Kirlian Camera: The Unreachable One. This is a band which
can be very hit and miss, but when they hit, you know about it. This is the
first track off their 2000 album Still Air (which I paid a ridiculous amount of
money for at Ripoff I mean Redeye Records). I’ve only heard a small part of
their large discography but from what I know, it’s their best track or
close to it.
Calva y Nada: Was Ist. I love this band with a burning
passion, and put this track’s album (Monologue Eines Baumes) at #2 on my 10 most underrated industrial albums ever. Unique, creepy and completely awesome
in every way.
Haus Arafna: Mein Leben. Nicolas Chevreux, manager of the
prolific and respected label Ad Noiseam, once called Haus Arafna “the meanest
band on the planet”. This track is fairly tame compared to the other brutal material
on their first two albums, and actually more resembles their quirky and cool
side project Novemeber Noevelet (coming up shortly). Apparently this duo (who
run Haus Arafna’s cult record label Galakthorro) are still putting out strong
material… I need to catch up! A great minimal track from a great respected band.
November Noevelet: The less prolific project from Mr and Mrs
Arafna (that is actually what they refer to themselves as). I was quite excited
to dust off my copy of From Heaven on Earth and play a track from it, as it doesn’t
get heard anywhere very often. Mrs Arafna does most of the vocals on this
project (while Mr Arafna does them on their main project).
F/A/V: Rentnerbunker. F/A/V (aka Feinde Auf Valium, aka
Enemies on Valium) put out a few really good and largely overlooked albums
around the turn of the century, on Mental Ulcer Forges (yes, the label run by
Rudy Ratzinger aka Wumpscut…but we won’t hold that against F/A/V, right?). What I
like about F/A/V is that he can do some really good fast tracks, and then pull
the tempo way back and do a really good slow one, like this. Probably the best
track of his self-titled album or any of his albums, really.
Anaesth: !NnoWwarMmix!. Anaesth are an obscure
flash-in-the-pan act that should have got a mention on my “Whatever happened to...?”
post. This French solo act did one album also on Mental Ulcer Forges, then
promptly disappeared in a cloud of smoke. The album doesn’t hold up well from
beginning to end (due to some very long weaker tracks), but this opening track is
immensely powerful. Watch for the great transition around halfway through the
track (about 24:50) where the tempo jumps up. I figured this transition would serve
well as a launch point for the faster electro tracks in the second half of the
mix.
Nullgrad: Buran. Nullgrad are a recent discovery (and the most recently released track in this mix, having only come out a few years
ago), and have released some nice albums on German power noise label Hands Productions. It’s nicely reminiscent of 80s space exploration videos. The album
(The Shepherds Satellite) also has a great longer remix of this track, and is worth
checking out.
Nitzer Ebb: Join in the Chant. All that needs to be said
here is that this is still one of the best EBM tracks ever recorded by one of
the best EBM bands in history. That bassline... unbelievable. That Total Age (which
made my top 10 EBM albums list) sounds just as powerful 25 years on as the day
it was released.
The Horrorist: 13 Dobermans. I’ll be totally honest: I don’t
really love the style and schtick of the Horrorist. I see what he’s doing, and
that’s he’s pretty good at it, but a lot of his music doesn’t do much for me (it reminds me too much of crappy late 90s electroclash). But
for some reason, I love this track. Something about the combination of the
music and the lyrics really works. Putting this Horrorist track right after
Nitzer Ebb makes it really clear how influential the latter were…
Front Line Assembly: Mutate. Have I mentioned how much I love
early Front Line Assembly? In case I havent’t: I love early Front Line Assembly
(I love a lot of their later stuff too, for what it’s worth). Grim, minimal, instrumental
EBM by the masters. This is the first track off the Corroded Disorder release,
which I thought was just an aggregate of the tracks off the very early
Corrosion and Disorder albums, though according to Discogs this track wasn’t on
either of those albums. Weird… but oh well, who cares, it rocks! I particularly
love the snare drum sound in this track: it is pure 80s EBM.
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