Link:
http://www.losingtoday.com../reviews.php?review_id=518..9
By Richard Stokoe
Text:
"Had circumstances, namely death, not already robbed us of the
directorial talents of Sergio Leone and the curious imaginings of Jean
Cocteau then a collaboration between the pair and the similarly skewed
but inspired mind of Guillermo Del Toro would still be a possibility.
The results would, one would assume, have been fascinating /
illuminating/ twisted / horrific, or all of these. There would probably
have been a lot of scenes featuring bleak, Dali-esque landscapes; at
least one character with gap teeth, a glass eye and packing a shooter;
an ashen faced child who may or may not be dead but doesn’t so much
walk as glide when he or she moves; and something incongruous but
ungodly preserved in a glass jar.
But why even ponder such a project? No reason at all other than the
fact that Music For Money have the perfect soundtrack ready and
waiting. Maudlin pianos weave a melancholic trail through a soundscape
across which is strewn electronic squelches, distant Theremin howls,
desolate post rock guitar textures, soporific drill’n’bass drum
patterns and a chorus of ghostly voices to conjure a spaghetti western
so unseemly that you can almost reach out and touch the tumbleweed but
don’t for fear that something might bite your hand off. Like the best
works of the aforementioned luminaries of film, the Montreal quartet
have created a work that is unsettling in a good way, doffing their
caps to their fellow Canadian creators of bleak but inventive
instrumentals, Godspeed! and Do Make Say Think to name but two, while
making it clear that theirs is a music that is menacing but controlled
and as such hides the unyielding promise of a sting in the tail.
RICHARD STOKOE