Italian death-industrial release. Equally terrifying for most and deeply satisfying for any death-industrial addicts. An excellent introduction for both of these veteran acts, if you don't know them or know where to start! 



tirsdag den 6. februar 2024

Chaigidel - Entrails of the Earth



A new and fresh label called Dark Odyssey Records has just released its first release (read former label text on Kalteldur, link below). Entrails of the Earth by an Italian project called Chaigidel. This one is a re-release that was originally released in 2020. It was self-released digitally on Chaigidel´s official Bandcamp site... and it was also released by Nailed Nazarene Industries, both as a digital one and as a CD? I'm not sure if the CD was ever released, there has been some strange talk about the dodgy label Nailed Nazarene Industries... but enough of that! 2 other releases can also be located with Chaigidel, and they have been released by Cryo Champer, and Cyclic Law (check Discogs link below!) 

A decent cassette re-issue with excellent printing on thick white paper. Even a cool-looking colored photo of the artist Mattia Giovanni Accinni (behind the project) inside the inner sleeve.

The album contains only 4 tracks, but 40 minutes in total!    

The first track is called A Little Seed. There is a deep and huge cellar room, with a huge sort of circular steel barrow rolling on a stony surface. The sound is very good I must say. Next, there is a sort of... shimmering bell sound with some harsh glittering on top of it, and a creepy slow-flanging drone hums like a ghost in the background. There is a seed growing all right, not a pleasant one if you ask me. Maybe, it´s a virus (if you look at the cover artwork). Additional scratching sounds and creaking doors are added to the creepiness. A subtle rhythmic sound there and more subtle dark-ambient unpleasantness are added. So far, it´s very adventurous! Lots of dynamics and color (although dark and bleak)! Very good first track, the perfect fusion between ambient and industrial!

The second track is called Under the Soil. It's a very slimy sort of intro. Imagine worms and snails crawling over you, while the ever-growing roots of plants and trees are squealing your body together. And that is the sound there is here, there is also a heavy and monotonous loop giving it all a decent claustrophobic feeling. Some nice and harsh metallic bashing here, giving it a nice industrial edge. 


We flip the cassette and continue with the fourth track which is called Sulfur, Mercury, and Salt.  A thumping bone-crunching machine... thumps and thumps in the cathedral, not that far away from the sound of Brighter Death Now´s Pain In Progress. Lovely heavy and minimalistic soundscape, with hints of a sound there and here... which somehow manage to disappear into the ever-engulfing darkness within. Some extra and mysterious looped sounds are added, which are nicely faded in and out. Again, the aesthetic and adventurous feel are still here, feeding our constant curiosity. 

The last track is the fourth album which has the strangest title... 16/4. Is it a date? Or is it how much alcohol there is inside a vodka shot with a licorice taste? I tried doing a Google on 16/4, and the first answer was the vodka shot with the licorice taste. But the whole track could sound like the actual hangovers. Can you puke or not, or should you just go back to your bed? Whatever! The track starts like a headache, with very high-pitched sounds and some subliminal heavy moods in the background. If you added some trip-hop sounds it could sound a bit like Scorn! There is also the presence of human voices in there, and some low-tech radio equipment perhaps? Low-tech and heavy harsh death-industrial sounds are added, maintaining that atmospheric clinical sort of vibe. The whole last track is a humongous-moody monster, which could have been released as a single mini-album/EP. Perfect soundtrack material here for any horror movie. 

And that was... the sound of the Entrails of the Earth. Horrific and classic Italian death-industrial with a clear focus on mood and ritualistic aesthetics. I was actually surprised by this since most artists I have come across (who have had a connection with Cryo Chamber and Cyclic Law ) always sounded so... sterile and clean. Maybe that is why Cryo Chamber and Cyclic Law haven't made a re-issue of this one? Perfectly executed industrial-ambient with a nod or two to the harshness of noise. I´m curious what the other releases sound like!