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Recorded + Mixed By: Phillip Odom
Mastered By: Brad Boatright At Audiosiege
Artwork By: øjeRum
Track List: Self-Inflicted, Scarcity, Dissolution, Moral Decay, A Futile Light, Merciless
Antichrist Superstar, Alien from the AIDS of space, or the Pale Emperor, finding a clear name for Marilyn Manson over the past 26 years of being in the public eye always twirls back to this gothic, near Hammer Films level of graphic sensibility. Feared and revered in the 90s, now his newest record WE ARE CHAOS is less about being shocking and more about creating a solid piece of ground.
Coming off his last record, Heaven Upside Down was never shell shocking, but had moments where Manson could feel more as if he was trying to reach back into his previous styles when he was wearing nothing but torn cloth on stage. His installment before, THE PALE EMPEROR felt more mature and as if he was able to act closer to his age. Now with WE ARE CHAOS, this is more of what Heaven Upside Down should have been. It is still Marilyn Manson, but the pieces of work here tell a more interesting narrative and have some elements of pop rock that catch on the ears rather than grate.
Take the opening track, “RED BLACK AND BLUE” pulls back the curtain with some spoken word and distortion around Manson’s delivery to obtain some engaging poetry. He describes, “My eyes are mirrors. All I can see are gods on the left, and demons on the right,” accompany this with a line-up change and it becomes a whole new situation for Manson to play with.
The work of Shooter Jennings as one of the main songwriters working with Manson here allows a new perspective that also includes Juan Alderete and Ted Russell Kamp on the bass. Brandon Pertzborn and Jamie Douglass are on the percussion but there is also another new addition to the group. Aubrey Richmond covers the fiddle on WE ARE CHAOS and while subtle at times, adds this flair of sound to the orchestra. The guitars are covered by John Schreffler and Paul Wiley, giving an overarching reach to Manson in some of the better suited and engaging instrumentals of the last few albums.
Preferably on the almost sunken dream-esque piece, “PAINT YOU WITH MY LOVE” is the closest thing to a lullaby coming from Manson. Even though he describes, “To kill the man behind the crowd would be viewed as amateur. Because the king is invisible, the king is invisible and death is a profession,” the instrumentation here is gorgeous. It is something that would be more fitting for a cheerful artist like Taylor Swift than the same person who wrote the track “This Is The New Shit,” but Manson makes it work. He thrives in taking some of the strange ideas and contorting them to a new skin.
Even when the subtly wears off and Manson is left standing nearly alone on “BROKEN NEEDLE,” there is something touching coming from THE GOD OF FUCK. Something somehow human and less monstrous which takes the audience by the hand and caresses them like a velvet coffin instead of a mass grave.
But this is the theme of WE ARE CHAOS, it is a rebirth in a lot of ways that sees a wax museum to his previous styles all meshed in one housing. Not entirely sadistic or frightening, Manson is approachable here with hints of charisma not seen in his other lives.
Listen Here – Youtube
Featuring: Cam + China
Video by: Jonathan Snipes + Cristina Bercovitz
Special Thanks: Brian Miller
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Track List: Ersatz, Mensrea, Cicadas, Vacancy, Skeleton, Bubble Baby, Parlor Games
Listen/Watch Here – Youtube
Video Concept By: T. Grave
Shot, Directed + Edited By: Sam Gehrke
Thanks: Hunter Nelms, Jesse Lundin, + Rue
Listen Here – BandCamp/Spotify/Amazon/iTunes
Featuring: Yung Mehico, Hologram, Meyhem Lauren
Produced By: The Alchemist, Budgie Beats, Daringer, DJ Muggs, Harry Fraud, Samiyam, Tommy Mas
Track List: Capoeira, C12H16N2, Latin Grammys, Golden Eye, Mongolia, Vega, Splash, Sergio, Shredder, Cliff Hanger, Marcus Aurelius, Hard Target
Listen/Watch Here – Youtube
Listen Here – BandCamp
Track List: Whats The Point, Tell The World, Cross To Bear, Mind Cell, Found Out, Voyeuristic Lust/Reckoning, No Amends, Can’t Cut It, No Space, Performance Piece, Shaky Ground, Bootstraps
Bordering somewhere on the acid runs of experimentalism and the intricacies of jazz, there is also a touch of the vein into orchestral music that comes from David Axelrod on his debut 1968 release Song Of Innocence.
While the following record Songs Of Experience was already featured here, the previous venture lays the groundwork of engaging instrumentation and the ability to compound layers through sound. It begins with shrills on the strings that essentially act as a horror film’s score but then erupts into beauty based on the over 40 credited musicians on the record.
Stretching over seven tracks and 27-minutes, the trip is short but worthwhile for the way that Axelrod can conduct this sporadic expression of noise into a digestible and palatable adventure. With the opening track “Urizen,” Axelrod uses abstraction as his greatest ally to confuse the audience, then pulling the rug out from under them to bring in a groovy sense of gratification. The instrumentation that follows after the anxiety attack becomes these horn placements and a percussive bounce that is both explosive but also able to be reserved at moments.
Perhaps when Axelrod is shrieking is when he is at his finest. Taking a slower approach with the following piece “Holy Thursday” has a similar key structure to Sublime’s “Doin’ Time” but the production here is closer rooted to jazz than rap. The percussion on “Holy Thursday” is a powerhouse with fast fills and breaks even though the general instrumentation is sluggish and drained. Still beautiful, Axelrod has this fantastic ability to pit conflicts within the instrumental of his tracks to form clear cut differences in atmosphere. One corner is a striking cobra while the other is a lingering grizzly bear; both who are still monumental.
Song Of Innocence is an entirely instrumental album which relies on the players to the tell the stories rather than a vocalist, and through Axelrod’s direction, the uplifting nature on “Merlin’s Prophecy” becomes an initiative dance toward these final moments on the record spent on “The Mental Traveler.” It is a perfect segue from a guitar solo that is ripping through the diverse underlay to then being stopped dead in the tracks by a glimmering and intimidating course of action.
“The Mental Traveler” is less of a progressive stance and more of a rock n’ roll tribute where the low-tuned guitar is proud as a centerpiece. Almost as if the instrumental was being played on a mountain, the range here of the resonation is almost thunderous. Even while being a simple chord run, the stoned fingerings that follow are simply outstanding. “The Mental Traveler” then switches on a dime and becomes this build-up where a minute and a half of near-silence cascades into a pouring over of noise.
Capturing Axelrod’s twisted sense of sound seems impossible as the wide variety in each of his records continues through each listen to unlock more and more pieces of the puzzle. From the funk grooves of the 1960s to the rocking format of the 1970s, Axelrod is a complex producer of warped landscapes with always grand finales.
Listen/Watch Here – Youtube
Track Produced By: Slauson Malone
Featuring: Duendita
Video By: Ryosuke Tanzawa
Special Thanks: Nick Briggs + Sean Gordon
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Vocals + Noise: Cole Rodgers
Guitars + Vocals: Devan Fuentes
Bass: Cole Sattler
Drums: Luke Smith
Full Release November 13th, 2020
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Track List: War, Grounds, Mr. Motivator, Anxiety, Kill Them With Kindness, Model Village, Ne Touche Pas Moi, Carcinogenic, Reigns, The Lover, A Hymn, Danke
The Dirty Souf might be one of the biggest birthplaces for a unique sound that ties to hip-hop. Born by DJ Screw and Three 6 Mafia as the main benefactors, their influence on the modern age has been from the underground to the mainstream and slowly the syrup drains into Kryptonyte on their self-titled release.
Kryptonyte is a group effort from Jade Fox (Liv.e), Lord Byron, and Pink Siifu as the vocal triple threat or hydra and the production comes from Ben Hixon who not only seems to create nostalgic magic but has a light switch ability to transfer on styles in an instant. With tracks beginning under “Emmys,” Kryptonyte immediately is a Houston-esque classic with low-tuned production on the sample that clashes with some ethereal synths. The percussion that has that distinct lo-fi rattle to it is accompanied by a distant vocal hook from Lord Byron.
Fox also features on the track and the smooth female vocal immediately transports the listener to some of Gangsta Boo’s earlier verses. With a hook that describes, “Choppas, techs, bitches, sex, drippin’ wet, killahs, yes” and demands some grills on the teeth of the narrator, Kryptonyte is entertaining and almost sculpts this velvet coffin for the listener to sit in.
The transition from “All For My Wifey” to “Knock Knock” lets the chains swing on the neck with a golden gleam on the grueling dungeon torture chamber. “All For My Wifey” is a graceful 1-minute delivery from Fox spawning some thoughts of bubble baths and the finer things in life where clouds part for her. Extremely graceful and based in the realm of heaven on Earth, all things change as “Knock Knock” slides back the van doors and unloads two fully loaded lyrical Uzis on the audience.
The production here from Hixon is a freight train and knocks heads, immediately causing the hair to stand on the neck; something here is wrong. While only 10 seconds longer than “All For My Wifey,” the experience lasts like hours on a bad trip. Nightfall comes and Lord Byron acts as executioner describing, “Knock Knock who’s at ya door my nigga, it’s a 1-8-7 marble floor my nigga.” Setting up the parlor for an autopsy, Lord Byron’s vocals here are muffled and distorted slightly, but the delivery is rough and intimidating as if it is coming through a two-way radio.
Kryptonyte as a whole kind of has that delivery behind it where the distortion and tape effects are a part of the adventure through Memphis or Houston. As a group, Kryptonyte is less focused on the polished ability that each artist has shown previously and more about taking what’s in your pockets through sound.
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Mixed & Produced: Ryan James Ford
Mastered: Reel Mastering
Manufactured: AnalogCut
Distributed: Clone
Track List: Six Stair, Roscoh Denk, Structure Of Civilization (Youth Mix), While You Were Sleeping