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THE BRVTALIST

Mutant Metropolitan Culture

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The Brvtalist Premieres: Lucy Cliché - "Heady Duet"

The Brvtalist is pleased to premiere a new track from Lucy Cliché. The Australian artist debuts on Berlin’s Fleisch with a killer five track EP filled with hypnotizing synth-wave, infectious electro, New Beat rhythms and more. Ranging from 120-125 BPMs, there is a weapon here for any occasion and and Cliche’s vocals pair perfectly with each element of the multi-genre exhibition. Today we present “Heady Duet”, which as the name implies, is a double edged hardware assault.

Coming off some stellar European shows, Cliché is a name to watch and Cliche’s Principle is a record to pick up. Out October 8th on Fleisch. Pre-order here.

-JRS

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Monday 10.01.18
Posted by Jeremy Schwartz
 

THE ORDER A/W 2018

With conglomerates ruling the majority of the fashion industry, independent designers are not only important but vital to the creative world. Few brands do it better these days than Chicago’s The Order. The line is conceptualized, created and executed in the Windy City by designer + proprietress Nicole Maret and has been one of our favorite brands to watch over the past couple years. A jet black palette and rebellious attitude run through the garments while each collection tells a compelling narrative.

For A/W 2018, the label presents “Antidote”, a conceptual nod to the ever present tension between rebellion and conformity, as it pertains to our hyper connected world and the delicate line between image and reality. Like the name implies, Antidote is a cure for the common outfit, with vinyls colliding with suedes and mesh pairing with silks to create absurd yet chic everyday uniforms.

Details are everything and The Order always get this right. Gun metal safety pins, hand embroidered leather and hand stamped logos are found throughout the collection. Making the hard seem soft and the delicate more rigid, the collection captures the essence of dichotomy and hypnotizes with its beautiful materials and craftsmanship.

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Some standout pieces for us are the longline bomber, “Venom” pant and shirt and the seductive, “Seditious” bodysuit. We also love how winter white makes appearances throughout the collection and the sheer and mesh items are standouts as well.

For more information and to shop online visit: www.thisistheorder.com

-JRS

Credits - CAMPAIGN: PHOTOGRAPHER : KIRSTEN MICCOLI MODELS: KAPRICE IMPERIAL & ASHLEY HELLER HAIR/MAKEUP: JENNA BALTES CONCEPT: NICOLE MARET

Credits - SHOP IMAGERY: Photography: Kirsten Miccoli. Model: Georgie Myers Hair/Makeup: Andrea Samuels

Wednesday 09.26.18
Posted by Jeremy Schwartz
 

The Brvtalist Premieres: VTSS - "Versatility"

The Brvtalist is pleased to premiere a new track from VTSS. The Polish producer is one of our favorite young artists today and her four track Self Will EP also launches the new Intrepid Skin imprint. "Versatility" is a huge track which showcases the artist's production prowess and varied dance floor influences ranging from techno, EBM, industrial and more.

Based in Berlin, the vinyl label is initiated by fellow rising talent SPFDJ, and is dedicated to uncovering the uncompromising sounds at the harder edges of body music. Self Will will be released parallel to the residencies of Red Bull Music Academy’s class of 2018 and will launch at Jasna, one of Warsaw’s leading techno clubs. We look forward to more from VTSS and Intrepid Skin.

-JRS

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Monday 09.24.18
Posted by Jeremy Schwartz
 

New Rituals featuring Pan Daijing and Aïsha Devi feat. Asian Dope Boys

On October 7th, music, visual art, architecture and more collide when Clon presents New Rituals at the iconic Barbican London. Curator Estela Oliva and the hybrid art/new media studio return to the Barbican for a double header of some of the most exciting acts in experimental music today.

In New Rituals, Clon explores experimental music, visual art and post-internet culture as new spaces for today’s queer identities and reborn spirituality. After a sold out event with Russian producer Dasha Rush and local standouts LCC, the second installment finds two uncanny performances taking place in London for the first time.

Barbican by Nicholas Triantafyllou

Over the last few years, few artists have traversed elements of noise, techno and beyond like Pan Daijing. Using vocals and ominous, industrial atmospheres, her powerful compositions are cathartic and are sure to stir up an emotional response. In Fist Piece, Berlin based Chinese-born artist Pan Daijing explores the unsettling states of femininity through choreography, visuals and sound material from her recent album Lack 惊蛰 (PAN records, 2017). The live performance features guest dancer Gregori Homa and collaborations with Ekaterina Reinbold. The uncanny outcome is a rabbit hole that is simultaneously tender and fierce.

Pan Daijing live

Driven by the rave-like sounds of Swiss-born Nepalese-Tibetan musician Aïsha Devi, who channels ancient incantations and hi-fi beats from her new album DNA Feelings (Houndstooth), Aetherave is a newly commissioned performative, visual and sonic initiation. It incorporates Asian Dope Boys’ visceral dance shrouded in the grotesque yet sacred contemporary imagery of Chinese artist Tianzhuo Chen.

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For those lucky enough to be in London, New Rituals looks to be an incredible night of sonic and visual stimulation all set against the backdrop of one our favorite pieces of architecture. Even info and tickets below.

-JRS

EVENT INFO
New Rituals: Aïsha Devi feat. Asian Dope Boys + Pan Daijing
Sunday 7 October 2018 / Barbican Hall, London / 19:30
Tickets £15 – 20 plus booking fee
Event page here.






Saturday 09.22.18
Posted by Jeremy Schwartz
 

The Brvtalist Premieres: Ron Morelli - "Disappearer"

The Brvtalist is pleased to premiere a new track from Ron Morelli. “Disappearer” is the title track of the artist’s forthcoming record on iconic imprint Hospital Productions. Following Morelli’s cult release “Spit”, the L.I.E.S. label boss returns to Hospital for a 13 track full length which traverses through minimal electronics, scum rave and more to create a filthy narrative of stripped sonic heaviness. “Disappearer” feels like a nasty score to a bleak journey of underground exploration.

Disappearer is set to come out on LP and cassette formats on September 21st. In addition to the record, Hospital and Quo Vadis also just announced the initial lineup for Hospital Fest 2018 to take place at the Knockdown Center on December 8th in New York City. Ron Morelli will perform live in addition to other label mates like Prurient, Silent Servant, Shifted, Ancient Methods and many more. Visit www.hospitalproductions.net for info.

-JRS

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Wednesday 09.19.18
Posted by Jeremy Schwartz
 

Nyx vs. The Brvtalist + Tara in Tibet Mix

On Friday, September 28th in Berlin, The Brvtalist once again teams up with Nyx for the second ritual in our collaborative series. Presented by our Killekill family, we are back at Griessmühle, but this time in the main room for a huge event featuring Tommy Four Seven, Oake (DJ), the live premiere of Tara in Tibet (She Lost Kontrol), The Brvtalist (DJ) and Xik (Gegen). The Silo floor will host Killekill’s Tigerhead, Cork Bangers and DJ Untalented. All of this will be followed by Colours Afterhours 2 Year Anniversary which will no doubt extend the night well into the following day.

To prepare for the event, Tara in Tibet has delivered the second podcast in the Nyx Rituals series which is an incredible journey in worship of the night.

Pre-sale tickets are available now and you can RSVP and pick them up here: https://www.residentadvisor.net/events/1151837

Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/618930435170151/

See you on the 28th of September. X

-JRS








Tuesday 09.18.18
Posted by Jeremy Schwartz
 

Ancient Methods - "Swordplay" Premiere + Q&A

by Maria Bungau

Ancient Methods is without any doubt one of the most exciting and iconic artists and DJs in the world of electronic music. With every release you get a glimpse into a fascinating world inspired by stories, myths and sonic images.

Five years after Seventh Seal was released on Ancient Methods' eponymous label, his debut full length album, The Jericho Records, comes as a complete work - a coherent crystallization of the ever present biblical story of Jericho. Divided into the three chapters (The City Of Jericho, The Battle and The Aftermath), the album takes the listener on a bold and emblematic journey, with every track further developing into the next one and some featuring collaborations with Regis, Orphx, Prurient, Cindytalk and King Dude.

The Brvtalist is proud to premiere today “Swordplay” an overwhelmingly powerful track that plays with all your senses, evocative of a historical fight and at the same time blending perfectly into the dark corners of a dancefloor.

Ahead of the album’s release, which is set for September 21st, we sat down with Ancient Methods to find out more about the work behind “The Jericho Records”, future plans and whether music can still tear down walls. (see Q&A below)

The Brvtalist: For those who are not familiar with this detail, Ancient Methods is not your full time job (Michael is a lawyer and Wahiba a software developer) which is why this album probably took a little longer to be released. How do you balance these 2 aspects of your life- your day job and making music?

Ancient Methods: Structure and discipline are certainly keys to cope with the sometimes insane workload. If I feel I’m getting lost in the amount of tasks I try to visualize them, making task maps and priority lists for the week or the day. But I admit I am not a machine and lack of discipline brought me into trouble a few times. The most challenging part is still to say "no" to people, for example to decline remix requests, or to reply to every email you receive during the week. Equally important, I think, is to schedule spare time to recover and to find inspiration - however, the latter are things I have recently badly neglected.

TB: Given that producing music is not your primary source of income, do you think this removes some of the pressure that most producers have today, who need to release in order for their name to be known and to get more bookings? Is this influencing in any way your approach to making music?

AM: It is exactly like that. The most important influence of such financial aspects is that there is no influence at all. But generally speaking I don’t know how much financial aspects can have a direct influence on the music you do. I doubt the mere resolution to make a commercially successful track would deliver the desired result if you actually dislike that kind of music. It might sound naive, but I believe you can only be good at things you actually love. But of course the financial freedom has indirect influences, for example it enables me to play less shows when I’m not feeling being on the road every weekend but prefer to spend that time on producing music in the studio.

TB: The press release of The Jericho Records describes the album as “an attempt to create the pictures by the music itself”. This somehow resembles the notion of synesthesia. How do you transpose images to sound? What is the creative process behind?

AM: Despite the albums documentary approach which could maybe resemble a soundtrack, the album could only remain an “imaginary soundtrack“ in absence of the corresponding pictures - and therefore the music can not underline, emphasize or complement an already existing image. That is why the attempt was indeed to make the music itself figurative, each track is meant to refer to a specific part of the Jericho story - graspable and less abstract. Of course, the groundwork was re-reading the Joshua chapters and other publications about the Jericho myth and take in the emerging pictures. Then I selected some pictures/scenes that I believe are elemental parts of the story and where I had specific ideas for stylistic devices on how to transform these pictures into music. Furthermore, I structured the story in three chapters: The City, The Battle, The Aftermath. In my perception, the actual transformation process was varying. For some pictures, for example the “Swordplay“, “Seven Shofars” or “Array The Troops” I wanted to make use of very intuitive, tangible, or you could even say stereotyped sounds that allow an immediate association. I built the tracks around these prominent key elements. For other pictures I used a rather metaphorical transformation, like in “Walls”, placing competing musical themes left and right from a wall of bass. Other pictures, in particular the last chapter were rather a certain mood or atmosphere and accordingly implemented, here the lyrics are often the most direct link to the picture of the story.

TB: The album made me think at times of bands like Ordo Rosarius Equilibrio, Brighter Death Now and others that have a ritualistic approach to their sound. What would you say were the musical influences when working on The Jericho Records?

AM: Thank you. The formation process has been stretched over a period of five years. Basically the entire range of music I absorbed during this time, and way too much to mention particular artists or styled here, has shaped the album.

TB: Why is the story of Jericho’s battle so appealing to you?

AM: It is the perfect metaphor for the ambivalent power of music unmatched in its symbolic impact.

TB: Your recent performance at Berghain was truly impressive. I particularly appreciated the use of live instruments and vocals. How does it feel to play such a live show in front of a crowd that might be expecting more techno?

AM: Thank you. At Berghain we had a perfect technical setup and a great crowd - lots of friends that listen to all kinds of music. Obviously it’s much easier to meet expectations of a crowd that is aware of what you are doing. But I guess for a live show, that is the significant difference versus a DJ set. In my opinion it is more important not to worry too much about the audience's expectations. Plus, there wouldn’t be much room for it anyway since all your focus is on the performance of the instruments.

TB: You mentioned in the past that you rarely listen to techno. What have you been listening to lately that really made an impression?

AM: That’s a difficult question since it is so much and always a mix of recent releases and "classics". Some of the most impressive recent releases have been certainly Trepaneringsritualen’s Kainskult, Bain Wolfkind’s Hand Of Death, Prurient’s Rainbow Mirror, La Breiche’s Le mal des ardent, Heaters’ Matterhorn, Alder & Ash’s Clutched In The Maw of the World. Furthermore the recent output of (Dolch), Die Wilde Jagd, Becoming Animal - only to name a few. According to the the counter on my mobile device Hypnopazuzu, Burial Hex, Giöbia, The Blue Angel Lounge, Gas, Kentin Jivek, Day Before Us, Frustration, Rome, High Functioning Flesh, Johann Sebastian Bach, Art Abscons, Hekate, Herz Jühning, Soviet Soviet, Popol Vuh, Necro Deathmort, Martial Canterel, Restive Plaggona, Wrekmeister Harmonies, Coil, Johann Jakob Froberger, Whispering Sons, Urfaust have been on heavy rotation. Lots of recent music I listen to is featured on the radio show on Berlin Community Radio.

TB: How do you stay inspired, be it through music or any other source? Is there a show you attended recently that stayed with you for a long time?

AM: It’s the triad of music, books and movies, lately the movies as an inspirational source suffered the most from my time famine. From the most recent shows I saw undoubtedly both Nick Cave concerts belong to the most intense and impressive shows I ever attended.

TB: We live in a time when the concept of the label "Music Will Tear Down Walls" hits home more than ever. Do you believe music still has the power to tear down walls?

AM: Absolutely. Delimitation and exclusion are encouraged by abstract ideologies that fuel prejudices, aversion, hate. Music and, in particular, dance music can bring people together and I believe in the power of direct encounters, face to face, similar like traveling to a foreign country, to overcome these negative forces. But remembering the ambivalence of the Jericho picture. music itself is a neutral amplifier of emotions and one can also load it with an ideological message and hereby abuse it for the contrary.

TB: The album feels like a sonic journey, with highs and lows, reminding me of Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey, where the hero embarks on an adventure to eventually return home transformed. Reflecting back on the work you put in and the final result, would you say that Ancient Methods changed over the years? Is there something you feel you have learned from the experience of working on this particular release?

AM: I wouldn’t say my music has changed or transformed, but it has further developed. The work on the album already made me hungry for the next projects, I learned there are still so many things to explore I haven’t touched yet, so many ramifications of ideas. After so much work during the last month I would have expected to be tired and longing for a break, but I learned it’s quite the contrary.

Photo by Mary Staggat

TB: Finally, what can we expect from Ancient Methods and from the label in the near and not so near future?

AM: Lot’s of remixes and DJ Mixes as usual, some projects that are too early to talk about, among them sort of a mix CD; I will continue releasing on my label Persephonic Sirens, and also feature new talents such as Sharpens and Aoud. If time allows the radio show will continue and possibly the live show will be refined next year.

Ancient Methods Album Tour (LIVE)

September 22nd – Fabric // London, UK

October 13th – Nancy Jazz Pulsations Festival // Nancy, France

November 17th – Theaters // Tilburg, Netherlands

November 30th – Black Factory at Closer // Kiev, Ukraine

December 1st – Ex-Dogana // Rome, Italy






Monday 09.17.18
Posted by Jeremy Schwartz
 

New Brvtalism No. 155 - Jasmine Azarian

The Brvtalist is proud to present a new mix from Jasmine Azarian. The Irish-born artist has been taking Europe by storm as of late and has become one of the most exciting DJs in the scene. New Brvtalism No. 155 brings Azarian's signature high energy sound fueled by techno, rave, EBM and beyond. For her latest dates, see below and watch for some new productions coming soon.

-JRS

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Upcoming Dates

14.09 - Fee Croquer, FR
21.09 - Comebye Festival, UK
02.10 - Griessmuhle, DE
06.10 - WERK, AT
11.10 - DSNT, Belfast
19.10 - Renate, DE
20.10 - TBA, FR

21.10 - Jaded, UK
09.11- TBA, UK
16.11 - TBA, DE





Friday 09.14.18
Posted by Jeremy Schwartz
 

UY Studio

Berlin’s UY Studio has long been a Brvtalist favorite as the brand takes inspiration from the local nightlife scene and fuses it with progressive minimal designs, top notch construction and conscientious sourcing. While the label’s latest collection stays true to this ethos, what makes this one unique is it’s the first time UY has introduced color to the range. Deep red hypnotizes while the label’s signature black maintains a shadowy, mysterious silhouette.

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From UY

This collection was designed by our head designer Fanny Lawaetz and represents a new spirit. Our label was built around the nightlife scene here in Berlin, It’s where we united and was our the main inspiration when starting the label. Our latest collection represents the growth we’ve undergone over the past 5 years. We’ve deconstructed our look and rebuilt with a mature approach while keeping our aesthetics alive. We’ve gone offbeat by evolving our palette, infusing a deep red into this collection. Our futuristic, clean cuts and silhouette ethos are still vivid. The line is complemented with hats, hoods and gloves, each retaining that discipline signature cut.

We love the polished, yet carefree attitude of this line and the pieces are perfect for the winter months ahead. While we typically stick to monochrome palates, the use of red here plays the perfect centerpiece to the collection and UY gets the hue just right. Be sure to visit the label’s shop in Berlin or shop online at: https://www.uy-studio.com/

As an added bonus, the label also provided us with some great behind the scenes images from the shoot. See below and credits to follow. For more follow UY on Instagram.

-JRS

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CREDITS

Photography: Tom Kleinschmidt @tomkleins

Hair + MUA: MINE @minestudio.berlin

Styling: @hallafarhat





Thursday 09.13.18
Posted by Jeremy Schwartz
 

Atonal 2018: Smokescreens and Vertigo

by Yannick Franck

To Defeat Binary Oppositions

I arrive in Berlin after a long, pleasant train ride. I like to feel and contemplate the land I’m crossing, the actual distance, something that the haste of flying doesn’t allow for. Ahead of the festival, I stay in Friedrichshain for a few days at my friend, musician and sound healer Colin Tobelem’s place (aka Ground Tactics. See recent release on Midgar). Always intense, our conversations revolve around the need to defeat binary oppositions, possible new uses of the world, necessary changes of perspective, and attempts and strategies to create forms of music that can heal ourselves and others. Colin’s preparatory incantations help us gather the right energies to face five days of barely interrupted input such as AV performances, concerts, DJ sets, close-to-constant socializing and, of course, insane partying.

We meet up with our friend Iulia, discovering the joys of German pinot noir (Spätburgunder) and talking about Berlin’s exponential and unstoppable gentrification process. I can’t help noticing the progressive Disneyfication of the city each time I come (should I say Googleification?). In notebook #006, I find the note: “holding up to whatever is unavoidably going away is depriving ourselves of many great experiences”. Ditto, I’ll try and adopt this philosophy during the festival and focus on the present moment. As soon as the temptation of looking back surfaces I’ll use my favorite weapons: lightheartedness, irony, and curiosity.

Photo by Helga Mundt

A Sense Of Immersion

Generally speaking, the shows curated by Atonal belong to the postmodern tradition that aims to immerse the listener-viewer in a larger than life, vertigo-inducing environment that covers the whole human ear spectrum and beyond. Impressive sub-woofer-loaded line array systems drown you in an ocean of sound while your vision is stimulated to the max with the help of giant, flickering screens, stroboscopic lights, lasers and smoke. Despite the visual stimuli, the sound is always prominent in such a paradigm (even in a wide range of the so called “postmodern cinema” context).

A sense of immersion is therefore more than justified. Of course, vertigo isn’t automatic, it’s actually part of the joy of such a festival to oscillate between a purely intellectual, critical distance and pure sensory pleasures. At some choice moments - made sweeter by their rarity - there is a sensation of enchantment. 

We dive in with an enjoyable but not particularly notable opening concert by David Morley. I quickly get absorbed into Astrid Sonne’s outstanding AV performance: “Ephemeral”. Ethereal and solemn. (check out LP “Human Line” on Danish label Escho). “Ephemeral” is somewhat complemented and certainly magnified by the following show, “Synclines" a haunted litany unveiled by RVNG’s newcomer Lucrecia Dalt. It’s inevitably reminiscent of Laurie Anderson’s conceptual narratives. Lucrecia’s journey punctuated by spoken words is nonetheless deep and refined. Add early Residents / Tuxedo Moon like analog rhythmics and psych synth waves to the mixture and you might get a vague idea how spellbinding it sounded.

Lucretia Dalt by Helga Mundt

Length Value

A collaborative effort between New Zealander Fis (whose recent release on Subtext “From Patterns to Details” explores tonal, neo-romantic realms dramaturgically blended with noise passages and abstract textures), and Berlin-based Iranian percussion virtuoso Mohammad Reza Martazavi provides an impressive performance. At one point I wonder about the necessity of Fis’ discrete interventions, but as the duo slowly builds their aural edifice I see the role that such sobriety plays. It all starts coming together during the second part, after the two musicians have achieved a tense dialogue and when both sonic streams start colliding into an arousing and ever-fluctuating rhythmic / arhythmic continuum.

In a context where the quest for immediate reward leads us to adopt ridiculously short attention spans - and where even experimental and alternative scenes are subjected to such mutations -  it feels good to be reminded how great and valuable lengthy, slow developments and patience are, when experienced to the fullest. 

Falling back into the “wow effect” category, Robin Fox’s music & laser show “Single Origin” has a few truly exciting parts, even though my attention drops a little at the end. Throughout the evening, I kept hearing people asking each other “have you seen the laser show?” Which could have pissed me off if it hadn’t been exactly that, a fine laser show.

At Stage Null, Gabor Lázár doesn’t disappoint, while at Tresor, local DJ Resom provides an invigorating technopop mix followed by a live act by PTU. They do the job pretty well -given the difficulty of playing in the dark, smoky, crowded, rumbling pits of hell Tresor can turn into at times.

I’m surrounded by millennials on synthetic drugs. I can’t help thinking that everything I see around me seems pretty distant. We’re all in the same ocean of sound, smoke, darkness and flashing lights, but each of us is alone. The DJs in their booth, the musicians, so small under those giant visuals, behind their monitors. Tonight, revolt, subversion and collective catharsis appear to me as things of the past. Anyway… staying aware of what the week can give me is what matters for now.

Thursday around noon. My thoughts and my vision are both blurry and confused. I hear screams from a dream, still echoing in my mind. My right knee hurts, I remember hitting it on a concrete podium yesterday at stage Null. I find myself wishing to transform - nothing to do with my knee, I seek an instant inner transformation. It’s what I’m longing for today. 

As the day passes I’m slowly cheering up. I watch a Claude Chabrol movie (Merci pour le chocolat, 2000) - it always does the trick.

Neon Chambers by Cornelia Thonhauser

Evocative Power

The music provided by Kanding Ray and Sigha (for those who don’t know them yet his solo releases on Avian and Token are definitely worth a listen) as Neon Chambers make a great impression on me. The content - pretty much lacking in the visuals, let’s be honest - is definitely to be found in the strong evocative power unleashed by the music’s carefully built organic structures. At stage Null, I find Alessandro Adriani’s electrokrautish trance inducing performance and June’s dark, straightforward - yet groovy - offering particularly uplifting. Those were followed by equally interesting, mystifying soundscapes by Phantom Love and Bruta Non Calculant.

Phantom Love by Frankie Casillo

As it often occurs when you don’t expect much, Thursday was the most beautiful evening.

Friday. Tired. Chabrol again. Betty (1992). In Chabrol’s films, adultery, debauchery and even murder often appear as more valuable options than coping with hypocritical social conventions. The viewer finds himself empathizing with the murderer, the maverick, or here, the unfaithful wife.

I can identify with Betty and understand her pathological behavior, though I wouldn’t betray Stéphane Audran (who in their right mind would betray Stéphane Audran?).

Joining up with friends, we start the day at Downwards label’s anniversary party at Kuboraum, where Jim Ningus, Layne, Justin Anastasi and label boss Regis provide pretty sick DJ sets, mostly post-punk rarities (what a pleasure to hear Chrome’s Electric Chair again, and for once played by someone other than myself). Colin and his partying squadron have arrived. Charming people, and a beautiful evening in perspective. Back to Kraftwerk.

Murder has many ways

I can feel the crowd’s palpable overexcitement. Yet, among the expectedly straight-in-your-face, brutal performances provided by the well named British Murder Boys and Regis, only Giant Swan’s fierce, high tension performance leaves a durable impression on me. No pretending here and no midi controllers triggering 20 minute sequences that sound exactly like the album. No need for robotic mannequins, immobile human models or giant glitchy visuals. Everything is transmitted straight from the Swan’s guts - through the electronic circuitry - to the membranes - out to our throbbing flesh and bones. Wild, unadulterated live action. Yeah!

What follows is a long night of gin shots and excitants of all kinds. My aim is to last long enough to attend all the gigs. I make it but nothing really thrills me as much as the Giant Swans. They made my day.

Saturday. I have different appointments planned, things to do… I’m running everywhere. Opening new doors, contemplating perspectives that keep on expanding, seemingly without end. It all feels like a metaphor for what life can offer, and the vertigo that’s induced by the realization that as soon as I choose a path from the myriad in front of me, another myriad unleashes.

Back. To. Kraftwerk. 

Giant Swan by Frankie Casillo

Recognize… and Enjoy

While Actress’ retro futurist silver mannequin doesn’t really make up for his muzak (ranging from gentle digital drones to slow piano tunes), Veronica Vasicka’s testosterone-filled techno gives me a little more to chew on as she fills up her explosive mix with post punk hymns such as Fad Gadget or New Order. While none of these are anything new, and several friends find the whole thing “macho” and too systematic, it gives me the right amount of even more typically post modern recognize and enjoy nostalgia and the kick I need not to drop dead from exhaustion. Yet after an hour, I head back to the hotel. 

Sunday. At the Main Stage, I find myself fairly disappointed by the pompously named “Transcendence Orchestra”, whose bland, repeated ad nauseam melodies don’t transcend much for me. I find the following act, the Japanese duo Group A’s power electronics quite elating and genuine, which usually makes up for the lack of renewal in the genre. The performance leaves power electronics aficionados with a radiant smile on their faces.

Group A by Helga Mundt

To Die Consciously

In my opinion, the cream of the crop is by far the main stage’s closing performance: LABOUR’s “Next Time, Die Consciously”, a video collage and live electronics performance involving live drums players and electronic light wand bearers (the wands look like modern, led-flashing version of the thyrsus that were carried by the voltaries of Dionysus) strategically positioned all over the main room and on the surrounding balconies. 

For sure LABOUR didn’t take their participation at Atonal as another gig on a busy roster. Musically it’s somewhere between electroacoustic music, noise, avant garde drumming composition, and a neopagan ritual. It feels like hard work; the whole thing has been carefully thought of, rehearsed, and everything falls right into place. LABOUR provides a solid, proper in situ work with a highly cathartic dimension. The whole thing works really well and leaves me with a feeling of satisfaction. I have the impression that most the people present felt the same. A rare and precious moment and a definitive festival highlight.

No matter the technique, the wand, the drug, the dance. The essential subversive energies that a genuine form of musical art conveys seem as alive as can be. And I can still feel it in my guts. Rejuvenated. Again, a myriad of perspectives unleash. Vertigo, here we go.

Yannick Franck is an electronic musician and the founder of independent label Idiosyncratics. He is the man behind RAUM (Clan Destine Records) and Outlaw Compound, he has also released several albums under his own name. He is part of the avant-techno duo Orphan Swords. All his projects are promoted through the platfform ⊹ nsnwrdsnsgls ⊹

Labour by Helga Mundt

Photo by Frankie Casillo








Wednesday 09.12.18
Posted by Jeremy Schwartz
 
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