After taking over ten years to write and release 2018’s Continuum, finding out that they had twinned the release with another 6 tracks the following year, in the form of Buried Memories, was more than a welcome surprise. If you had asked me how they would do this, getting Justin K. Broadrick (Godflesh, Jesu, etc.) to remix the same song 3 times and have James Plotkin (Khanate, Jodis etc.) mix 3 other tracks, is a million miles away to what I would have expected. With this I had no idea what to expect and dived straight into the abrasive darkness…..
The Justin K. Broadrick mix of Hitman starts with a pulsing
heart beat like vibe as the track strums its way forward and evolves with the
guitars filling out, giving you that sense of driving through the night. Not the
driving into the desert feel but more like driving the length of the UK in the
dark in the rain kind of feel. Instrumentally it has a buzzing electric vibe to
it that plays so well against the keyboard that winds along behind everything,
giving it a real feel of it being played live right before you. At this point
Hitman kicks into gear and pulls you in to its beat for a couple of minutes
before the keyboards take over with a load of reverb, taking you into a darker
more psychedelic place that you feel yourself slipping in and out of before a
big dark old school Sabbath riff kicks in and I defy anyone not to move their
head from here onwards.
The Jesu remix is a slower darker affair. The basslines are
really brought into the forefront as every strum has a thundering grinding
sound that shakes the speakers. The keyboards and organs combine to give you
the floating sensation that falls somewhere between the dark and the light. The
industrial sound that appears then disappears has the feeling of big robotic
machines crossing the land before something that feels like a ball of dark
energy that is fighting to implode or explode. It’s near impossible to explain
what this feeling of sound is doing but there is a real dark magical feel to
it. At times you forget that it is the same song but this mix really pulls
something from beyond the track itself and lets the basic structure take on a
complete new life of its own as it rises up into the clouds.
The third mix of Hitmen by JK Flesh stars off with a warmer softer
feel as though the track has lifted itself above the clouds and is floating
away above the light. The beat feels a lot cleaner and electronic as it folds
into itself with a feeling of ambience. The mix then pulls the guitars and
drums back in to give you a feeling of orbiting the earth and the cosmic like
mix of the tone begins to pick up pace as though you are speeding towards
Earth. Finishing off with the repetition of a riff that sounds like an alarm or
a warning, the track leaves you wondering if you ever made it through the
atmosphere.
James Plotkin starts his trio of mixes with the track
Warhero which builds and creeps along with a definite SOAC feel to it before it
spreads itself into something wider, making you appreciate the noise between
the sounds. With some eerie keyboards floating around the noisier breaks held
together with some huge reverberating bass lines, Warhero flits between a huge
stomping gloomy monster and something that feels like an alien lifeform trying
to reach you.
Remembrance is a short low end dark couple of minutes that
hangs around like a metallic beast that has hold of you. Possibly a soundtrack
to a nightmare of some sorts.
The remix of SS Montgomery has James Plotkin really casting
his wizardry over a track by making it come alive in an almost magnetic way,
with each instrument thrusting its way into your eardrums. The song stomps
along in electronic form with a dark space like feel that pulls the buzz of the
guitars towards the thumping bass and the harsh crashing of cymbals. It’s something
that has to be played loud through your headphones whilst sat in the darkness.
The 6 tracks are quite an experience and sometimes a long
way from what Continuum was, but I really enjoyed what I heard, and it really
works well as the antidote. The band seem to be constantly evolving and having
seen their last couple of live performances, they have a real magic spark that
hooks you in and keeps you in their mesmerizing dream. Hopefully the live video
below, from the Black Heart in London, shows you something of this.
Buried Memories has been released through the following
labels in a variety of beautifully put together packages.
Website - Facebook - Bandcamp - YouTube - H42 Records - Robustfellow - Solid 7 Tapes
Website - Facebook - Bandcamp - YouTube - H42 Records - Robustfellow - Solid 7 Tapes
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