Thursday, 22 October 2009

music & science (and moonspell)

If you recall, a few posts ago I brought up a connection between metal and phyics - specifically through Somn from Forest Stream, who is both musician and physicist.

Well, here's another parallel: I just clued in that the latest Epica album, Design Your Universe, is "directly influenced from quantum physics" (to quote the promo blip). To be honest, I'm not quite sure how yet. It doesn't sound anymore quantum than their other records (what does quantum even sound like?), but a neat idea nonetheless.

One more timely connection between music and science:
Quantifying Goethe, by the Penderecki Quartet at Waterloo's Quantum to Cosmos Festival.

And, in case you were wondering, Moonspell completely rocked the Mod Club in Toronto Tuesday night. Great and extremely intimate set all the way from Wolfheart to Night Eternal. It amazes me how that band manages to sound as ferocious as they ever did without losing the subtleties or falling into dated nostalgia. Too bad it's been such a busy concert week, keeping some people away who might otherwise have shown up. (for the record, I'm not a jot sorry I chose Moonspell over Satyricon)

Sunday, 4 October 2009

reviews and interviews (summer turns to fall)

Time for a round-up of what interviews and reviews I've managed to get written in the last month or so...

hellbound.ca:

exclaim.ca: (it looks like my posting of these reviews has been a little lax...)
And these two didn't seem to make it online:
Karl Sanders
Saurian Exorcisms
Saurian Exorcisms is the second Eastern-acoustic album from Nile's Karl Sanders, a complex and unearthly musical tapestry generated almost entirely by Sanders himself. The record is broken up into multiple individual tracks - all with enigmatically descriptive titles - but the songs course from one mood to another, flowing between looping motifs, between geographical and cultural influences, with little conventional logic or shape. The sound is deeply evocative and exotically picturesque, easily suggesting the kind of mythologies the album title invokes. Layered traditional instruments, Middle-Eastern melodies, hypnotic percussion - it's all a long way from Sanders' usual fare. But the accumulation of eerie cries and chants, dark and strange tones, and unresolved harmonic tension makes it easy to forget this isn't a metal record. Saurian Exorcisms is the kind of lullaby that produces exquisite nightmares. (The End Records, www.theendrecords.com)
Laura Wiebe Taylor
These Are They
Who Manifest
At three songs and under 21 minutes, Who Manifest is just a taster, a mouth watering snippet and, hopefully, a sign of more good things to come. Novembers Doom is the closest reference point for These Are They - not so much because of current similarities (beyond Paul Kuhr's easily recognizable growl) but because of history. These Are They bring together two parts early Novembers Doom (Kuhr and Steve Nicholson) with members of Disinter and Earthen in an old school death/doom rumble, channelling some classic harsh and gloomy sounds. Amped up with some gnashing riffs, a little heavy blues, and some stripped down soloing, Who Manifest is solid and raw, abandoning melancholy for sheer ominous mass. (The End Records, www.theendrecords.com)
Laura Wiebe Taylor