• Playlist Sountox on neurobeat.net - Nov, 17 2009

    Nov 17 2009, 20h13 por Sountox

    Access To Arasaka - Medway
    Exocet - Tug Of War
    Mlada Fronta - Ti 47.88
    ZandoZ Corp. - Cerebral Programming
    Converter - Dim (Live)
    Genetic Selection - The New Order
    Caustic Window - The Garden Of Linmiri
    Iszoloscope - Skotophobique
    Hezzel - Test Positive
    5f-55 And Grover - 31+32=55,
    Heimstatt Yipotash - Urban Night Motifs
    W.A.S.T.E. - Marked For Extinction
    last days of s.e.x. - Kronstadt 1921, Dont Forget Them...
    Sona Eact - Powerrush
    Cervello Elettronico - Septic Shock
    Imminent - Teskede
    Milligramme - Vocal Chords
    Black Lung - The Hostmen Of Tyne
    Mothboy - Gutter Song
    Digital Energy - emptiness (Hardstep Dub`n`Bass Remix by Authist)
    Gaiden - The Cruncher
    Paul Kalkbrenner - The Grouch
    Exercise One - Sleeper
    Redshape - Garage Gt
    Undermathic - Keep Out No Entry
  • Friday Twenty: My top 200 tracks 1990-99 Pt.02a: 160 to 141

    Nov 13 2009, 16h11 por amodelofcontrol

    Previously: My top 200 tracks 1990-99 Pt.01a: 200 to 181
    Previously: My top 200 tracks 1990-99 Pt.01b: 180 to 161

    Part two of my tracks of the 90s rundown: again split over two posts. The next forty will be posted on Tuesday.

    160
    Leonard Cohen
    TocarThe Future
    The Future
    1992

    Among the fair number of wildly inventive soundtracks released films released in the 90s was the Natural Born Killers soundtrack, put together by Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails and featuring a vast range of styles and artists - and not a single one felt out of place. Two of Cohen's songs were used on the soundtrack album (a third was used in the film), and this track in particular was pretty special. A musing on the pessimism of the world, and what is to come in light of what has already has happened, it's slightly cheesy synth lines and the big gospel chorus are brought together to make a song ostensibly about everything going to shit actually sound quite positive...

    159
    Converter
    TocarConqueror
    Shock Front
    1999

    The monstrous opening track from Converter's debut album, it's seething, near white noise intro gives way to massive, hulking beats, before another set presumably stomped out by AT-ATs obliterates all before it. This is dancefloor noise at it's finest.

    158
    Pop Will Eat Itself
    TocarUrban Futuristic
    The Looks or the Lifestyle
    1992

    The first inkling that the Poppies were angling for a heavier sound came from this industrial metal monster, and maybe the repeated refrain "no more Mr Nice Guy" just rammed home the point all the more. Everything about this song rules, and it also hasn't dated as badly as certain other Poppies tracks...

    157
    Covenant
    Stalker
    Sequencer:Beta
    1998

    A while before they became bona-fide futurepop stars, earlier Covenant material was a whole lot darker. Brooding synths, less danceable beats, and an almost gothic delivery in the vocals. It's still recognisably Covenant, though, and if you got into later-period Covenant without ever going back, this whole album is worth a look.

    156
    Incubus
    TocarNew Skin
    S.C.I.E.N.C.E.
    1997

    Ah yes, back when Incubus weren't acoustic bores. Back when they were still a band full of their native california sunshine and funk metal…and were awesome fun. Particularly this track, a song about reinvention, and it simply teems with life.

    155
    Paradise Lost
    Enchantment
    Draconian Times
    1995

    Interesting here in that I could have picked any number of PL songs from the mid-90s from this list, but hearing it live recently sealed the deal for it to be this. The epic, doomy power of this track for me makes it one of PL's very best songs, but it's not all growling and hate - it's beating melodic heart is what seals the deal.

    154
    Queen Adreena
    Cold Fish
    Taxidermy
    1999

    The first QA song I ever heard, as I recall. It's still nuts, too. I've no idea what Katie-Jane Garside is on about during it, but it's bruising rock is a hell of a thrill, even if it is something of a tease with out only lasting two minutes or so.

    153
    Radiohead
    TocarSubterranean Homesick Alien
    OK Computer
    1997

    OK Computer has been analysed to death, befitting it's status as many critics view that it is the best album of the 90s. It's certainly an extraordinary album, vast in scope and frankly fearless in it's endless experimentation with their basic rock sound. My favourite track on the album, though, is this gorgeous track, sometimes forgotten in it's position in the shadow of TocarParanoid Android. As guitars shoot across the sky like shooting stars, Thom Yorke muses on the idea of being abducted, how great it would be, and how no-one would ever believe him anyway. One of Radiohead's prettiest songs, and still somewhat underappreciated, in my view.

    152
    Sneaker Pimps
    Tocar6 Underground
    Becoming X
    1996

    Part of the coffee-table craze for anything "trip-hop" related, in reality Sneaker Pimps were always a little more interesting than that (and perhaps were even more so once Chris Corner stepped out on his own as IAMX). This is the track that started it all, though, and it's slinky, after-dark feel (and Kelli's frankly heavenly vocal) is still great. There was no need for it and the rest of the album to be re-recorded, re-mixed and re-issued, though, and if anyone can help me with a copy of the original version (i.e. the one with the motherboard-style green and silver cover), please let me know...

    151
    Leftfield
    Inspection (Check One)
    Leftism
    1995

    There is certainly a case for the album as a whole in a best of the 90s list, and certainly other tracks from this album could have made this list - however I had such a long list of possibles for this, that I decided to restrict it to one song per album (and two songs for certain artists at most). So the one from Leftism? This titanic, slower-paced track, that when played loud probably has more bass contained within than I've ever heard. The spacey, dubby vocal intro on the album version rules, too.

    150
    My Dying Bride
    TocarThe Cry of Mankind
    The Angel and the Dark River
    1995

    We'll be here all day debating which MDB album is the best, but The Angel… puts in a convincing case. Not least for it's epic, twelve minute opener. It's yearning, bleak seesawing riff that opens it, the stately piano, the occasional vocals that break through, and that foghorn blaring out through the mist as the song descends into it's ambient second half...the whole thing is a glorious wallow in bleak misery (in other words, exactly what this band should be). I am astonished it has a video, though, even if it is only a third of the song.

    149
    Red Snapper
    Wesley Don't Surf
    Reeled and Skinned
    1995

    I was never entirely sure where this lot were meant to fit in. Broadly a jazz band that used live instruments but filled in the gaps with electronic textures, their early singles were a fascinating mix of styles. Many of their earlier tracks were a rather more mellow, so the uptempo attack of this track was something of a change - and was by far the best of them.

    148
    The Verve
    TocarBrainstorm Interlude
    A Northern Soul
    1995

    While The Verve may be better known for their later albums and greater success, their earlier material remains intriguing. One track I've adored for years now has been this one - a reverb and feedback drenched jam that is one of the centrepieces of A Northern Soul. Rather than the naked emotion that much of the rest of the album gives away, this near-instrumental track (just try and work out the lyrics in the dense sound) gives nothing away and is perhaps all the better for it.

    147
    PJ Harvey
    TocarLong Snake Moan
    To Bring You My Love
    1995

    No two PJ Harvey albums are alike, which always results in some odd surprises each time around. To Bring You My Love, though, was still a bit of a shock. Much wider in sound than the previous albums, it's was still bluesy, but less raw (Flood being producer saw to that, I think). The swampy, blues-rock of this track, though, was possibly the most eye-catching on the album, and her almost screamed vocals as the song climaxes still sends chills through me.

    146
    Soundgarden
    TocarLet Me Drown
    Superunknown
    1994

    Never mind grunge, this was metal. The snarling opener to Soundgarden's most successful (and on balance, best) album, it's heavier, and thanks to the big-budget production, much…bigger than anything they had recorded to this point. Lyrically as dark in tone as the rest of the album, listening to it again for the first time in a while has reminded me that if I ever get asked the High Fidelity question of "five side one, track ones" again, this gets included.

    145
    Nitzer Ebb
    TocarGetting Closer
    Showtime
    1990

    Nitzer Ebb's third album was the first time that they really even moved beyond their EBM core, and the results were pretty impressive - not least in the awesome, steady build-up of opener Getting Closer, as the beat winds up from a standing start into a full-on industrial attack with what I see as their best vocal performance (as a live opener, this is incredible, too), before the sweeping, stabbing chords herald the mid-section, a breakdown, and then back to the chorus where it steps up again. Sod newer industrial, I'll take this every time.

    144
    Dub Pistols
    TocarThere's Gonna Be a Riot
    Point Blank
    1998

    What much of Barry Ashworth's material has concentrated on a more ska-based sound, this track was a roof-raising, dancefloor-slaying track that was something of an underground hit back in the days of "Big Beat" - I vividly recall this being played at The Heavenly Jukebox at Turnmills in '97 and sounding utterly immense.

    143
    Cold
    TocarGo Away
    Cold
    1997

    Originally "discovered" by Fred Durst of Limp Bizkit, but honestly, don't let that put you off. Their first album was impressively dark, emotional metal, and the opening track's ominous rumble (everything is downtuned, resulting in a marvellously deep, fuzzy sound that the bright production only helps to accentuate) coupled with Scooter Ward's wracked, gritted teeth vocal delivery is a spectacular start that the rest of the album never quite lives up to.

    142
    Slint
    Good Morning, Captain
    Spiderland
    1991

    Pretty much year zero for Post-rock as we know it, this band, and the album Spiderland has been feted to an incredible degree as a result. It fully deserves the praise, mind, but it's this stupendous closing track that takes the honours. Lyrically based around The Rime of the Ancient Mariner - if you can make out the muttered words - it's the use of quiet-LOUD dynamics that catches the ear, and as the track reaches it's climax, you realise that more than just post-rock owes this a debt.

    141
    Die Krupps
    TocarIron Man
    II - The Final Option
    1993

    They may be EBM pioneers, but their later industrial-metal hybrid phase produced some outstanding material, too. Including this, one of the ultimate tracks on the classic industrial music cliché of shedding human form for robotics. A monstrous, mechanised beat couples with equally mechanised guitars, and that whole cyborg idea gets better with every passing minute of this song.

    Shortly: My top 200 tracks 1990-99 Pt.02b: 140 to 121
    Tuesday: My top 200 tracks 1990-99 Pt.03: 120 to 81
  • Tuesday Twenty-Five: My top 50 albums 2000-09 Pt.02: 25 to 01

    Out 27 2009, 17h32 por amodelofcontrol

    Today marks the last part of my rundown of the decade's music. Next week will be the usual rundown of the month's best tracks, and then I'll be starting at some point after that with a rundown of the 90s in a similar style - after all, this autumn marks twenty years since I first got into/was exposed to "alternative" music, and this is a good time to do this, I feel. Anyway, on with the show.

    Previously:
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.01: 100 to 81
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.02: 80 to 61
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.03: 60 to 41
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.04: 40 to 21
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.05: 20 to 01
    My top 50 albums 2000-09 Pt.01: 50 to 26

    25
    The Axis of Perdition
    The Ichneumon Method (And Other Less Welcome Techniques)
    2003

    "Industrial Black Metal from Middlesborough" is perhaps not the way to sell yourself as a band. But if you are looking for something extreme, heavy, and most of all dark, you've come to the right place. A viciously loud, murky production, with the vocals treated to resemble beasts emerging from the pits of hell, and the music itself is black metal as you may not have heard it before. Riddled with samples, programming and savage riffs, this such a fascinating spin on the genre that if you have any interest in it, it's worth giving it a listen.

    24
    Doves
    Lost Souls
    2000

    We perhaps have a fire to thank for the way this album turned out. After a studio fire destroyed years of their work for dance act Sub Sub, they changed direction and ended up with this. A beautifully understanded, mellow album, in the main, it has moments though that are utterly extraordinary, and is also imbued with a surprising warmth, too. Some people have dismissed this band as dullards, but really, they are anything but, and are vastly more talented and interesting to listen to than a number of their peers.

    23
    Gojira
    From Mars to Sirius
    2005

    An intriguing, unusual band in the metal scene - "progressive death metal" is about as close a description as I've seen, but frankly they cover so many genres that trying to nail it down too closely is all but impossible - they are a band who actually have something to say. Most of their lyrics have an environmental theme, some of their songs become epic soundscapes, but then they also rock like bastards. This was the album that I, and probably many others, discovered them on, and as concept albums go it's really pretty fucking special.

    22
    Deftones
    White Pony
    2000

    The whole genre termed nu-metal hardly seems to have had much of a shelf-life, and to be frank I'd be happy never to hear some of those bands ever again (*cough*Crazy Town*cough*), but Deftones were always different and a cut above their peers. It wasn't just the astonishingly abrasive sound, or the use of actual tunes, but the way that Chino Moreno managed to include all of his influences, including bands like The Smiths and The Cure, in amongst the metal grooves. This all came together to amazing effect on this album, considerably darker and at points more experimental than ever before (or since).

    21
    Panic DHH
    Panic Drives Human Herds
    2004

    Nowadays Robbie Furze has left this band behind for a perhaps more mainstream band in the form of The Big Pink. A damned shame, really - this, the only studio album Panic DHH ever released, is a brutal exercise in using power electronics to bolster what at points is otherwise somewhere in the realms of punk. The sheer savagery of this album really cannot be understated, particularly in the opening few tracks (Leader and Spare are pure power noise), and live they incredibly upped the ante even more. I only wish more material got released, although I really should check out The Big Pink.

    20
    Emperor
    Prometheus: The Discipline Of Fire and Demise
    2001

    The last new material from the greatest of the black metal bands, and what a way to finish. I've already mentioned the jaw-dropping closing track, but the rest of the album is hardly bad. In fact the rest of the album is nearly as astounding. Opening with a harpsichord intro (no, really), it explodes into the appropriately-titled TocarThe Eruption, before taking you on a nine-track, hour-long journey through an incredible, ultra-technical symphonic black metal masterpiece. It's probably a good thing that they never recorded anything more following this - they were never, ever, going to top this.

    19
    Six by Seven
    The Closer You Get
    2000

    I'm not really certain that many people knew what to make of Six By Seven when they first appeared. Their debut single, European Me was lauded like the second coming in the music press, but in my view there are a number of far better songs on that album. But then, the barely disguised contempt for the world at points in it got unleashed in full on the follow-up, which really was quite a shock. Gone were the epic songs of the first album, instead a number of shorter, snarling beasts of tracks that were a torrent of fury and hatred. Opener Eat Junk Become Junk had psuedo-industrial beats and programming to add to the punch, while Ten Places to Die suggested a list of ways to finish it all. But then on the flip side was the joyous New Year, and the giddy rush of Another Love Song. While schizophrenic in mood at points, this remains an essential listen.

    18
    65daysofstatic
    The Fall of Math
    2004

    In the development of the "post-rock" scene, 65DoS deserve more than a footnote, perhaps, judging on some of the bands that are now appearing here and there. More than anything else, they could be seen perhaps as trailblazers in realizing that the genre had so much more scope, and mixing in disparate influences, clever and targeted use of glitchy electronics, and an astonishing focus that came across in the quite staggering technicality and emotions that their music invokes. Obviously, they are even more astounding live, and you may have seen me wax lyrical about that before. But even so, on record they are still a thrilling experience.

    17
    Arcade Fire
    Funeral
    2004

    I still don't quite understand how this album passed me by for over two years, maybe more. I don't think I'd ever noticed them on regular viewings on MTV2 or wherever else, never followed any links…and then one day, I did listen. And was sat there scratching my head. It sounded great, heartfelt, driving rock that was instantly memorable, and I had the tune (I think it was Neighborhood #3 (Power Out)) in my head for days. Once I got my hands on the album, I quickly realised that there was so much more to the band than what I had heard. There are elegant, beautiful ballads, songs that just demand to be sung by a huge crowd (Wake Up, I'm looking at you), songs that evoke extraordinary atmospheres (Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)), and more than anything a general feeling that life is too short, in an urgency to enjoy life to the fullest in the time we have. Maybe that's why this band are so loved. They somehow take cliched ideas that would feel like cheap shots with other bands, and make them into things that sound brand-new and life-affirming. And a great album to listen to, too.

    16
    Esa
    The Sea and The Silence
    2008

    Released right at the end of 2008, this is yet another astounding step forward by Jamie Blacker, to the point of it probably eclipsing his two previous, really quite remarkable albums. Taking the basic premise of reasonably extreme, powerful industrial electronics, and stretching them into shapes and sounds that other contemporaries probably haven't even thought of trying yet. Again there is a concept, but this time rather more abstract, but musically this album destroys any idea of boundaries that might constrain it. There are elements of world music, of live instruments, of pitch dark black metal, dark ambient, and straight up industrial power. Either way, an absorbing listen that rewards repeat listens in spades.

    15
    In Strict Confidence
    Exile Paradise
    2006

    This decade was an extraordinary one for ISC: they released four extraordinary albums, all of which showed a distinct growth and evolution, culminating in this absolutely exquisite darkwave/gothic/electro meisterwerk. A shimmering production, some of the greatest songs they've ever written, and a visually stunning theme that enveloped everything to do with the album (lyrical themes, videos, images, even the music at points). We're still awaiting the follow-up, but tracks from it are finally due to be unveiled in the coming weeks, I understand.

    14
    Aesthetic Perfection
    A Violent Emotion
    2008

    As I noted when awarding this album of the year for 2008, this album's concept is seemingly all about channelling violent energy to make a positive difference, and in that respect - and in it's brilliantly varied musical conception - it works brilliantly. Yes, it has dancefloor-friendly tunes, but really this is all about so much more than that, and works equally well as an album to listen to at home miles from any dancefloor.

    13
    Collide
    Some Kind of Strange
    2003

    Amazing to think that this is now six years old, really. An ageless sound that gently seduces your ears for just shy of an hour, it's an album to luxuriate in. Little on the album goes faster than languid, but then that suits Karin's vocals perfectly, as the songs unwind around her voice, sometimes used to great effect wordlessly. The opening pair of tracks are absolute belters, but the rest of the album takes it's time to work it's magic...

    12
    Amanda Palmer
    Who Killed Amanda Palmer
    2008

    My girlfriend disagrees with me on this, I think, but I still believe that this AFP album is better than all her albums with The Dresden Dolls. Rather than being constrained by the stylistic and musical influences they made such a play of, here AFP and producer Ben Folds allow free reign for everything to come out, resulting in joyous blasts where everything and probably the kitchen sink too are chucked in (Leeds United, Guitar Hero), covers of show tunes, very, very dark ballads, and just generally a broader musical palate. And she even manages to crowbar in a jaunty, bright 60s-influenced pop tune about rape and a subsequent abortion (Oasis), and just about get away with it.

    11
    Edgey
    Flawed
    2007

    An album that really took me by surprise, this. A staggering mashing of drum'n'bass, breakcore, glitchy electronics, and industrial/dark ambient atmospheres, it sounded like no-one else at the time, and it's still pretty damned unique now, too. A rare album in these realms, too, for me that I can happily listen to the whole thing in one go, too, rather than dipping into bits of it every now and again. Hardly one for the dancefloor - I'd love to see rivetheads try and dance to the seemingly-calculus-derived time signatures of Cohesion - but it is an awesome album to listen to at a hefty volume.

    10
    Stromkern
    Light It Up
    2005

    Still a regular album to listen to in my house, Stromkern remain probably the only band in the industrial scene to successfully hip-hop stylings to their music. That and their searing, highly-charged political lyrics have them stand out as a band with something to say, even if they refuse to publish the lyrics, leaving you to interpret them for yourself. Some might still only know Stand Up following it's playing everywhere in recent years, but delve deeper and you'll find a great album too - even the shorter, intermission-esque tracks don't feel out of place, and both of the tracks with guest vocalists are awesome. Still waiting for that follow-up, though, and with changes to the political landscape since this, it will be interesting to see what they do do next.

    9
    Seabound
    Double-Crosser
    2006

    The opener to this (Scorch The Ground (Version)) I named my track of the decade the other week, and really the album is not far behind. All about lust, obsession and revenge-best-served-cold, it's icy, gently-seething façade only breaks a couple of times to let some warmth in, and it's perhaps notable that these couple of tracks are the weaker songs here. Where the album really, really scores spectacularly is when Frank Spinath let's his hate and bitterness really spill out in the lyrics, devastating lines delivered with a lightness of touch that almost wrongfoot you every time. Also, musically, it's electronics fit the mood perfectly, and never intrude on the words taking centrestage - and when they are this good, as they should, too.

    8
    The Knife
    Silent Shout
    2006

    Drenched in darkness in just about every way - not only musically, but in the look of the group, the artwork, the videos…this was an unsettling listen that was to begin with, pretty much inpenetrable to me. But I kept plugging away at it, and eventually just how brilliant this album is became clear. There isn't a single bad song here, but sometimes it can become all a bit much. Where they go from here should be interesting, but seeing as the recent Fever Ray album is almost a pitch dark as this, I'm not expecting it to be a ray of sunshine. I'm not sure being exposed to that much light would suit them, anyway...

    7
    Converter
    Blast Furnace
    2000

    My entry into anything noisy-rhythmic-industrial came from this album, and I'm still not sure it's actually been bettered by any of his peers, although some have made a bloody good go. At points extraordinarily extreme (TocarRed Crystal in particular), it perversely also spawned a massive industrial dancefloor hit for a while in the lengthy form of TocarDeath Time, and perhaps also was in some respects one of the most "commercial" "noise" albums yet released. Those who listened in casually, purely because of that track were in for a shock, though, but it was worth persevering. The Blast Furnace title was no accident, as metallic effects were all over the place, in samples, machine-like rhythms and even the atmospheres created. Little humanity was allowed a look in, but then why should it? The machines simply crushed all that out, and this is the soundtrack to that very event. Be afraid.

    6
    Rico
    Violent Silences
    2004

    I noted the other week that five years have now elapsed since the last recorded output from Rico, and I'm increasingly of the fear that this was the last word from him on record. Shame. Also as I noted then, the second half of the album is much the stronger, some feat when the first half features contributions from both Tricky and Gary Numan - also a sign of the wide appeal of Rico's music. Unfairly pigeonholed early on as the "British Trent Reznor", he was never quite that, but deserved far more success than he ever got.

    5
    Machine Head
    The Blackening
    2007

    Best. Comeback. Ever. Those three words are going to be endlessly associated with this - the hackneyed tale of a band fallen on hard times, the creative well empty, or so we thought, and then they roar back with this. Fucking hell. That was pretty much what most of us said once we'd heard the monstrous, ten-minute opening track, never mind the rest of the album. The good thing was, the rest of it was just as good. Making no concession to trends in metal, this was just simply the metal album that Robb Flynn and his band wanted to make, and not a minute was wasted in creating a brilliant, brilliant hour of thrash metal. They are still touring it now, mind, and while they are fucking ace live, it would be nice to hear something new soon...

    4
    Covenant
    Northern Light
    2002

    The single most enduring and remarkable album to come from the futurepop/EBM/electro-industrial/call-it-what-you-like period in the early couple of years of this decade, this album transcended the usual limitations of the genre in some style. At first listen a cold, aloof creation (to go with the frozen figures and icy landscapes that dominate the sleeve), a few listens thaws it to an astounding effect. There are belting dancefloor monsters (TocarCall the Ships to Port), astonishing pop songs (Bullet), choral-backed ballads (Invisible & Silent) and also one of the most euphoric, uplifting songs ever released in this scene (We Stand Alone). Oh, and not to mention the many, many references to Greek Mythology scattered through the album that makes the lyrics worth listening to (and fun to work out what on earth they are on about, too).

    3
    Battles
    Mirrored
    2007

    I loved this band from the moment I first heard Atlas, and I've still not stopped loving it yet. An endlessly fun album, that twists and turns, playing with the structures of rock music, dance music and twisting them into a hugely enjoyable take on post-rock that pretty much immediately made everything else look deadly serious. That few bands have dared to tread the same path is telling - it took four seriously talented and respected musicians to even approach music this complex-but-accessible - and perhaps they will remain standing alone in a musical universe bathed in a bright spotlight.

    2
    Prometheus Burning
    Beyond Repair
    2006

    I remember being played a couple of tracks from this as my first exposure to the band, and being bowled over to the point that it didn't take me long to go and hunt out the album. Starting with the template of industrial-noise - and at points, this band are unbelievably harsh - but adding in twisted, heavily treated vocals and rhythms, and emotional outpourings based on pure rage, this sounds different. Very different to what has gone before. Slowly twisting the knife further as you go into the album (the last couple of tracks being the harshest and closest to pure noise), before ending in an unsettling silence, this was an album that I'm not sure you were ever meant to unlock a deeper meaning to. The followup album, based much more on old-school industrial, was great, but never quite had the sheer visceral power that this one has.

    1
    Cyanotic
    Transhuman
    2005

    I could equally have made a case for the reworked Transhuman 2.0 to be in the top spot with this, but there are reasons why this album makes it to the top spot on it's own. Firstly, for me this album gave my interest in industrial music a shot in the arm. In 2005, there wasn't a lot for me to be excited about. Most of the albums I was bothered about around that time were either not industrial, or were older bands making comebacks. So to hear this, a new band doing interesting stuff with a genre I was beginning to fear was stagnating badly, was seriously exciting to me. That and the fact that this album made a perfect synthesis of industrial and metal influences, nodding back to the past and Sean Payne's formative years listening to Ministry, Nine Inch Nails, Numb and others, but also looking to the future and fusing other, outside genres to the sound to create a hybrid that sounded both familiar and new, and tremendously exciting, all at the same time. I'm not going to pick highlights from the album, as it's all great, and indeed as I've been DJing industrial to a greater extent in recent years, Cyanotic remain the one band I can play and get asked "who is this?" by punters more than anyone else. In addition, Sean Payne's ceaseless promotion of his peers on compilations, remix work, just linking to others, and high quality of all his musical output have opened my eyes to a whole scene across the Atlantic that gives me hope for industrial music in the future. There is so much more out there, we just need to look for it. And I'm glad I found this. I'm still a regular listener to this album now, as my play charts on Last.fm will attest, and with the medication generation finally nearing release, I'm sure I'll be playing this band for some further time to come yet, too.
  • Playlist Sountox on neurobeat.net - Aug, 18 2009

    Ago 18 2009, 19h09 por Sountox

    Monolith - Edge Of The Earth
    Architect - St Vodka (Mother Russia)
    Orphx - Pre-Dawn Haze
    Iszoloscope - Crimson Road
    Imminent & Synapscape - Tors
    Xebox - Assembly-Line Production Of Battlerobots
    Converter - Smoke
    Synth-Etik - Vata
    5F-X - E 6° 59' 0" - N 51° 34' 0" (logbook RMX)
    Milligramme - Abdomen
    Pow[d]er Pussy - Cateatscuckoo
    Edgey - Common Enemy
    Nullvektor - Zerbrochener Rhythmus
    Contaminant - Blue Eye Distortion
    Hezzel - Reality Distorted
    Mono No Aware - Noema
    100blumen - Beat That Nazi Maggot
    W.A.S.T.E. - Shut Up And Bleed
    Esa - Nerve Pattern
    Verstaerker - Utonal
    Gaiden - Point Blank
    Robert Natus - A2
    Angina P - Tokyo 6PM (Rush Hour Mix)
  • CD Archival To Lossless Format Project

    Jun 21 2009, 8h48 por insektl0gic

    I am continuing to archive my cd collection to flac format in favor of mp3 vbr.

    New Acquisitions:

    annodalleb - 2005 - dAATh
    Blancmange - 1990 - Second Helpings: The Best of Blancmange
    Boole - 2002 - Pheromones
    Clan of Xymox - 2003 - Farewell
    Front Line Assembly - 1997 - FLAvour of the Weak
    Girls Under Glass - 2005 - Zyklus
    Lamia - 2003 - Dark Angel
    Lustmord - 2002 - Zoetrope
    Mind Necrosis Factor - 2008 - Morphogenesis
    Narc - 2001 - Human Waste
    Panzer Division - 2007 - I Am Sinistar
    Tumor - 1999 - Seelenfresser

    Previously As VBR Only:

    Converter - 2003 - Exit Ritual
    Die Form - 1982 - Die Puppe II (2001 re-issue)
    Die Form - 1984 - Some Experiences With Shock (remastered 2001)
    Die Form - 1987- Poupée Mécanique (2001 re-issue)
    Die Form - 1991 - Confessions (remastered 2002)
    Die Form - 1994 - Suspiria De Profundis (2001 re-issue)
    Die Form - 2000 - Extermum
    Die Form - 2001 - Archives & Documents Iii (2 CD)
    Die Form - 2001 - Corpus Delicti 2
    Die Form - 2001 - Photogrammes
    Dust Of Basement - 2004 - Awakening the Oceans (2CD)
    Dust Of Basement - 2006 - Meridian (2CD)
    Jack or Jive - 2004 - Absurdity
    Sleep Chamber - 1990 - Sirkle Zero
    Sleep Chamber - 1993 - Secrets Ov 23
    Sleep Chamber - 1996 - Sacrosanct

    Copies in mp3 vbr are also available from me on Soulseek P2P. Please support the artists by buying their releases.
  • Playlist Sountox on neurobeat.net - Jun, 02 2009

    Jun 3 2009, 4h39 por Sountox

    Morgenstern - Blow Away My Reason
    Orphx - Nullity V2.3
    Monolith - Matrix-B
    Imminent Starvation - Tentack (Live)
    Converter - Death Time (Live)
    HPP - Girlfriend-Mass-Murderer (Zymosiz Remix)
    Zymosiz - Signal In
    Synapscape - Thirsteater
    Haus Arafna - Last Dream Of Jesus
    Mono No Aware - Tepalock
    5F_55 - L.I.S.A. (Early Promo Version)
    MS Gentur - Physis
    Palindrom Evil - Pandemonium
    Xebox - Self Automation
    Sona Eact - More & Faster
    Winterkälte - El Nino
    100blumen - What Kind of Man Are You (Alive)
    Sonar - Doubled Spiral
    Config.sys - Chaozkopf
    Iszoloscope - -28°c And Falling
    Contaminant - Crash & Burn (Bbr-Mix)
    Synth-Etik - Lek
    Gaiden - Point Blank
    HIV+ - Burning Up (Sulphuric Mix )
    Asche - Dist Dj Pt 5
    W.A.S.T.E. - Shut Up And Bleed
    S.K.E.T. - Stalinoper 2004
    S?x Only - Burning Ham
    Nin Kuji - Partiell Mitschuldig
    Marc Romboy - Iceland
    Akufen - Architextures 1
    Boris Brejcha - Die Reise Nach Riad
    Underworld - Dark & Long 2009
  • Tuesday Ten: Do You Remember The First Time?

    Mar 17 2009, 19h20 por amodelofcontrol

    As I said last week, I suddenly have a short flush of inspiration for these Tuesday Tens at the moment. This one has taken me weeks to collate, gave me lots of ideas, and perhaps even more music to re-evaluate. This week it's about debut albums, and in particular ones I really like or left a lasting impression.

    There are many debut albums I really don't like, though - and this even applies to bands I otherwise adore. I can't stand the first albums from (to pick a few examples in my collection) The Afghan Whigs, In Strict Confidence, Spahn Ranch, Type O Negative, to name four. Maybe it's just because I got into all four bands a little further down the line. Maybe they simply weren't that great to start with. Other debuts captivated me for numerous reasons, either when they were released, or when I got to listen to them at a later point, and these are the ten that made this list. And when creating the shortlist for it, I came to the scary realisation that I had created a subject that was far too broad. So, a way of whittling it down - each act in the list had to have released two (full, as opposed to remix or compilation) albums to make the list. In other words, they had to have followed-up the debut with another album release. So that knocked out some of my favourite albums, but still left me with a "shortlist" of 24!

    Killing Joke
    Killing Joke
    Post-industrial, barely as industrial got started. Or at least, something like that - I'd love to know exactly how this was received when it was released - and how fucking otherworldly this must have sounded. TocarWardance's primal call-to-arms - the brutal, pounding beat, that pulsing bassline, and Jaz Coleman's alien-sounding verse vocals, coupled with the roared chorus - is simply fucking magic, even now. The whole album sounds like the strange hybrid that it still is, too - the near-mechanical rhythms coupled with the raw emotion and scratchy guitars, and a testament, perhaps, of how fucking fantastic this album is, is shown in the enormous list of bands, across countless genres in metal, industrial, grunge, and perhaps even in electronics that owe this a debt in some way or another.

    Black Flag
    Damaged
    From around about the same timeframe as Killing Joke, but it could really sound much more different. One of the truly great hardcore albums, while this was the band's debut album it was already with their umpteenth singer - a certain Henry Rollins. It bristles with rage, power and a feeling of reality, in that the band had clearly experienced everything they were writing/singing about. So we have songs covering making your own mark in the world (TocarRise Above), drinking problems (Six Pack), police brutality ([track artist=Black Flag]Police Story), oh and the goofy chaos of TocarTV Party, where the idea of getting wasted and watching TV instead of something more positive is skewered. Another album with incalculable influence, this...

    Tricky
    Maxinquaye
    While this album got tangled up in the "trip-hop" boom during the mid-90s, this was a far more exciting, interesting and downright strange beast than it's nominal "trip-hop" tag could ever let on. From the wildly inventive electro-punk cover of TocarBlack Steel, to the Michael Jackson-sampling of TocarBrand New You're Retro, the claustrophobic, pitch-dark lover's tryst of Suffocated Love, not to mention the slew of classic singles. Tricky never came close to topping this since, as he sank for a good few years into ever-dark weed-infused paranoia, but even fourteen years on this album remains a unique and endlessly rewarding listen.

    Fiona Apple
    Tidal
    Not perhaps something you'd expect me to include, but then I've always been a sucker for certain female singer songwriters. This album kinda crept up on me, and rather than hearing TocarCriminal first, it was the sultry, dreamy opener TocarSleep to Dream that got me hooked. The whole album is a mellow, stately trip underpinned by Apple's deep, husky voice that holds the whole thing together. Not to everyone's taste, I'm sure, but I loved this - although I wasn't bothered by either of the two albums that followed.

    ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead
    ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead
    While they've become perhaps a little more mainstream since, their debut was anything but. A chaotic, multi-instrumental album with a heavily punk attitude, all-but-indecipherable lyrics and songs about, well, I have no idea whatsoever. It may not be their best album, but as a statement of intent it was (and is) extraordinary, and the initial rush of opener TocarRichter Scale Madness is pretty much worth it alone.

    Queen Adreena
    Taxidermy
    Pretentious? Yes. Wierd? Yes. But good? Most certainly. Raw, abrasive art-rock with a strikingly delicate flipside, this band were (and still are) a mass of contradictions that strongly divide opinion but have always been a fascinating listen. And this first album was where things all started, with the short-sharp-shock of Cold Fish to introduce things, countered by the pretty, sparse arrangements of TocarPretty Polly and TocarYesterday's Hymn amongst others. Oddly, though (and uniquely to me in terms of this list), this album only really grew on me once I'd seen their fearsomely intense live shows...

    Dismantled
    dismantled
    This was an album of straight-up hero worship that needs to be understood in the context of the time of release, perhaps. This album, when released, sounded for all the world like a Front Line Assembly album from the early nineties, updated using new technology. Which was, for us long-suffering FLA fans, great. FLA at the time were not good, seemingly devoid of ideas and with little future. It may be accidental timing, but this album got us all hooked, FLA returned a couple of years later with one of the best albums of their career (Artificial Soldier), and Dismantled chose to head down a more "pop" orientated path, which while gaining many new fans seemed to lose just as many "old" fans at the same time.

    Deftones
    Adrenaline
    System of a Down
    System of a Down
    Both Deftones and SoaD first appeared in the midst of the "nu-metal" boom, but they were a league apart from many of their supposed contemporaries. While much has been made of Deftones' vocalist Chino Moreno's love of bands like The Smiths and The Cure, their influence is not immediately obvious on their savage first album - the production is raw, spiky and buries the vocals beneath layers of dry guitar riffs and harsh rhythms, and even when the vocals can be heard in the mix they are almost unintelligable - and as you listen you get the impression that Chino would rather it remained that way. The dynamics of the album are such, too, that the heavier moments are like punches to the gut - particularly the mid-album section involving TocarRoot, Seven Words and engine #9.

    SoaD took a different approach - vocalist Serj Tankian looking and sounding like the ringmaster of one insane, heavily-political musical circus. Nothing is done straight, with bizarre, unexpected rhythms, lightning-fast changes of tempo and vocal style, and surreal lyrical images mixed up with the politics, drawing heavily on their Armenian heritage. Never mind the perennial mosh-pit staple of TocarSugar, it's the brutal power of TocarWar? and the quick paced TocarDDevil that stick long in the mind for me.

    Icon of Coil
    Serenity is the Devil
    The sleek electro-thrills of this album took a while to register for many, I think - but before long IoC became one of the biggest bands in the industrial/electro/EBM scene, although Andy La Plegua seemingly became bored with the band and regrouped as Combichrist. Ironically as Combichrist have, er, evolved, in some respects they have become more like IoC than ever. Full of cold, pulsing rhythms, big choruses and even effective ballads, big swathes of this album have remained dancefloor staples, and I don't think Andy La Plegua ever got it as right as this again.

    As I noted above, there were countless other contenders for this list. Here's some of them, in no particular order:

    Rage Against the Machine | Rage Against the Machine
    Suede | Suede
    Foo Fighters | Foo Fighters
    Tori Amos | Little Earthquakes
    VAST | Visual Audio Sensory Theatre
    dEUS | Worst Case Scenario
    The Verve | A Storm In Heaven
    Rico | Sanctuary Medicines
    Seabound | No Sleep Demon
    Rotersand | Truth Is Fanatic
    Converter | Shock Front
    Doves | Lost Souls
    Garbage | Garbage
    Godspeed You! Black Emperor | F#A#∞
  • Post's in thmodernprimitive blogspot

    Mar 8 2009, 15h09 por THModernPrimitv

  • Electronic Nightmare Playlists - February 2k9

    Fev 4 2009, 22h41 por b-s-v

    04.02.09

    Terrorfakt - The Unknown (Edgey Remix)
    pr0metheus buRning - Negative Insulin
    Mute. - Victim By Design
    Epidemia - La Muerte (Todesfall Mix by autoclav1.1)
    Broken Fabiola - When She Left
    Mika Vainio & Chicks On Speed - Flame On
    Access To Arasaka - Nostromo
    Sincere Trade - Edge Of Ruin
    Echorausch - Sens
    Document 3 - In Motion
    Synth-Etik - Exobiological
    Hezzel - Your Name Is Love
    Terrorfakt - Damage
    Kaebin Yield - Polymorph
    Edgey - I Become
    Epidemia - Phylomenescus Cerberus (Severed Mix by C/A/T)
    Kaebin Yield - The Reconfigured Capsid
    Vuxnut - My Sex Appeal (Kick The Pussy Mix)
    Sincere Trade - Return To The Mean
    glaxprism - Dusted
    Totakeke - Dead Set On Living


    11.02.09

    Echorausch - Velocity
    Diode Fetish - Do Chel Denmha (Instrumental Version)
    Marching Dynamics - Confederate
    Antigen Shift - Butoh
    Mara's Torment - Invitations And Seductions (Version)
    Hazing Ritual - It Isn't Pretty...
    Synapscape - Purge
    Antechamber - Abraisive Vision
    unitus - Bonding Over Pharmaceuticals
    cornflex - Medioker 2
    dälek - 2012 (The Pillage)
    Kaltesglas - Activate Me
    Fracture 4 - Re-Motional Turbulence
    Hecate - Venetian Affair
    Epidemia - Chu'uutul (Psitacosis Mix by HIV+)
    Empusae - La Puissance
    Exclipsect - Copperplate
    Hindu Pez - Paranoia Pt. 1
    Void Settler & Labyrinth - Another Particle Accelerator Starts Reminiscing About Lost Glory


    18.02.09

    Iszoloscope - Skotophobique (Recollection Mix by Urusai)
    Architect - Grand Diesel
    Sonar - Tone Loc (Manufactura vs. Converter Remix)
    unitus - Living By The Labour Of The Dead
    Muted Logic - Abort
    Railgun - The Trouble With Progress
    Marching Dynamics - Power Freak
    To Mega Therion - Book Of Enoch (Be Commanded By The Gods Of Fire Remix by Ah Cama-Sotz)
    Laf-O - Fifteen Kd's Later
    Broken Fabiola - Only Our Fate
    Epidemia vs. Complex Mathematical Equation - RF / WF
    Sincere Trade - Push Pin Tactics
    D.Forma - Sindrome
    Mute. - Rebuild The Void With Flowers
    Duncan Avoid - Lucid (Down The Rabbit Hole)
    Laf-O - Molting The Exo
    Skeeter - Ferristek
    DBN - Mes Anges


    25.02.09

    The Future Sound of London - Private Psyche And Inner Life
    Broken Fabiola - Lament
    Freeze Etch - Symbiont
    Sincere Trade - Tesfaye
    Hate Squad - Different From You (More Different Mix by Biochip C.)
    Hecate - New Odyssey
    Takshaka - Zerolight (Railgun Remix)
    Raquel De Grimstone - Approaching Menace (Somatic Responses Remix)
    Laf-O - Untitled
    Empusae - Melkor
    Mimetic Fake - Lust (White Papoo Rmx)
    Iszoloscope - Skotophobique (Remixed by Ah Cama-Sotz)
    unitus - Recombinant
    Monstrum Sepsis - Least
    Detritus - Word
    Exclipsect - Steamfactor
    Laf-O - Reducer
    Exclipsect - Gravitron

    To be continued March 4th...
  • New Free EP by Chaos Royale frontman Luke Chaos!

    Jan 12 2009, 20h07 por Nethiros

    to all of you who know Chaos Royale this is awesome news, and if you never heard of him this is a chance to get familliar with one of the sickest and best musicians i know.



    at first a little information about chaos royale in general:

    Chaos Royale is the performance unit of British-born Tokyo-based sound creator Luke Chaos. The sound is a synthesis of hip-hop, avant-garde classical, reggae, death metal and noise. Live shows combine acrobatic dance performances with realtime heavy beats, remixes of and R’n’B and a ton of .
    The result is extremely danceable, extremely hard, extremely harsh and extremely addicting music somewhere between and . if you happen to live in japan, another reason to see him live are his 2 acrobatic dancers ;)

    as of now, he released 2 ep's and a couple of single tracks, (almost) all for free download at his label's page .
    Let's hope someday he uploads all the tracks here at last.fm ;)

    Chaos All-Stars v1.2


    Harder than god and heavier than satan
    Starting with a harsh and noisy remix of Beyoncé's TocarCrazy in Love this album gets you going from the beginning. At first you'll notice the cut-up vocals and distorted percussion, but when the chorus begins the noisy scratchy sounds start. Interestingly, the static "kkkrrrzzzz" is not antagonistic to the music, not even unpleasant to the listener but simply fits the mood. Still, this is the "softest" track on the ep, if "soft" can be used at all. "Dragstalina", a remix of Daddy Yankee's Gasolina is much more direct, screeching from the beginning, building up fast and hitting you in the face with a -rhythm that gets you moving. The next song "Oh so low" starts slowly and heavy with deep basslines, getting faster and faster until the chorus comes back, blasting you away with one wave of sub-bass after the other. It's a small break for the crowd, since directly after it my favourite kicks in: Haters. This song is brutal. It completely screws your head, the sample (familliar if you know Venetian Snares, it's Elephant Man's Haters) is awesome, the beat is banging loud, the tension builds and builds. For the first 30 seconds you think "wow, hard stuff" but then it really begins. I tell you, there's no way around this mutant dancehall track. The finishing track, a remix of Tocar1 Thing by Amerie takes the rest of your energy, with catchy lyrics and a perfect mix of fucking up her voice and the driving rhythm of the beat.

    After listening to this album you simply collapse. Fuck dancing, i want to have a seizure!



    Night Aquarium

    The new EP, "Night Aquarium" is more abstract, noisier and has a hint of dark ambient atmosphere. This is not the noisy reflection of a club on fire, this is more what the burnt-out building looks like, after it was abandoned for a few decades. Maybe it's haunted by ghosts, or it's just you unconsciously wanting to avoid this place, but you don't feel comfortable. Just like when you listen to these tracks. They are noisy, and i mean Merzbow-noisy, yet still rhythmical. They're danceable in theory, if you find enough sick fucks wanting to dance to it to fill a club (if you plan to do so, send me a pm :D ). The first track "alice underwater" is long. It's hostile. It's dark. You hear static noise, fucked up percussion and lots of effects. The second track "fuckdiver" is more dark ambient, until the droning noise begins. The sounds remind me of Ant-Zen acts like Synapscape, but this more Harsh Noise than anything rhythmically.

    If you're into Merzbow, Masonna and the like, check this out. You won't be disappointed. Also try out Noise/Girl, also on the label's page, which is a blending of harsh noise and disco, but much more noise than anything else.





    Now, in the old tradition of jounal-whoring (to my defense: this is the first time i'm doing it):
    Cardopusher, Bong-Ra, Shitmat, Girl Talk, Coreline, Cholostase, Broken Note, Converter, Hypnoskull, Loli Ripe, Food For Animals, DJ Donna Summer, Glowstyx, The Bug, Scorn, Vex'd, Datach'i, Toecutter, Hecate

    Most of these Artists don't really sound similar, but i guess they fit the rough direction of this.