Bruce Russell - 21st Century Field Hollers and Prison Songs

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w.m.o/r
26

In an intriguing act of self-exhumation, Bruce Russell has plundered the carcass of his own (with Ralf Wehowsky) earlier release on a bruit secret, ‘Midnight Crossroads Tape Recorder Blues’ (a recording with which I’m not familiar), extracting elements that held for him a particularly bluesy resonance, re-recording them at odd speeds and then constructing loops to create (almost) entirely new works. That blues (and dub) feeling really does permeate the tracks, sometimes overtly, other times requiring a certain amount of aural perseverance.

But the fact that Russell does generally utilize loops makes for a certain ease of entry as even the harshest or most abstract nodules attain some familiarity with each repetition. The opening “Black Car Blues” creates a murky, gelid atmosphere with shards that may have been lifted from “Concret ph” knifing through the gloom. You could likely derive a good deal of amusement attempting to ID sources throughout the disc. I swear the second track, “Kate’s Blues #3”, contains a segment from Frith’s “No Birds”…but I could be wrong. On the other hand, if that’s not the loopy synth from “Space Is the Place” popping up on “Dirty Water Dub” (great title) I’ll eat my pixels. Many of the nine, shortish tracks (the disc as a whole is barely over a half-hour) are guitar-driven, allowing Russell to at least hint at blues wails and often more than that, though lines of any clarity are swiftly chopped into stew-meat. By doing so, Russell achieves a chewy, rough medium between song and tape collage where the loops provide the form but the elements from which they’re created simultaneously subvert any such suggestion. My personal favorite is the final cut, relatively lengthy at five minutes where the music seems to branch out into wider territory, abandoning any specific genre--fittingly, it’s dedicated to Philip Samartzis. There’s a sense of stepping outside an area whose hermeticism wasn’t earlier perceptible; a very strong piece.

It’s a quite enjoyable disc. Best of all, you can download it for nothing at Mattin’s site, as well as read the text and view the photos that are included in the booklet: w.m.o/r

Posted by Brian Olewnick on June 21, 2006 5:52 PM
Comments

This is 1 tasty record. And much bloosier than that awfly mobyesque blaxploitation thing from Eckehard Ehlers ...

Posted by: Lutz at June 23, 2006 8:13 AM

Brian, it seems clear from reading Bruce's notes accompanying the disc that all the material comes from his recordings with Ralf Wehowsky. And that album is certainly worth getting hold of, if A Bruit Secret discs are available on your side of the pond (does Jon stock them at Erstwhile I wonder?)

Posted by: Dan Warburton at June 23, 2006 9:25 AM

indeed we do:

http://www.erstwhilerecords.com/distro.html

Posted by: jon abbey at June 23, 2006 9:31 AM


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