Skullduggery - You Are Here. [Nowhere]
Pro CD-R, Trozoc, 2009
www.myspace.com/skullduggery
It's three years now since I first came across this artist, on the
Glitch Mode compilation "H0rd3z Ov Thee El33t!", as one of many artists
that I first heard there that I thought 'hmm, must check them out again
sometime'. Some vanished, others I went and bought the albums. This was
one, I'll admit, that I thought had vanished until this album appeared.
The track on said compilation - "A Violent Reaction" - was great, and
at the time I was almost willing an album to come.
So, the album is here, how is it? There are no mellow intros here,
for a start - from the very first second a complex, wheezing polyrhythm
bursts out of the speakers at you (if you have it on loud it's a hell
of a shock, too), which works well as an intriguing pointer of what is
to come. By the time the second track, "Everything", comes around,
things are much slowed down, with a languid, near-buried vocal to match
the slow-pace perfectly. "Grotamh" takes us into IDM territory, with
irregular rhythm, phasing effects and more vocals. These are perhaps
the big surprise here, as most electronic music of this complexity
(and, frankly, this far out in the left-field, not in a million million
years could this ever be called mainstream) shuns vocals as much as
possible.
There is only one group of artists in industrial who, over the
course of their career, have experimented this much and got away with
it (indeed pushing the genre into realms most never even expected) and
that would be Skinny Puppy. Like other albums I've heard in recent
years, it's difficult to escape their spectre when creating tracks
crackling with this many ideas, and the first overt Skinny Puppy-feel
comes on in "In-Security", with sampled guitars, drawled, treated
vocals and punchier beats bubbling in a veritable soup of effects. An
ace track, though, influences or not.
Remarkably, it gets better, too, with the (very, very) dark
lullaby of "Angel", with its vocals that sound like they are recited
right next to your ear thanks to clever mixing, and the sparse, pretty
electronics never intrude too much. The calm is shattered by the
drum'n'bass attack of "Religion = War", a seemingly angry tirade at
those who use religion as an excuse for war. An old subject, yes, but
hardly one without enough in the way of sources to provide a fresh spin
on it, as it does here. The whispered vocals are really creepy, though.
"Calamity" isn't especially notable, but "Relapse" certainly is. A
fast-paced, techno attack, it is another curveball in an album
seemingly stuffed with them. "My Rightful Place" is about as 'normal'
as things are going to get here, while "Jacobs Ladder" is four minutes
of pure spite. "Sacrilege" weirded me out, but not as much as the
straight-up synthpop of "Truth". The closing title track, with its
cut-up radio samples and graceful piano brings to mind walking down a
city street and catching innumerable snippets of conversation, but
never engaging in any of them. Which perhaps sums up the title nicely.
To do this album justice (its scope is vast, and to cover all the
musical styles touched upon here would probably take most of my word
limit on their own) it's an album you don't need to be reading about,
other than to be recommended it. It's not going to be for everyone, but
it's really worth giving a try - you will either find it an engaging
curiousity or a massively rewarding and challenging listen. I'm in the
latter camp, and more than a few listens in I'm still finding bits I
missed.
-- Adam Williams [9/10]
Fucking awesome! What else can i say?