Showing posts with label 1989. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1989. Show all posts

Aug 19, 2024

Deaf Lions / PBK - "Shamanistic" Cassette 1989 (PBK Recordings)

 


"Side one: 'Radiate Out' is one of the finest aural collages I've heard in quite some time. The piece has been repeatedly test-driven by your erstwhile reviewer through Industrial Wasteland National Park (Rt. 1/9 thru Jersey City) and has done so much as to make the trip and aesthetic one. The piece changes course about every three minutes either by gradual loop shifting or more abrupt bridging, presenting texture after texture in much the same way as an art gallery leads you past work after work. I'd be interested to know the collaborative strategy behind it. Side two is solo PBK's 'Metachroma(tism)' - reminiscent of the prelude to the afternoon of a nuclear test site. In either case, don't fall asleep with the headphones on." (Ear Magazine of New Music)


Aug 18, 2024

PBK - "A Noise Supreme" Cassette 1989 (PBK Recordings)

"The Coltrane influence in the title is obvious, the influence on the music is more subtle.The release is composed of analog synthesis and digital synthesis sides. The analog side begins with soft, subdued tones and progresses to a pleasant noise crescendo punctuated by a staccato distortion loop. The digital side evokes more of the spirit of Coltrane with its evocative noise melodies integrated with a slight digital keyboard feel. A fitting tribute that is highly recommended." (Factsheet Five)

"As PBK puts it, 'A Noise Supreme', is a collection of 'abstractions in sound and rhythm'. One side of this tape uses analog synthesizers, the other digital - and the two sides do sound worlds apart. The analog side is quite a forbidding place, where a howling wind kicks up a blinding sandstorm that obliterates the landscape. When the dust finally settles, the terrain proves barren, with nothing but jagged rocks as far as the eye can see. You're just about to give up and go home, when a deafening whine fills the air. As you rush to cover your ears, the ground starts rumbling, and fissures begin to gape open all around you. Somehow, despite what seems an impending death never comes, and you emerge unscathed. The digital side is, in fact, the noise supreme - more richly textures, with a great depth and feel. Sometimes jackhammers threaten to vibrate your fillings right out of your head, and at others, synths lift you up off your feet, giving you a birds-eye view of the entire planet. On side B (which contains many shorter pieces, as opposed to the three or four long pieces of side A) there is always a sense of change, of motion, and of space that makes it much more fulfilling. At least in PBK's universe, the digital planet is definitely the place to be." (File 13)