Saturday 27 February 2021

Trance ‘Ancient History’ CD (Helicopter/Troniks)

Trance never quite entered the centre of Americanoise understanding, the project running a freer and more ambient understanding which linked to but never aligned with the rougher Self Abuse and Mother Savage surges which dominated my survey of that place and time. ‘Ancient History’ compiles three extended Trance live performances from the early 1990s, recorded at the time on a DAT recorder strategically (or not) placed in the audience and sonically tweaked by John Wiese’s expertise. On each Mason is joined by Elden M, whose Allegory Chapel Ltd project similarly stood near but never in the Americanoise lexicon as I appreciated it – but which I’ve had a long and unassailed admiration of nonetheless.

The first track here is Trance’s first live show, emerging from the shadow of a run of late 1980s/1990 cassette, and heavily reliant on elements of Mason’s earlier musicality as rhythmic patterns merge with free-form junk percussion, flanged but discernible guitar and large empty spaces of withdrawal. The set is too long and meandering to truly succeed, something even the liner notes partially acknowledge, and is at its best when the percussive elements decline near the end, setting up a brief but edgier war of sustained guitar notes which are cannoned out to achieve feedbacked bliss, melting into some brief destructive kinesis; before that, however, the stretch of the piece is a bit laconic for me.

The second set from October 1992 is what I would have expected from a Trance show based upon the materials I’d heard previously: a swarm of mid-range guitar and keyboard tones struggling to be contained within a loosely formed shape, and bounded by minimal percussion. The groaned vocals add a strange ‘80s industrial undercurrent but fit the piece well, which (grunting aside) hits the intended target somewhere between an untidy Aube and a lite version of C.C.C.C. (whose Oakland visit this performance was in support of): better in the denser opening tranche and the gleeful extended closing feedback duel (which finds the vocals re-emerge in a more aggressive manner) than when the guitar takes up a rhythmic role and leaves Elden to fill too big a gap. While experiencing a brief lull in the middle the piece makes proper use of the loudness apparent in the room, genuinely transcendental moments emerging from the volume-driven forces of the duo at the peak of their free-form noise-making, making the fairly demure audience applause at the end rather surprising.

The final track is at Starlight Furniture Company in July 1991, supplementing the American live outfit with core Hijokaidan duo Junko and Jojo Hiroshige, and turning the project away from its more meditative qualities and straight into Japanoise scrawl with Junko’s screams a pervasive and typically abrasive feature alongside the drilling qualities of Jojo’s guitar. Another unusual feature to this track is the clear low-end murmur which has been extracted from the recording, adding a somewhat fidgety undercurrent to portions of the piece which is absent from the confined frequency profile of the other tracks. The collaborative track found edited release on a 7” previously which I’d always attributed to the Hijokaidan part of my collection rather than the American contributors, and hearing the full piece confirms that view – if the screech of 1990s Hijokaidan is for you, then here’s a dialed-in chunk of it.

‘Ancient History’ supplements rather than explains Trance’s history, with only the middle track really profiling the project at its place in American noise lore – although I suspect the first track strongly reflects Trance’s emergence from the 1980s as Mason extricated Trance from its noise rock and proto-industrial beginnings. The recordings stand up well given their age and derivation, expertly salvaged and presented in a typically loving digipack by the team at Helicopter and Troniks.



Saturday 6 February 2021

Young Hustlers ‘Hiding In The Open’ 12” (Skuggsidan)

 

My review of Young Hustlers’ debut cassette ‘Encaged’ described a series of tracks built from familiar power electronics components but promising more than it could deliver, the singularity to the pieces wearing quite thin. Of greater moment were the duo’s tracks on Styggelse’s ‘Stadsbranden 3’ compilation, a crueller detachment settling into the two tracks donated to that collection.
 
The opening synth buzz, slow synth excoriation and barked vocals of “Alienation” bash out an effective but primitive power electronics attack opening ‘Hiding In The Open’, flagging that Young Hustler’s stoic primitivism hasn’t been abandoned – but the pieces have moved beyond the motionless trajectory of ‘Encaged’, demonstrated by the emergence of a scalding fuzz into the opening track, and the antisocial remoteness of the project remains strong. What follows is familiar European power electronics but with a heavy dose of unsettling hooliganism bringing similar disquiet to Young Hustlers’ neighbourhood the way Skm-Etr did to Winnipeg in the mid-’00s, notable for what it manages within strict genre confines rather than any attempt to move or expand upon those. The tracks from both ‘Stadsbranden 3’ and the pair’s split cassette with Alfarmania are included on the LP, ‘Hiding In The Open’ the fuller exposition of the tone set across those releases.

Heavy synth currents and burly distortion layers remain the instrumentation of choice but the vocals are the central feature both in attack and tone; “Cocaethylene” sets the scene with an overwhelming glut of effects in which the vocal blasts are immersed, as sickly feedback and a slippery low-end thud take up the small amount of available space which remains. The remaining tracks of the first side follow suit, the unhinged vocals dominating the compositional space, new track “Bacca Bazi” a favourite as the punishing yells become so swollen with effects that they bear the sonic texture of sheet metal bashing as much as they do vocalising, supported by an insistent fast-paced repetition and intentionally irritating mid-range scratching.

Over the second side a balance returns between vocals and instrumentation, Skm-Etr heavily invoked in the rampant vocal effects and turgid synth of “Startpistol Med Hagelpatron”, while the heavy thrust of “Vagabond Annihilation” and glacial synth ebb of “Knullad Av Hundar”, laced with a fuzz of cold wind distortion, allow more space between the lines of hoarse yelling. While playing an intentionally supportive role across the LP the chance for that instrumentation to emerge is crucial to closer “Vagen Ut”, which unwinds a softer mid-range shudder and slow modulations for a chilled finale of introspection, the heavy vocals completely absent and replaced instead by spaced spoken word passages seemingly sampled from news broadcasts or the like. Spoken in Swedish the content of those passages is lost on me, but the sudden shift from hooliganism to introversion is clear: a pause in external hostilities to dwell on the internal motivations which enrage the remainder.

While there may not be solace there does seem to be in “Vagen Ut” an internal recognition of the excesses across the remainder of ‘Hiding In The Open’, a retreat into the shadows after blazing across the city fuelled by intoxicants and malign intentions. The danger which brews in the remaining tracks is palpable, but that detached antisocialism is actually recognised and made that little more dangerous by the clarity of thinking which “Vagen Ut” brings to an already strong LP.