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BLACK BEAUTY
Forming part of 'The Vortex Vault' a mail-order only series of
12 CDs.
TRACK LISTING
Dead Roses
A Numbers Game
Bamboo Sheep
All Things Bright and Beautiful and Corrosive
The Artless Shaman
George the Chemist
Tinder Box
REVIEWS
BIZARRE
MAGAZINE
Consisting of 12 individually released CDs, this is, in part, a collection
of unreleased material from one of the UK's finest electronic experimentalists'
studio archives. A collaborator with similar sound envelope-pushers such
as Nurse With Wound and The Hafler Trio, Liles' music mixes minimalist
drones with antique instrumentation and natural noise for a sonically
surreal sound. This is dark ambience in its most eclectic form - sublime,
sinister and visually spectacular.
By Billy Chainsaw
RE:GEN
MAGAZINE
For its centerpiece, Part Three of Andrew Liles' collection
of rarities features two extended experiments in ambient music and found
sound. The first, "All Things Bright and Beautiful and Corrosive,"
is as bleak as its title suggests, and as varied. Starting off with quiet
ambient drones, creaks, and occasional tapping sounds, it also features
slowly echoing gongs and washed out crashes of cymbals. For its second
movement, soft chimes slip into the mix, adding a sort of creepy music
box vibe vaguely reminiscent of Coil's early work, and the emphasis on
random and unexpected sound effects calls to mind Nurse With Wound. "George
the Chemist" is less eclectic, but perhaps also less unsettling,
with softly ringing tones evoking the subtle loneliness of Tor Lundvall
or Raison D'etre. It's the scattering of short pieces on Black Beauty
though, that prove to be most compelling. Each a quick experiment in melody,
they run the gamut from beatnik weirdness on the rain stick-soaked jazz
wails of "Dead Roses" to the Tim Burton chiming of "Tender
Box." Each is long enough to present a thought, but short enough
to leave you wanting more; the eerie dulcimers of "A Numbers Game"
in particular would make a good basis for a longer piece. "The Artless
Shaman," on the other hand, is perfect just the way it is; any more
of its mellow tribal beats and puzzled, puzzling growls, and the fun would
be ruined. And Black Beauty is, most importantly, a fun CD; it has its
dark places, but Liles' passion for extravagantly weird music comes through
even in its bleakest moments.
Posted: Wednesday, July 25, 2007
By: Matthew Johnson
Associate Editor
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