Recommended by us on 12th May 2011
...according to our Ant on Thu 12 May, 2011.
The Cicciolina Holocaust side of this LP has been digitally remastered directly from analogue tapes and was originally released as a private cassette back in 1984. Performed by Florim Prishtina and Rezart Veseli whose setup in this instance consisted of a couple of Korg Poly 61 synthesizer, Korg KPR77 drum machine, cornet, self-built machines, guitar, effects pedals and tapes. Zigomar is a brooding opener with processed vocals and claustraphobic beats. The darkness continues on 'In Tempore Non Suspecto' with the beats ticking away, again giving the feeling the walls are closing in. It's really quite mechanical sounding and what I would refer to as "proper" industrial music. 'Silent Killing' is the strangest track of the three with some really evil demonic beast sounds gurgling away. This is superbly crafted total nightmare shit! Sermonizer's 5 tracks were recorded between 1983-86 on 4-track. Here the tools consist of synth, guitar, drum machines, found objects, electric shaver etc. Tracks range from the spooked dark ambient of 'Mystery' to the twisted machinations of 'Acid68 to Dica86' to the Throbbing Gristle-esqe 'Sibelius Spiders' and 'Copulator' complete with disembodied female sexual panting and deranged electronics. Fantastic bad trip gear.
*First release from this important new imprint dedicated to releasing archival and previously unreleased material from the darkest end of the synth/analogue electronic underground dating from the late 70's to mid 90's - cut at dubplates & mastering in Berlin and pressed up in a limited run of 550 copies*
There's no shortage of electronic reissue imprints operating these days, especially ones concentrating on 'lost' synth-wave recordings from the late 70's - mid 80's - but few have access to the kind of material amassed over the years by Forced Nostalgia, a brand new label curated by one of Belgium's most knowledgeable and methodical sound archivists: Fré De Vos. The breadth and quality of the material already scheduled for release by Forced Nostalgia is just jaw-dropping - extending the remit to begin with the post-punk heyday of the late 70's all the way through to the mid 90's, taking in often unreleased, mostly unheard and overlooked material from tape music to industrial, from bossa-pop to proto-techno, from drone to out and out analogue experimentation - with the vast majority of the music now being made available on vinyl for the very first time. For this first release, the label has unearthed incredible material from two brilliantly monikered production units dating back to the early-mid 80's: Cicciolina Holocaust and Sermonizer. Florim Prishtina and Rezart Veseli recorded together as Cicciolina Holocaust in Firenze, (Italy) during the late '70s and early '80s, releasing several tapes, all as small private editions given to friends. Using a bunch of drum machines, home-made electronic synths, guitars, effects pedals and a Tascam 4-track Portastudio, the pair produced oppressive and uber-dark synthscapes and minimal proto-techno experiments that slot perfectly alongside the kind of darkside work typified by Regis and the more experimental end of the Downwards label in 2011. Sermonizer, meanwhile, is the work of an anonymous producer from Bologna who started experimenting with primitive (field-) recordings and tape manipulations in late '79. From 1984 he recorded numerous avant-garde, industrial and ambient works on to a 4-track recorder and his massive output consists of numerous private tape albums, both studio and live recordings. The 5 tracks here were recorded between 1983 and 1986 and were made on Synthesizer, Guitar, Violin, Drum Machines, Electric Shaver and other found objects and voice - producing some of the darkest electronic material you'll likely hear - somewhere between Coil, Throbbing Gristle and Gray. For those who like to dig deep - welcome to a whole new world of crucial, largely unknown and now thankfully unearthed material from the archives.
Andy The Electric Guitar Effects Pedals Man said:
I loved Throbbing Gristle, great name check and got me thinking. Going to have to give this a try!!So, what do you think? Best reviewer each month gets £10 off their next order!