Xela
The Illuminated

A Norman Records recommendation (13th February 2009)

Cover art for The Illuminated by Xela Description: New LP on Dekorder
Format: LP (vinyl)
Genre(s): Dark Ambient
Label: Dekorder
Price:
£11.29
Availability: Sold out / currently unavailable. Sorry!

4Rating: 4
...according to our on 12 February 2009.

Ant here chilling (literally as its freezing) to the fine 'Illuminated' LP from Xela on Dekorder. Chilling also because the sound is kinda scary at times. This was originally released on Cassette on Digitalis industries. 'Black Scripture' sounds like a buddhist monk ceremony being interupted by someone doing the hoovering then some nutter pops in with an angle grinder and stars carving up the walls. It builds into a glorious intense full sound with layers of distortion and lots of deep atmospherics while a kind of bizarre chant is looped in the background. The second Piece 'Gilted Rose' is similarly dark and mysterious with bell sounds twinkling over eerie synths. There's a distant black metal style evil vocal that appears to possess your mind. Really quite gripping stuff from the darkside.

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What their label says...

The music of Xela is not easily described. The alias of Type Records main-man John Twells, he has over the last decade moved through a dense fog of musical styles from abstract electronics to rusty soundscapes. In recent years his output has allied itself with darker realms, taking a liberal dose of influence from Norway's darker exponents, but retaining a deep and measured experimental focus. 'The Illuminated' was originally released on cassette, a format very fitting to the gloomy, waterlogged sounds; but having sold out in a matter of days it now recieves the much needed deluxe re-issue treatment. Taking cues from the cracked black metal of Burzum and Striborg and fusing this with heavy, synthesized noise 'The Illuminated' is possibly Xela's darkest, most spine-chilling work to date. We are taken through chiming Nurse With Wound-inspired soundscapes into Middle Eastern marketplaces and through caverns of thick, buzzing synthesized noise on the album's first piece. Entitled 'Black Scripture' this takes the dank religious themes of 'In Bocca Al Lupo' and goes even deeper into the Church dungeons, digging up lost artifacts and the angry spirits that accompany them. The flipside extends this heresy with a throaty vocal and distorted electric guitar, leaving blackened corpses and the traces of a sleepy village in its wake. Devastating and dark material, listen if you dare...