Taxidermy’s Post-hardcore Noise Rock Single “Rot” is a Map of the Uncomfortable Journey to Accepting Life’s Uncertainties

Taxidermy, photo courtesy the artists

Taxidermy’s “Rot” begins with an intricate guitar figure and spare drums but the melodies quickly drift slightly discordant as the song unfolds. From a place of building doubt in the lyrics and the music conveying a sense of unraveling into a passage of sweeping churning distortion and back into unsettling tension. In the music video we see shifting scenes of people contemplating in natural surroundings and then sitting in the dark lit only by candlelight and the moon. Vocals go from tranquil to hysterical as the song leaps into jagged riffs and splayed rhythms that after some headlong momentum seems to break down, dissolving into lingering, fragmented tones that echo into silence. It’s like the song embodies a moment in life when all of the things you thought you believed in and which formed the foundation of your identity and psyche come into question to their very core and you have to come to terms with what you really believe or accept an uncomfortable but possibly more satisfying acceptance of uncertainty and flux and the impermanence of all things. Fans of Slint and Gilla Band will appreciate Taxidermy’s inspired use of asymmetrical structure and raw noise as a compositional element in the context of songcraft. Watch the music video for “Rot” on YouTube and follow Copenhagen, Denmark’s Taxidermy at the links below. Look for more to come from Taxidermy on Pink Cotton Candy Records.

Taxidermy on Facebook

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Quiet Sonia Creates a Deep Journey From Existential Contemplation to Hopeful Resignation on “In My Arms Many Flowers”

Quiet Sonia, photo by Minder Storrelse

The imagery in Marianne Skaarup Jakobsen’s video for Quiet Sonia’s “In My Arms Many Flowers” is like a collage of negative images super imposed on others with colors manipulated to look like something from decades past. And with the images in motion it flows with an organic drift like the way memories are stored in the mind. The music itself in its intricate web of melody and texture, acoustic guitar, strings, swells of tone. Impressionistic lyrics spoken/sung by Nikolaj Bruus in a weary matter of fact, thoughtful tone are offered in short poetic sketches. Like a piece written inspired by urban decay and the neglect of culture as manifested physically in the landscape and in the lived experiences of people as if everything can be plugged directly into a system to drive short term profits and barring that limited and ever changing utility cast aside. Lonely piano notes seem to mark the time throughout the song but especially as it heads toward the fading outro. But there is a reprise wherein the song proper ends on a note of hopeful resignation. An underlying theme to the song appears to be how we are all part of one big, interconnected cycle of being and that our individual place in the impermanence of being is as actor, as witness and as quantum impetus for what comes after. One might liken it to a post-rock song but it seems to have more in common with the likes of experimental jazz/ambient composers like Steve Tibbetts and John Hassell among other such artists on the ECM imprint in the 1980s with its crafting of tone, pacing and texture. Listen to “In My Arms Many Flowers” on YouTube and marvel at how it’s more than ten minutes seem to pass so quickly and follow Quiet Sonia at the links below. The All Black Horses Came Thundering EP from which “In My Arms Many Flowers” is drawn is out now on Pink Cotton Candy Records.

Quiet Sonia on Facebook

Quiet Sonia on Instagram

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