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Gum
Vinyl Anthology
23five, Inc. 2CD
Available through the Helen Scarsdale Agency: $18.00
Sometime back in pre-history, around 1986, in a far away,
semi-mythological land (Australia), young Andrew Curtis
posted an advertisement in a local record shop looking
for someone who shared his passion for industrial bands.
The ad was answered by an equally young Philip Samartzis
and Gum was born. Though both were ardent fans of the
music, it didn't take long to become evident that the
trappings and general downcast and glum aura associated
with the industrial scene weren't good fits for their
personalities so the two forged on into improvised turntablism,
albeit often with rock undertones. A couple of albums
and several contributions to various compilations resulted.
Those and a few more odds and ends are collected in this
handsomely produced, very enjoyable 2-disc set.
Disc One includes the ten tracks originally issued on
the Vinyl LP as well as two outtakes and a 20-minute
live performance from 1987. With a couple of exceptions,
the cuts are short, two to four minutes. I continue to
have the growing suspicion that there's something genetic,
or something in the water, that causes Australian sound
artists to be particularly keen on sonic separation as
that aural clarity is heard throughout this set. The very
first piece, "Stormy Weather" (no, not that
one) leaps into one's face, a-crackle and roaring, a mass
of sound that reveals, upon a moment's consideration,
six or seven layers in play, high to low, foreground to
background, like a sliver of Xenakis' "Bohor".
While not every piece completes the 18 year journey without
showing signs of wear, as a whole the performances sound
remarkably fresh and works like "Outfits for Agony"
(yes, some of the titles betray a bit of youthful indiscretion
)
are just stunning in their richness. A distant, pounding
drum, multiple strata of flute-like hums, captured CB
conversationall make for a thrilling, very cinematic
soundscape. Oddly enough, in some pieces you also get
a whiff of Terry Riley's mid-60s experiments, recalling
things from "Mescaline Mix" (not available at
the time of this recording). The live track is a kick
as well, opening and closing with "Stayin' Alive",
detouring and rhythmically deconstructing various songs,
advertisements and other detritus along the way. After
they finish, someone from the crowd shouts, "Play
some music!"
The second disc includes several pieces done for compilations
(not all accepted) and the contents of Gum's second album,
the felicitously titled, 20 Years in Blue Movies and
Yet to Fake an Orgasm. Indeed, the first track features
porn dialogue over an increasingly funky backdrop; maybe
not the most original ideaeven thenbut still
pulled off with enough glee to work. The highlight here,
for me, is "Okefenokee", a riveting throe of
a piece from 1990 (late period Gum), all whooshes and
chitters whirling about over a freight yard full of shuddering
rumbles. A massively impressive slab of sound. The 20-minute
"Banning" is just a single-minded yet multi-faceted
machine, brutally gouging a path through the rubble, eventually
joined by frenetic drums and bells. Yoshihide and Tetreault
achieved this kind of intensity a couple of times last
time I caught them; hard to imagine any other turntable
tag-team doing so. The final selection is Gum's most blatant
allusion to their industrial rock roots, working off a
loose cover of Throbbing Gristle's "Blood on the
Floor", quickly appropriating the beat and chorus
and basically going nuts rocking out with them. Nerds
on the loose! It's great fun and a rollicking way to tie
up what is, in total, an excellent, ear-opening look into
the early career of Samartzis, one of today's most rewarding
sonic adventurists (Curtis, according to the fine liner
notes by Jim Haynes, has returned to his first love, photography).
Highly recommended.
-- Brian Olewnick / bagatellen.com |
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