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REVIEWS
CHAIN D.L.K
Have you ever been compelled
to deal with keeping a vigil over baggage by some strike by
airport's personnel, extreme atmospheric disturbances or Icelandic
volcanoes? Have you ever experienced zombie-like condition during
daytime for a bad jet-lag or strong occupational stress? If
so, you could have experienced the malaise mentioned in the
title of this release, the mildest one as the most serious case
circadian or nycthemeral rhythm disturbances are related to
worrisome sleeping sickness. Originally released on a 3"
CD-R by Laughing Bride Media four years ago, this sonic pearl
by Lull, the forerunning beatless dark project by that hyperkinetic
musical genius of Mick Harris, who has been considered one of
pioneer of the so-called Isolationist ambient music, and Beta
Cloud, project of NY-based musician Carl Pace, who gained some
respect in the scene since its catchy release "An Open
Letter To Franz Kafka" with Aidan Baker ad for some interesting
soundscapes in his album Lunar Monograph for its ability in
setting field recordings in muffled drones and dark-ambiuent
gelatins, "Circadian Rhythm Disturbance" is a 20-minutes
lasting piece, re-issued by Cold Spring which assigned visuals
to talented designer Chase Middaugh. It looks like a sonic description
of what many insomniacs experience while they're caught by that
disturbing hypothalamic sensation after a long period of sleep
deprivation or chronobiological disfunctions, sonically represented
by an oppressive drone where other sonic stimulations such as
alerts, chatters, chirps, pulses, clicks, trafic noises and
so on have been turned by a fatigued consciousness into something
extremely upsetting, a sonic translation of yuppie flu or eyestrain,
body temperature alterations, peevishness and other symptoms
related to sleep disorders. The second track is a reconfiguration
(or better...another toothpick...) by one of the most eclectic
veteran of sound arts, Andrew Liles (Nurse With Wound), who
tips over the sonic pelting so that it seems he departs from
"inner" spaces (for instance the chattering which
are in the beginning of the original version have been placed
at the end of the track) by putting the emphasis on field recordings
and gradually disturbing sonic hype, noisy streams (it's nice
the transmutation of a notebook fan blow into an air-jet turbine
engine!) and boulder-strewn sonic paths within narrow sequences
of pulses, disquieting harpsichord arpeggios and chimes, matsuri-like
hits, interrupted by random disturbing sonic sketches such as
squeaks, clinks, newborn screams and...shhhh...babies are sleeping!
Review by: Vito Camarrett
DUSTED
MAGAZINE
Dark Ambient is often a frustrating and unrewarding genre. Whereas
“regular” ambient music remains dominated by the
theories and ethos of Brian Eno, managing to be both immersive
and intangible, Dark Ambient’s focus on fear and oppressiveness
mean it’s rarely either discreet enough to work as background
music, nor has it the melodic elegance that made Music For Airports
such a haunting work. Maybe a comparison with standard Ambient
is unfair, and misses the we-wanna-scare-you point, and there
are exceptions (KTL, William Fowler Collins, Lustmord), but
for the most part Dark Ambient seems hamstrung by its own focus
on being unsettling, and over the kind of track lengths used
in ambient music, it quickly becomes dull, overbearing or irritatingly
oblique.
That said, any genre can deliver remarkable
results if one applies a robust and clearly thought-out concept,
and that is exactly what Lull & Beta Cloud did in 2008 on
their limited-release CD Circadian Rhythm Disturbance, which
has been given the reissue treatment by Cold Spring. Lull —
better known as Napalm Death’s Mick Harris — and
Beta Cloud’s Carl Pace explore the state of insomnia,
and their deep bass drones and snippets of intangible voices
and sound effects recreate that dreadful state, when your mind
hovers between wakefulness and near-sleep and where every sound
from outside is too quiet to latch onto but loud enough to jar
every sense in your body. The duo’s moody, fiercely tense
sonic expanse, in which everything progresses in a state of
near-stasis yet remains deeply involving, manages to eschew
the clichés of “dark” music to create something
that is so conceptually relevant it slips under your skin and
haunts your thoughts without you even noticing.
If Harris and Pace’s take on the concept of “Circadian
Rhythm Disturbance” is haunting, albeit whilst relying
on the listener’s foreknowledge of the ideas contained
within, Andrew Liles’s curious “remix” (the
quotation marks are necessary) takes things to a different level
altogether. A better word for what Liles does would be “destruction,”
as he chops up the doom-like drone of the original like a madman
equipped with a pair of scissors and promptly ups the angst
and the noise. Disturbing, ear-shattering samples and found
sounds crash into the mix, tearing any sense of equilibrium
to pieces and leaving gaping holes of morose silence. The sounds
Liles introduces are often unrecognizable, distorted to the
point of atonality in the manner of Jason Lescalleet and Graham
Lambkin’s Air Supply album. Sudden surges sound like motor
vehicles accelerating, intensifying the disorientation and near-physical
sickness of insomnia.
Circadian Rhythm Disturbance was a pretty brilliant approach
to Dark Ambient in and of itself, meriting comparison with Thomas
Köner at his most atmospheric. With Liles onboard to fuck
things up in even more unsettling and intense ways, it has grown
into a messy, haunting and unrelentingly powerful beast. By
Joseph Burnett
MUSIQUE MACHINE
Circadian Rhythm
Disturbance, a 20-minute piece created through a cross-Atlantic
collaboration between Birmingham, UK’s Mick Harris and
New York’s Carl Pace, was first released in 2008.
Harris’ Lull project first saw the light of day in the
early nineties when it was incorporated into the awkwardly named
‘isolationist’ category that brought together other
beat-makers in need of respite from the tyrannical grids of
their MIDI sequencers with post-industrial artists exploring
darker textures in ambient music. While the tag didn’t
last for long, a preoccupation with sound and how it can affect
our perception of the world continues to drive ever-increasing
amounts of artists to work with field recordings to create mediated
realities. Beta Cloud has been doing just that since 2006, often
adding dreamy, improvised guitar manoeuvres to coerce our attentions
into going beneath the mundane, predictable surfaces of everyday
life. And for Circadian Rhythm Disturbance, Pace and Harris
aim was to present the psychological affects of insomnia through
processed recordings with added atmospheric augmentations.
The result is a miasma of cars and voices streaking by, presumably
through the open window of the compromised insomniac, as a hi-pitch
needle injects an unpleasant tinnitus-like tone. Then, as if
the listener has ingested sleeping pills, things start getting
blurry as the needling is mercifully drowned out by the urban
ambience increasingly soaked in reverb and delay as it coalesces
with layers of slowly churning, deeply breathing subsonics.
Both paranoid and somnolent, the cycling surges extend until
three-quarters of the way through the piece when the hi-pitch
tone violently returns to cut through the murk. Rudely roused,
it makes the outside ambience take on a less soporific hue as
the cars and voices become recognisable once more.
For this re-release, Cold Spring drafted in Nurse With Wound’s
Andrew Liles to ‘reconfigure’ the experience as
only he knows how. Belligerently ditching most of the original,
Liles presents an array of clicks, whirrs, snips and squeeks
in his proprietary high-definition fashion, sounding like the
assembly of clockwork machinery that regularly and rudely interrupts
the odd subterranean rumble. From here it builds into a battery
of looped industrial hits, sometimes seeming like the CD has
stuck, as they hammer and crash regularly and stubbornly like
some kind of industrial gabba. But, despite growing to destructive
levels the beating is never left alone for long, but faithfully
curtailed by the mechanical ratchetting, like some kind of battle
between time as it is tightly measured and how it is more loosely
perceived. All this aggression is variously visited by snippets
of music hall piano, lightly tinkling bells, stately Spanish
guitar and lithely twisting glassy tones to form a bemusing
but no less beguiling piece in stark contrast to its predecessor.
And it is this contrast that makes this release a particularly
exciting, involving experience that travels from the disturbed
drift of the original to the vicarious violence of Liles’
phantasmagorical time attack. Russell Cuzner
COMPULSION
ONLINE
Circadian
Rhythm Disturbance Reconfigured features an original collaboration
between Mick Harris's Lull and Beta Cloud's Carl Pace, originally
released as a 3-inch CD in 2008 on Laughing Bride Media. The
new Cold Spring edition, with brand new artwork, is bolstered
by a radical remix from sound artist Andrew Liles.
The opening moments of
the original piece feature environmental sounds such as street
chatter and passing traffic - as if caught from an open bedroom
window. Although existing simultaneously with Scorn, Lull was
born as a project for Mick Harris's beatless excursions. It's
more than probable therefore that the slight rhythmic undertow
of gentle pummel here was supplied by Beta Cloud's Carl Pace.
Either way, it is there underneath the lulling ambient shimmer
and low, low shape-shifting drones that comprise 'Circadian
Rhythm Disturbance'. With voices half-glimpsed voices set against
slight changes in tone with the occasional piercing frequency,
the overall atmosphere remains foggy and muggy with muffled
indeterminate sounds succinctly conveying the feeling of insomnia
where sounds are detected but never fully deciphered. And while
it captures the hinterland between sleep and an attentive waking
state, the end section delves deeper into denser and murkier
terrain with lolling dark ambient reverberations, capturing
the frustration and anxious moments of sleep deprivation.
The Andrew Liles remix
is altogether different, and with its recurring cuts, it seemingly
captures cycles of interrupted sleep patterns. Liles' time with
Nurse With Wound is brought to the fore with the sound abstractions
on his 'Another Toothpick' remix. Drone sounds are cut with
grainy ambient rhythms. Moments of silence and squeals are replaced
with industrial drone, ambient shimmer and grainy clicks and
cuts. Those clicks, it could be argued, might even represent
the interrupted ticking of a clock. Liles' 'Another Toothpick'
remix becomes more of a headfuck later on with thumping heavy
charges and escalating drone attaining a heavy rhythmic force
with its stuttering beats and charged explosions. The entire
piece sounds like an abstract collage of disquieting tones spliced
with moments of silence before returning to the street chatter
that opened up the original, That, however, would be failing
to mention the short passages of harpsichord, jet engine propulsions,
bells and electronic thuds and the ambient drone and shimmer
that underpinned the original work by Lull and Beta Cloud.
As the original edition
of Circadian Rhythm Disturbance Reconfigured was limited to
a mere 100 copies or so, this haunting sound creation was ripe
for rediscovery, and here alongside Andrew Liles's skull-smashing
radical remix, it's a more than worthy (re)issue.

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