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Black Boned Angel - The End

Saturday, February 16. 2013

Black Boned Angel - The End

Title: The End
Artist: Black Boned Angel
Label: Handmade Birds


This first appeared at the Liminal.

Campbell Kneale has been exploring the potential of the drone for more than 15 years now (in terms of releases, at least – before that, in the wilds of New Zealand and the wilds of interiority, who knows?). In high flung terms, his explorations call for a re-scaling of the word epic, a re-calibration of what’s possible in terms of sheer endurance, not to mention our very understanding of the phenomenological potential of the extended note and its psychedelic implications; more crassly put, his work is monstrous and alluring and repulsive in equal measure – and no more so than with his doom project, Black Boned Angel.

Kneale started Black Boned Angel 10 years ago as a duo along with James Kirk (more recently the band has incorporated Jules Desmond and Anthony Milton), the act creating blackened doom music, a kind of purist metal drone built around those early Earth recordings and the more unadorned Sunn O))) releases. There has always been something of a grand gothic edge to them, too – in the stage imagery, the backgrounded ranks of choral voices, and the themes of their records: Supereclipse, The Witch Must Be Killed, Verdun. Now the band have decided to call it a day, and The End is to be their last album, their epitaph. And it’s as if this has freed them up, somehow, given them an impetus to throw everything skyward, because that aforementioned grandeur is very much apparent, making The End an emotional masterpiece as well as one concerned with exploring the crushing sonic possibilities of all out heaviness.

The End is in three-parts, which add up to over an hour of music. It’s gruelling, yes, but that’s part of the point. A good chunk of Kneale’s aesthetic has always been invested in making you experience his time, so the listening experience is something akin to surrender. ‘Part 1’ is a magmatic, elephantine thing, guitar noise ripped to bursting point hoisted on blackened shrieks and Nadja-style programmed drums. This gives way, in ‘Part 2’, to something more unsettling, with swirling metallic drones and churning disembodied voices, like a choir buried hundreds of miles deep in the ground. The grinding riff, when it comes, is almost a relief. And it’s here that the emotional heft becomes really apparent, with the guitars buoyed by a vast organ patter that eventually decays into a simple fugue state lit by a simple piano figure. The closest comparison I can think of in recent times, in tone if not always in content, is another swansong – that of Corrupted, whose Garten der Unbewusstheit from 2011 had a similar soaring trajectory.

‘Part 3’ is built around another sludgy chord pattern that’s more lava flow than riff, above which flits a choral line treated until it becomes an almost theremin-like warble. Similar to ‘Part 2’ the track devolves into rubble and decay, as if the sonic fabric were unable to bear up under the strain. Which kind of adds up in terms of an elegy for Black Boned Angel; and there’s an admirable restraint in realising an idea has been pushed as far as it can go. The End stands (and crumbles) as a definitive final statement.

Liminal Minimals - November 2012

Tuesday, December 11. 2012

Ore Granolithic

Title: Granolithic
Artist: Ore
Label: Self released


This first appeared at The Liminal.

Ore are Sam Underwood and Stuart Estell. They are based in Birmingham. They make intricately composed and cavernously deep doom music. With tubas (a York front-action EEb and a Besson BE983 front-action compensating EEb tuba, respectively). Granolthic is their debut album and it’s quite a thing. The title is pretty instructive in that the accumulated effect of the sounds they produce is crushing and granitic – like being slowly compressed by a throbbing slab of warm stone. And that warmth is key here, because for all of the sheer density and low-end weight of their sound, it always remains human and absorbing – not least because of the presence of so much breath, both implied and actual. This is especially apparent on the opening track ‘Sospan Ddu’ (seemingly named after a Dutch dredger) on which the sharp intakes of breath act like a doubling mechanism of the slow percussive moment of the military drums. ‘Ustvolskaya’ (named for the elusive Russian composer?) is nominally the ‘brightest’ thing here, with both tuba players using higher registers. That said, the track still feels very like an elegy. Closing epic ‘St Michael’ – the longest track at 17mins 22 – is gruelling in its way, and close in places to the doom ethic of Sunn O))). The track suddenly mutates into a harsh bellow around the 14 minute mark, sounding for all the world like someone playing an enraged bull. Which is meant as a total compliment and absolutely left me wanting more. Where the duo goes with this sound is anyone’s guess, but on this evidence it’ll be worth keeping up with.



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Liminal Minimals April 2012

Thursday, May 3. 2012



Lots of good Minimal reviews this month, including Traxman, Hiss Golden Messenger and the latest sublime Ian Nagoski compilation. Just the one from me this month, but it's a good one - the mighty Pallbearer album.

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Liminal Minimals February 2012

Thursday, March 1. 2012



Artist: Liberteer
Title: Better To Die On Your Feet Than Live On Your Knees
Label: Relapse


Matthew Widener is alive with possibilities at present. His history is in the California grindcore scene, with gorehounds Exhumed and the more political crust-inflected political grind of Citizen; but Liberteer is a whole other beast. He’s essentially taken the vicious snarling grindcore of his past and added upthrusting drafts of pomp and drama straight from the classic American songbook: think of the Entombed of Wolverine Blues (actually just think of a wolverine) on a hovercraft cushion of John Philip Sousa or even Aaron Copeland. Hell, on ‘Sweat for Blood’ I even thought of Bill Conti’s work on the Rocky soundtracks. And all this packed into a tightly wound 27 minutes of barely suppressed anarchist fury. For Better Die On Your Feet Than Live On Your Knees also functions as a kind of manifesto, a mode for living. The package details not only the breathless bile of Widener’s politicised lyrics (check the titles alone for an idea of the content: ‘Class War Never Meant More Than It Does Now’ ‘We Are Not Afraid Of Ruins’) but also how to utilise the packaging as a graffiti stencil, and well, a bomb. As he has intimated in interviews, this is music of action, of agency. I hesitiate to use the word inspiring as I sit on my arse typing this, but this is serious and full of intent. It’s also a total blast. Go get.

Some new short reviews over at the Liminal.

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Liturgy - Returner

Wednesday, May 4. 2011

LITURGY // RETURNER from Panorama Programming on Vimeo.


(Reviewed the Liturgy record a couple of weeks back; spotted the video at the very fine NFR blog).

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Liturgy - Aesthethica

Tuesday, April 19. 2011



Artist: Liturgy
Album: Aesthethica
Label: Thrill Jockey


For a relatively new band, Liturgy come with a lot of baggage. Some of that is critical-acclaim, for sure; but a good deal of the rest has billowed up around their high-concept approach to their music, and their – well, vocalist and guitarist Hunter Hunt-Hendrix’s – relatively high-profile theorising around the band’s self-mythologised ‘transcendental black metal’. Simply type the term into Google and see the sneering responses it’s engendered, the accusations of hipsterism it’s created – and the broiling vilification it’s received from much of the black metal community. It kind of goes without saying that this is something of a shame as it gets in the way of listening to the band. And in truth, they’re a hell of a proposition.

Read the rest of the review over at The Liminal.

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Kehlvin & Rorcal - Ascension

Wednesday, April 6. 2011



This 28-minute brutal symphony of a record is currently available as a free download over at last.fm. It's IMMENSE. That is all. Go and get it.

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