A few years back we went to Ozzfest at Donington and got stuck in traffic trying to get there. It worked out okay though because we got there just in time for Mad Capsule Markets who came on just as we walked through the tunnel under the racetrack to hear their crazy blend of Japanese hardcore metal electronica.
I didn’t post a track two days ago so did a bit of a catch up last night. Two for the price of one. I should have posted some Cabaret Voltaire which is what I was listening to that day, inspired by a tweet from @eight8all. When I was about 14 or 15 they were my favourite band. I’ve got this on 7″.
I really like the strings on this. I can’t quite place them. They have a bollywood feel although the tuning feels more middle eastern.
Q Tip delivers a fairly tidy vocal too.
The bastard son of DJ Shadow’s Endtroducing... and Lou Reed’s Metal Machine Music, Necro Deathmort’s album, This Beat is Necrotronic, came to my attention from some friends joking about the name. However, having taken a listen, I’m finding it quite interesting. This might be because I’ve been travelling by train this week. DJ Shadow’s Endtroducing… is one of my favourite albums and when I was about 14 I borrowed Metal Machine Music by Lou Reed from the Walsall library, and whilst it is a cacophony of feedback and noise there was something intriguing about it. It has texture and it has it’s own internal rhythm. After listening to Necro Deathmort today I went back to Metal Machine Music. Only managed about 20 minutes before I gave up on the din. I was listening on headphones. I should do that thing that the yoof do on buses and play it out of the tiny speaker on my iPhone.
I’ve no real idea who Necro Deathmort are. It seems to be an experimental project from a couple of producer types. Musically it’s fractured beats, electronica, drones, doomy ambient. The sort of music that appeals to people who like to mess about with guitar effects pedals for hours. I’m one of those sorts of people and I have found today that I keep going back to it for another listen. The track I’ve selected for today is Necro Effigy. There are other great song titles on the album such as “I Fought the Law and the Law Won Because Fighting is Against the Law” but this is a starter for you.
The album is available for free legal download from their record company’s website, although because they seem to have been hacked there is some hoops to jump through to get the actual link. You can get it via their Facebook page though.
Sorry it’s Spotify links all the way today. Necro Deathmort are currently unavailable on Youtube.
First time I ever listened to John Peel he played a session by Cabaret Voltaire, including this track. I was a teenager, just embarking on my own musical discoveries so this had a massive impact on me and for a while in the 80s Cabaret Voltaire were my favourite band.
Shortly after I began taping the Peel show every night to listen to again on a big old Walkman on the bus to school the next day. Somewhere I’ve got a box of tapes of old Peel shows that contain so much great music.
I was watching an episode of Charlie Brooker’s Screenwipe this evening which was about children’s TV. He was talking about a kids’ TV show called Yo Gabba Gabba! and they showed a clip of this track, being used to help kids count, although without identifying it. It bugged me for a moment or two, trying to place it until I remembered it was by Cornelius from the mad ‘Fantasma’ album that I used to play over and over during ’97. I’ve now synch’d this re-discovered album onto my iPhone for enjoyment over the next few days.