Epigram - Anything that Comes to Mind






"
If it where another band or album, I might frown upon these structures but these make Anything that Comes to Mind all that more digestible. At first listen you will feel where the contrasts of resting and climaxing pieces are to be found, ideal to entice from the start. "Always an Uncomfortable Silence" is the perfect example of these contrasts, warm ambience in the back and delightful minimal guitars picking away on the swelling bass and drums until they suddenly explode in a climax of post-rock surging waves. The dauntless slide guitar riding the heights of the album do have a sagacious impact on the overall sound, but once acclimatized to its omnipresence in the tidal waves of fluid post-rock, it all makes sense."





read the full review @ the Silent Ballet



Epigram website
Epigram myspace
self-released | buy



H. R. Giger - an introduction

There's a lot to be said about this artist, his noticeable style and contributions to 'popular culture' ranging from ELP, Celtic Frost & Magma cover art to Korn singer Jonathan Davis ' microphone stand.
An inspiration to uncountable artists without a doubt, a man who's work one probably has seen more then heard his name...



Hans Rudi Giger




The Birth Machine (1967)



HR Giger is an Academy Award-winning Swiss painter, sculptor, and set designer best known for his design work on the film Alien. Giger's unique style and thematic execution is frequently imitated in modern art practice. His design for the Alien was inspired by his painting Necronom IV and earned him an Oscar in 1980. His third published book of paintings, titled Necronomicon (followed by Necronomicon II in 1985), continued his rise to international prominence, as did the frequent appearance of his art in the magazine Omni. Giger is also well known for artwork on a number of popular records.

Giger got his start with small ink drawings before progressing to oil paintings. For most of his career, Giger has worked predominantly in airbrush, creating monochromatic canvasses depicting surreal, nightmarish dream-scapes. He has largely abandoned large airbrush works in favor of works with pastels, markers or ink. His most distinctive stylistic innovation is that of a representation of human bodies and machines in a cold, interconnected relationship, described as "biomechanical". His paintings often display fetishistic sexual imagery. His main influences were painters Ernst Fuchs and Salvador Dalí. He met Salvador Dalí, to whom he was introduced by painter Robert Venosa. He was also a personal friend of Timothy Leary. Giger is perhaps the best-known sufferer of night terrors and his paintings are all to some extent inspired by his experiences with that particular sleep disorder. He was originally educated as an architect and made his first paintings as a way of art therapy.

Giger has created furniture designs, particularly the Harkonnen Capo Chair for an unproduced movie version of the novel Dune that was originally slated to be directed by Alejandro Jodorowski. Many years later, David Lynch directed the film, using only extremely limited rough ideas from Giger. Giger had wished to work with Lynch, as he had said that Lynch's film Eraserhead was the closest thing to portraying Giger's art in film (even including the films that Giger himself had worked on), as cited in one of Giger's Necronomicon books.

Giger has applied his biomechanical style to interior design, and several "Giger Bars" sprang up in Tokyo, New York, and his native Switzerland, although most of the bars have since closed. One such example was The Limelight in Manhattan, circa 1993 -- at the time, its bars featured faux embryos in jars, floating in a backlit pinkish fluid. His art has greatly influenced tattooists and fetishists worldwide. Ibanez guitars has released an H.R. Giger signature series; the Ibanez ICHRG2, an Ibanez Iceman, features the work "NY City VI", the Ibanez RGTHRG1 has the work "NY City XI" printed on it, and the S Series SHRG1Z has a metal coated engraving of the work "Biomechanical Matrix" on it. There is also a 4 string SRX bass; SRXHRG1, that has "N.Y. City X" printed on it. wiki



album art: Emerson, Lake & Palmer - Brain Salad Surgery (1973)


The album cover is considered one of the most memorable (and often disturbing) of its time. It features distinctive Giger monochromatic biomechanical artwork, integrating an industrial mechanism with a human skull and the new ELP logo (created by Giger). The lower part of the skull's face is covered by a circular "screen", which shows the mouth and lower face in its flesh-covered state. In the original LP release, the front cover was split in half down the center, except for the circular screen section (which was attached to the right half). Opening the halves revealed a painting of the complete face: a human female (modelled after Giger's wife), with "alien" hair and multiple scars, including the infinity symbol and a scar from a frontal lobotomy. The two images of the woman are very similar, but the outer image (in the circle) contains what appears to be the top of a phallus below her chin, arising from the "ELP" column below (the second painting originally had the complete phallus, but this was removed at the insistence of the record company). The back cover was solid black with the album title in plain white lettering.

On later vinyl printings (and most CD releases), the front cover is a single piece, and the alternate ("face") view is used on the back cover. However, the 1993 Victory Music CD reissue packaged the album in a special Digipak with the original split cover art, which also unfolded to reveal a small poster with the lyrics and band photos from the original album inner sleeve.

Both paintings were created in pure shades of grey airbrush, to appear metallic and mechanical. However, on some releases of the album, the cover was printed with too much red, making the image (in Giger's words) "cow-shit-pile-brown".

Giger's ELP logo, using a circular enclosure of the "E" and upper portion of the "P", around a column formed by the "L" and the vertical of the "P", became a standard for the band and has been used extensively since.

The paintings for the cover are titled "Work #217 ELP I" and "Work #218 ELP II". The original acrylic-on-paper paintings were lost (or stolen) after a Giger exhibition at the National Technical Museum in Prague, which ended August 31, 2005. wiki




album art: Magma - Attahk (1978)



album art: Celtic Frost - To Mega Therion (1985)


To Mega Therion (meaning the great beast in Greek) is the second album by the Swiss extreme metal band, Celtic Frost. It was released in October 1985, and was a major influence on the developing death metal and black metal genres. The cover artwork is a painting by H.R. Giger entitled Satan I. wiki



Work 219: Landscape XX aka Penis Landscape


Copies of Giger's Work 219: Landscape XX, better known as Penis Landscape, were included in an insert with the Dead Kennedys album Frankenchrist, and became the centerpiece of a 1986 obscenity lawsuit against Eric Reed Boucher, a.k.a. Jello Biafra, the vocalist and songwriter for the San Francisco punk rock band.



Giger's surrealist painting that formed the basis for the alien's design in the Ridley Scott film Alien (1979) and won an oscar in 1980 for Best Visual Effects.




HR Giger homepage

HR Giger online museum
HR Giger database
HR Giger @ wikipedia
HR Giger documentary Sanctuary homepage
HR Giger music related links


In the past 15 years, this reviewers ears have had the pleasure of being introduced to some of the most ingeniously sample-based albums -milestones if you will- such as DJ Shadow's Endtroducing and Amon Tobin's Bricolage and Permutation. The impact of this novice way to create albums proved to be immense although at the time their effort was mostly recognized only by critics and connoisseurs of the scene they where active in. Today, I have the pleasure to discus Dreamsploitation's sample-driven debut release The Soft Focus Sound of Today. Cunningly forming his moniker with a hint to the exploitation cinema genre, this brainchild of Canadian Chuck Blazevic got the name just right to describe his 'cut & paste' re-interpretation of orchestral melodic sounds of the 60s.

This 23 year old multi-instrumentalist, dj, composer, producer, record collector and guitarist of The Heavy Blinkers hailing from Nova Scotia didn't leave a rock unturned in his quest for the ideal soundbites for this album. Tapping into a wide range of audiosources such as film scores and foley recordings, obscure and forgotten vinyl releases as well as self recorded material and re-arranging, tweaking and most importantly using them in another context proves Dreamsploitation's intuition for the construction of a coherent composition. Build with more then merely a drumloop, a repetitive sample and a vocal line, The Soft Focus Sound of Today is a pleasant headrush of tiny samples constructed so that they form a blanket of Technicolour tints to crawl under and keep you warm. Like child playing with cutely bears under it's blanket, the unpredictability of this album is as surprising as it is coherent, no exuberant scratches but minimal shifts of creative playfulness.

Although scratch terms as scrible, flare and crab are slightly out of place when discussing The Soft Focus Sound of Today, this album contains quite some relish for the dj-skill junk. Samples looping in different measurements, cut up drumloops re-arranged on each passing keep a tempo in this album that will get to your sense of direction every now and then. The contrast of the Technicolour blanket of string and vocal samples and the unleashed drums don't allow much breathing space on the album, once the headspinning intro of the album is accompanied by it's groove, it's a one way ticket towards the end. Although there are several drumless and downtempo pieces, there's always the confronting, psychotic edge of Dreamsploitation's signature sound of. A sound filled with micro-samples, flowing yet always slightly abrupt.

And this is the greatest achievement -and perhaps in a way, flaw- of the album. Dreamsploitation lures you in his own sound universe right from the intro towards the end, and it's a brilliantly designed sound spectrum you'll discover. But in the end you're most likely not to be able to point out what catches your attention the most, what the thrills of the album where... The Soft Focus Sound of Today is much like a dream, an experience of memories viewed upon in a different, somewhat surreal way, something you want to remember in the morning when you wake up but most likely just end up wondering whole day what exactly happened... Dreamsploitation is not the new DJ Shadow or Amon Tobin, it's the third option; the new kid on the block that will amaze you and keep you wondering what will be next to come out of his absinthe fuelled sampler.




Website Dreamsploitation
Listen to The Soft Focus Sound of Today @ Last.fm
Dreamsploitation MySpace
Written for & published by The Silent Ballet webzine
top