Recommended by us on 15th May 2009
...according to our Brian on Thu 14 May, 2009.
Jacaszek has a new CD/DVD set out on Gusstaff called 'Pentral' which is a follow up to the much revered 'Treny'. Here you get 10 tracks of neo classical and ambient moods. The opener bristles with chimes and these intermittently imposing stabs of rolling church organ - the most fearful you're likely to hear this week. The haunting atmospherics and ambient tendrils on later tracks combine with drifting choral breezes and ominous splinters of found sound to create a stately yet sinister body of work. There's similar atmospherics to be enjoyed as on the Spire project stuff, this music does have a quietly solemn church-y vibe. I do thoroughly enjoy this dark, spectral sound, spilling with forbidden auras and hushed menace. I think lovers of the darker side of Machinefabriek and the quieter moments released on the legendary Touch label will lap this brooding slab of minimalism right up.- Jacaszek returns with 'Pentral', an album based around depicting the interiors of gothic churches
- Beautifully packaged in a 6-panel digipack, the album comes complete with a bonus DVD which features a 5.1 Dolby Surround Sound mix of 'Pentral'
and also a documentary
- For fans of 'Treny' (Miasmah), Scott Walker, Kreng, Koen Holtkamp and Lawrence English
File Under: Experimental / Drone / Modern Composition
Track listing: 'Pentral' Parts 'I' - 'X'
Info: Michal Jacaszek follows up last's year stunning and critically acclaimed 'Treny' album with another long player of incredible depth and ambition.
'Pentral', which is Latin for 'Inside, Spirit, Temple', is a conceptual project attempting to describe a gothic church interior with sound. In order to realise
this, Jacaszek set about recording 'Pentral' in three of Gdansk's oldest churches.
Divided into ten parts, it could be said that 'Pentral' is an uneasy listening experience, throwing the listener violently at times with almost overwhelming
dynamic contrasts; what begins as a slow and tense build seemingly created from sample based recordings suddenly explodes into an unrelenting,
shimmering wall of discordance, sounding like a hundred church organs screaming out. The compositions have all the claustrophobia of the nastier
end of Scott Walker's 'The Drift' arrangements, yet there does seem to be some light at the end of the tunnel - even in its most distressing moments
there is, within the ethereal racket, something of an uplifting optimism. While 'Pentral' does contain passages of melodic beauty such as those found
on 'Treny', this is a journey that is more rooted in atonal explorations. It has more of a 'found sound' source material feel, which in part comes from
Jacaszek's use and capitalization on accidental noises captured whilst recording in the church environments. "Part III" for instance develops into a
absolutely jaw-dropping choral arrangement, all laced in background static and percussive, treated piano recordings, never overreaching, never trying
too hard to overstate. Elsewhere we find pieces which attack with an intent to terrify; "Part VI" is a schizophrenic composition, frantically and without
warning cutting between sparse, low-end tension and more pummeling organ clusters - the unexpected bursts of dissonance being on a parallel with
the noise blasts of Sutcliffe Jugend and earlyWhitehouse. But this is not a noise album by any stretch of the imagination.
Ghostly operatic voices and unexpected minimal use of percussion colour the low organ tones and treated sounds, mixing unsettling feelings with
equal amounts of perplexity and intrigue. It's as much about the silence in the pieces as it is the compositions; within its minimal moments, what comes
through it the vastness of the church spaces, the slow decay of the sounds entirely owing to the environments in which they were recorded. It's dark
and it's certainly desolate at times, but in other moments the pieces purvey a sense of these buildings' strength and stability - these historic churches
have stood the test of time.
Jacaszek's 'Pentral' is release on Gusstaff Records, housed in a 6-panel digipack. The CD contains the 'Pentral' album, and the DVD contains a 5.1
Dolby Surround Sound mix of 'Pentral', and a documentary by Antek Gryzbek.
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