Thet Liturgiske Owäsendet are Linus Schrab and Johan Fotmeijer. Armed with guitars,
field recordings and modular synths they've evolved their own brand of improvised
soundscaping over a number of previous releases.While much of their output has tended
to be long form, drone based textural explorations, this release opts for shorter
running times and a greater variety in approach to both form and texture.
The pair's previous cassette 'Hafvet' was inspired by (and named after) the
sea, and the industrialised but sparsely populated American Midwest
is the inspiration for this one; it's clear that geography's
important to them. The opening 'Platteville' is presumably named after
oad (pop.1,256). Mournful melodic phrases are looped into a chunk of
lush, classically inflected melancholia worthy of Stars of the Lid – post
apocalyptic easy listening, perhaps. The brief but gorgeous 'Hazel Green'
is named after a village around 15 miles down the road (pop.1,256).
Perhaps fittingly it plays with near silence, placing slowly overlapping
stacks of chords over a muted ticking pulse. Occasional percussive bass
figures punctuate the shimmering harmonic clouds that dominate the
faintly Eno-esque 'Klar Piquett', while 'Iron Ridge' drops us into a nightmarish
industrial soundscape of low frequency noisebursts, piledriver
thumps, gaseous hisses and distant looped voices that's reminiscent of
the early work of 80s experimentalists 23 Skidoo.
'Mineral Point' is the most obviously programmatic piece; a lumbering yet
insistent tattoo of metallic clunks, scrapes and thuds grind away in a
suitably machine like fashion while faint bell like tones hover above.
'Rajah' closes things off in a more subdued manner, its faint, simple
melodic figure looping away to itself on rising thermals; a long cool drink
of water after the heat. By turns immersive and in your face, Wisconsin
Mining State is a luminous, involving imaginary soundtrack best heard
with lights off and headphones on.
FWD18 will be available digitally and as a limited edition cassette,
packaged in cardboard box with riso-print in rare risofedral blue on rough
warmwhite paper stock.