Band : Dälek
Album : Absence
Release Year : 2005
Genre : Hip-Hop / Noise / Experimental
Tracklist :
1. Distorted Prose
2. Asylum (Permanent Underclass)
3. Culture for Dollars
4. Absence
5. A Beast Caged
6. Koner
7. In Midst of Struggle
8. Eyes to Form Shadows
9. Ever Somber
10. Opiate the Masses
2. Asylum (Permanent Underclass)
3. Culture for Dollars
4. Absence
5. A Beast Caged
6. Koner
7. In Midst of Struggle
8. Eyes to Form Shadows
9. Ever Somber
10. Opiate the Masses
If the Metal Machine Music of hip-hop hasn’t been made before now, this is it. Absence doesn’t depart from Dälek’s previous two records (1998’s Negro Necro Nekros and 2002's From Filthy Tongue of Gods and Griots) so much as it distills their harshest, most confrontational elements.
Anyone
who’s ever heard those two albums knows that’s saying a lot. Among
well-known hip-hop artists, New Jersey’s Dälek have always been most
similar to El-P – both favor huge, noisy textures. Unlike El-P, though,
Dälek have never shown any interest in microphone gymnastics or complex
beats, preferring instead to explore waves of noise inspired by groups
like Sonic Youth and Flying Saucer Attack. (That description may remind
you somewhat of Clouddead's self-titled album, but Dälek is far
nastier.) Sonic Youth and FSA are pretty uncompromising themselves, of
course, and they’re pretty unusual influences for a hip-hop group, but
what really sets Dälek apart is that they background the beats and
rhymes that would be in the foreground in almost all other hip-hop. Even
at their most accessible (Negro’s “Swollen Tongue Bums,” From Filthy Tongue’s “Speak Volumes”), Dälek is a pretty extreme group.
Absence
differs from Dälek’s previous albums in that almost all the catchy bits
are absent until the tail end of the record, when “Ever Somber” rides a
very My Bloody Valentine-style hook. Before that, Absence is
almost defiantly loud – nearly every track features a huge coat of noise
that screams from the speakers. The album is also more stylistically
unified than Dälek’s previous efforts – there aren’t any of the obvious
experiments with Indian music that Dälek used to attempt, and nothing on
Absence features live guitars and drums like From Filthy Tongue
did. It’s hard to imagine anyone making an album more abrasive than
this that’s still recognizable as hip hop (I’m sure someone will do it,
but it’s still hard to imagine). Like Metal Machine Music, Absence
is startling and fantastic sounding, and it can make most music from
the genre from which it sprang seem frivolous, if you’re in the right
mood. And this is what hip-hop sound should be. Enjoy!
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