|
Limited edition remix CD released with first 1000 copies of the remastered
original recording.
DOGS BLOOD ASCENDING: A Remix by Andrew Liles
REVIEWS
Judas
Kiss
Written by Lee Powell
This limited 2-CD version of ‘Dogs Blood Rising’
is the sister release to the 2-CD reissue of Current 93’s debut
album ‘Nature Unveiled’, sharing the same reissue format as
‘Nature...’. The first CD is a remastered version of the original
and seminal Current 93 album from 1984, complete with a 12-page booklet
reproducing the original sleeve notes, artwork and photos, as well as
a collection of previously unpublished photos from the same period. The
second CD, included with the first 1000 copies of the album, is a remix
CD featuring a completely reworked version of the entire album by longtime
Current 93 collaborator Andrew Liles entitled ‘Dogs Blood Ascending’
Both CDs are housed in a double CD jewel case.
Now for me, ‘Dogs Blood Rising’, the second full-length album
by a then fairly new(ish) Current 93 is absolutely stunning. It has a
pitch-black atmosphere that is genuinely unsettling and confrontational.
It has a strong religious sentiment that can be construed in different
ways, depending on the listener’s religious perspective, and it
sees Tibet and co. producing a wonderfully innovative sound that is deeply
complex, claustrophobic yet ridiculously compelling all at the same time.
It was one of the very first Current 93 releases I heard, and it has remained
one of my favourite releases by them, although it captures a very different
sound to what’s come to be expected from them nowadays. It’s
also a release that seemed to hit a chord with me straight away, and it
inspired me to get my one and only Current 93 tattoo in homage to the
band, and the wonderfully unique music and vision Tibet projects through
it.
Again, as with their previous album ‘Nature Unveiled’, the
musical compositions that are contained herein are breathtakingly innovative,
especially considering that we’re talking about 1984 here. Their
reverberations can be felt through a whole range of contemporary music,
spanning not only the post-industrial and dark ambient genres, but also
touching upon black metal and doom. Utilising a wonderfully heady mixture
of drones, manipulated soundscapes, distant choral passages, tiny waves
of noise and vocals delivered in a plethora of styles, the sound and atmosphere
created is dramatically bleak, but also captivating, invigorating and
immensely powerful. It’s the sort of album that is immensely gripping,
with every minute detail of it perfectly executed. It emanates a pitch-black
atmosphere that is awash with religious connotations and references. It’s
harsh, yet inviting. Difficult, yet at times simplistic. Its nature and
presence shift from element to element, as you travel the expansions of
sound and dense structures that Tibet and his collaborators have produced.
At times, it’s immensely difficult to penetrate, then the next second
you’re lost in a swirling vortex of darkly haunting sounds and textures,
deeply stimulating and containing a harrowing warmth whilst never being
opening inviting.
Opening with the looped and repeated reverberated echoes and haunting
distortions of ‘Christus Christus (The Shells Have Cracked)’,
the album sets a compellingly dark atmosphere and tone almost instantly.
You get the impression you’re about to experience something unique
and tenebrous, yet have no idea just how correct your assumptions are,
although all is revealed on the album’s pinnacle track, the epic
‘Falling Back In Fields Of Rape’.
With a running time of almost 15 minutes, the album’s second track,
the remarkable ‘Falling Back In Fields Of Rape’ is, in my
opinion, the album’s high point, and it typifies the innovative
and challenging nature of the album as a whole. It also demonstrates how
diverse Current 93’s sound was at the time, and how Tibet, even
then, wasn’t afraid to push boundaries and blur genres with his
compositions.
The track consists of thought-provoking and analytical spoken word monologues
set against a background of slow drumming, warped sound manipulations
and dense droned noise and soundscapes, which create a wonderfully imaginative
and captivating intensity that carries you through the track’s entire
length. Sharing sound and structure similarities to Crass’s fantastic
political statement ‘Reality Asylum’, it demonstrates that
the music and social influences that Tibet drew from at the time far outstretched
the majority of other artists who inhabited this early phase of industrial/experimental
music, which Current 93 found themselves an integral part of. So it comes
as no great surprise to learn that Crass’s Steve Ignorant was part
of this formation of C93 and appears to play an important role throughout
the album and especially on ‘Falling Back…’.
The layering of sounds and aural textures over treated vocals is carried
on throughout the remainder of the album with impressively stimulating
results. Often alarming, uncomfortable and threatening, the atmosphere
produced by the album and its lyrical content is still as upfront and
demanding as it was at the time it was written. It’s aged immensely
well, and the strong religious connotations and wordplay the album contains
seem as poignant and relevant as they did back in 1984. This is demonstrated
perfectly on the album’s second long track, the almost 14-minute
‘Rio No Terrasu (Jesus Wept)’ which sees the phrase “Jesus
wept” manipulated and repeated to near nausea-inducing lengths,
whilst layers of sounds, operatic-style female vocals and warped choral
verses are reassembled in a jigsaw of sounds, making the track somewhat
uncomfortable to endure in its entirety, but equally rewarding for those
who feel they have the fortitude to work through it.
As mentioned, the original album is accompanied by the remix album ‘Dogs
Blood Ascending’ by Andrew Liles. Whilst sharing a lot of similarities,
as you’d expect, to the original, it’s interesting to hear
a modern take and representation of the album as a whole. Again, the smallest
element of sound is perfectly clear and crisp, thus ensuring that even
the minutest detail plays an important and necessary part. It pays tribute
to the original immensely well, whilst adding a new dimension of sound
and aural texture, which project an evolving kaleidoscope of imagery,
enhancing that constructed on ‘Dogs Blood Rising’.
I’ve always felt that the atmosphere, style and presence of some
of the compositions that make up ‘Dogs Blood Rising’ have
remaining exclusive to this release as a whole, and haven’t been
utilised or reworked on subsequent Current 93 releases. As such, ‘Dogs
Blood…’ is a truly unique, wonderfully distinctive album within
the ample canon of releases that Tibet has produced, and is therefore,
as you’d expect, an essential and intricate part of Current 93 history
that needs to be re-explored and revisited time and time again. It goes
without saying that this release is an essential purchase, especially
if you’re able to get hold of the two-disc set. So don’t delay,
track down a copy now. I guarantee you the album will go to great lengths
to impress you, and impress it does. A must-have release, and a fantastic
insight into the earliest embryonic stages of Current 93.
Brainwashed
Written by Lucas Schleicher
Sunday, 27 April 2008
Released the same year as Nature Unveiled, Current 93's second full-length
record is more uneven than its predecessor and less coherent. Time has
been kind to Current 93's debut, but Dogs Blood Rising feels a little
like Tibet's leftover thoughts and ideas forced onto record. It nonetheless
boasts of several outstanding moments and marks Tibet's first obvious
movement away from the trappings of the so-called industrial culture.
Everything Nature Unveiled expressed with brevity and eloquence is unnecessarily
confused and extended on Dogs Blood Rising. All the familiar symbols and
references to Christianity, Satan, redemption, fear, human impotency,
apocalyptic trauma, and positive biblical fables are present, but without
the strength of a unifying esthetic. "Christus Christus (The Shells
Have Cracked)" begins well enough with looped chants, abstract and
breathy tones, and a sense of direction. It is an invocation of Christianity's
dark side, a dimension characterized by death, burning, God's terrifying
judgment (who will be saved?), and humanity's capacity for evil. "Falling
Back in Fields of Rape" continues that promise of a new direction
by solidifying it with a distinct meter, evenly recurring and reversed
percussion loops, and a seductive chant deep in the background. Nature
Unveiled was not without its structure, but at the beginning Dogs Blood
Rising seems more thoughtful and coherent by virtue of its more conventional
form.
Steven Ignorant's opening lines a few minutes into the song arrive unexpectedly,
breaking the song's established vocabulary, and with his words Stapleton
simultaneously increases the audio frenzy. The sequence of audio events
presented in a short time is impressive. A metallic and vertiginous crash
realizes the act of falling suggested in the song's title, then there
is a moment of near silence before the now familiar words "In a foreign
town / In a foreign land" are delivered. Ignorant's tone is initially
narrative-like and it maintains the structure suggested by the song's
opening moments. However, his delivery is quickly made ferocious, his
voice reaches a feverish pitch, and in no time at all the music becomes
equally crazed. The song is then transformed and a child's voice becomes
the focal point, and then again another change occurs as a deranged and
slightly forced growl makes its way into the mix, and then yet another
change. This time a woman recites various cruelties to which humans are
subjected while an organ slowly drones away beneath her voice. Over and
over again the song mutates without warning, almost as though it were
punishing the listener for expecting any kind of order. An unnecessary
drum machine briefly makes an appearance before Tibet's dry and unnerving
voice enters the fray, calling to mind his performance on I Have a Special
Plan for this World. Unfortunately the song attacks the listener almost
too literally, inspiring frustration more than fright, sympathy, remorse,
or any other emotion. What could've been a new direction for Tibet and
Stapleton instead devolves into a less powerful version of everything
presented on Nature Unveiled.
Neither "From Broken Cross, Locusts" nor "Raio No Terrasu
(Jesus Wept)" improves the album much. The former is a consistent
song in both tone and structure, but it quickly becomes dull. For much
of the song Tibet simply repeats "Antichrist" over and over
again; his voice is amplified, distorted, and extended in various ways
with little more than a martial and repetitive drum-beat to accompany
him. The latter is, for some reason or another, dedicated to Japanese
author, playwright, poet, philosopher, essayist, nationalist, and imperialist
Yukio Mishima. Perhaps Mishima's literary and personal emphasis on the
body inspired Tibet, but making any definite connection between him and
the album is nearly impossible and suggests that Tibet was, at the time,
juggling too many influences to make anything definite and powerful of
them. Most interesting is the concluding piece, "St. Peter's Keys
All Bloody." In a conversational tone Tibet greets darkness by way
of Simon and Garfunkel's "The Sounds of Silence." It's an especially
interesting musical reference considering the song's generally accepted
message, which touches on the absence of love in public life and lack
of communication between individuals, public or private. In any case,
the song also signifies Tibet's interest in more structured music, especially
folk music. As the lyrics to "Scarborough Fair" while away beneath
Tibet's scathing delivery I'm reminded of Tibet's synthetic sensibilities
on Nature Unveiled. It's clear to me now that while Tibet worked initially
within an industrial (or at least experimental) mode, he was from the
start trying to break away from it. Simon and Garfunkel were almost the
complete antithesis of what was happening in London's more underground
venues in 1984, yet their influence appears on this record.
Also included in the first 1,000 copies of this reissue is a complete
album remix by Andrew Liles titled Dogs Blood Ascending. It is in every
way an improvement upon the original. The sudden and unappealing shifts
of "Falling Back in Fields of Rape" are transformed into a unified
and explosive expression of anger at the loss of innocence. The song,
in its remixed form, begins with the child-like voices that populated
the middle portion of the original and then proceeds to Ignorant's spite-filled
diatribe. It's as though, by a simple rearrangement and some improved
atmospherics, the entire album is given a perspective and force that it
originally didn't have. War is clearly declared on the evils of the world,
the pounding of drums that were previously wimpy synthetic thuds assume
a meaningful dimension that they couldn't have had in the original, and
all the musical changes that bogged down the original are given new life
because of Liles' determination to maintain some semblance of unity within
the song. The percussion on "From Broken Cross, Locusts" also
benefits from Liles' careful hand. Instead of being monotonous and ineffective,
they achieve a truly martial status that reminds me more precisely and
fully of a fascist dread marked by the terror of marching and perfectly
polished boots. Tibet's Antichrist-chant is invigorated by various effects
and benefits from being truncated slightly. The song is thus made into
the whirlwind of hatred I suspect it was intended to be. "Raio No
Terrasu (Jesus Wept)" is given the most radical transformation. On
Dogs Blood Ascending it is a quiet, subdued piece, emphasizing the somber
quality of Christ's sacrifice. It's a real tribute to Liles' talent that
he managed to latch onto the record's major themes and improve upon their
presentation without rendering the album completely unidentifiable. It
also shows that all the necessary pieces to the puzzle were available
to Tibet in the crafting of this album; they were ready to be assembled
in a powerful way, but simply weren't realized as well as they could've
been. The remix ends with "St. Peter's Keys All Bloody," but
this time a musical accompaniment that approximates "The Sounds of
Silence's" melody is the main feature. Tibet's vocals appear, too,
but the contrast between the toy-box melody and his pronounced groans
adds a depth to the song not present in the original.
|
CURRENT 93 - DOGS BLOOD RISING (REMIX)
CD - Durtro Jnana - (UK/Canada) - 2008
|