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monument to a ruined age
CD-R Album 2006 | Silber 050 9 tracks, 46 minutes $12 ($14 international, $5 download (256 kbps, ~84 megs)) : More info track listing: opened, kalifornia, one hundreds, your guilty prize, unfortunates, human beings, rodeo romeo, crusify you, yto nobogo |
Goddakk is the project of
Plumerai's Martin Newman, but it sounds nothing like Plumerai. monuments
to a lost age a complex collection of dense, electronica-based compositions.
For music that is seemingly difficult, it's also amazingly easy on the
ears. The songs appear to be a blend of loops and guitars and synths, and
even though the music is dense, there's a pleasure to be found within the
soundtrack-like songs inside. Comparisons to bands like Aphex Twin and
Coil are not without merit, though Goddakk never gets as weird as either.
Best moment: the wonderful, Robin Guthrie-esque "Opened," which, appropriately,
opens the record.
~ Joseph Kyle, Mundane Sounds
Goddakk is a solo project
from Boston based musician Martin Newman (burMonter, Plumerai, December
Sundays) on guitars, bass, keyboards and voice, though the promo sheet
notes that the dominant instrument is a Fender VI bass run through loops
& effects.
I really enjoyed this album.
From start to finish Newman treats us to a set of creatively constructed
contrasts that bring together sound-art, a film soundtrack feel and an
odd sense of melody and song. I love the blend of frenetic and off-kilter
patterns (including an oddly song-like melody) laid over a steady, stone
cold drone on "Opened". Ditto for "Kalifornia", with its machine-like sounds
and textures combined with drones and a repetitive melodic phrase. "One
Hundreds" is a strange piece that features a Robert Fripp styled guitar-scape
in a completely NON-Fripp setting. I love the cool funky guitar grooves
amidst the sound cacophony on "Your Guilty Prize". "Romeo Romeo" manages
to glom together the Fripp fun and funk guitar into one avant-freaky mish-mash
that culminates into a crazed symphony of looped patterns. "Unfortunates"
struck me as a drugged avant-garde version of a Morricone soundtrack. "Human
Beings" sees Newman travel into deep space, producing a cosmic piece that
brings to mind early 70's Ash Ra Tempel meets modern day sound art experimentations.
One of my favorites of the set. And the closing track, "Yto Nobogo", is
the longest piece on the CD and winds things down nicely, bringing together
all the elements that cropped up throughout the album into one experimental
and aesthetically pleasing excursion.
Wow, LOTS happening on this
album! Newman excels at assembling disparate elements of sound, ambience
and melody into cohesive and thought provoking wholes. Call it ambient
music for those who like to explore and experiment but don't need the meditational
bits. This is one you can play over and over and find something new and
exciting every time.
~ Jerry Kranitz, Aural Innovations
Well-assembled drones, loops,
and patterns from Plumerai’s Martin Newman working solo. Different from
some of the other loop-based artists/projects I’ve heard, in that Newman
adds quite a bit of active material to the loop backgrounds, which keeps
the pieces from drifting off into repetitive monotony. The moods here range
from pretty to bleak to pretty bleak. Most of the compositions are pure
droners, while a couple of them actually have a simple chord change or
two. All of them present a nice balance between musical elements and textural
sounds. I particularly like the crunchy, scattered-sounding bass guitar
on #5, and the sneaky processed vocals that show up from time to time throughout
the CD.
~ Max Level, KFJC
Don’t be scared off by Goddakk’s
gothy sounding name or the dark embryonic-like imagery of the packaging.
You have nothing to fear. The music of Goddakk is entrancing and mesmerizing.
All the sounds on the disc are created by Martin Newman mainly using looped
sounds produced on a bass, along with some guitar, keys and vocals.
The music on the disc is
eerily familiar. It took me a long time to place where I had heard music
like this before. Newman’s self proclaimed love of the Cure threw me off
the right track. His true allegiance is not with the Cure but with someone
from much further south, New Zealand to be exact.
His true fellow sonic explorer
would be Roy Montgomery. Both artists share a penchant for slowly building
droney soundscapes. Newman & Montgomery use mostly a single instrument
(Martin uses a bass) to build up dense subtly changing sound environments.
On some tracks, like “Unfortunates,” Newman uses a keyboard that would
not sound out of place on a Dadahmah or Dissolve record. On other tracks
like “Human Beings” it feels like atmospherics of early Flying Saucer Attack.
Martin employs dense heavily
altered vocals on some tracks, like the first track “Opened.” It is impossible
to hear what is being said, but I don’t think that is really the point.
The altered vocals give the song a claustrophobic, uneasy feel. At first
the vocals bothered me, but after repeated listens they grew on me.
“Crucify You” is slightly
different then the rest of the tracks. It is less dependent on bass loops
to build up dense sonic soups. It is much more song orientated with what
sounds like a simple bass & string like sounding arrangement. This
track shows the broadness of Newman’s sonic pallette. “Yto Nobogo,” the
final track, builds up from simple loops to become denser and denser, before
it reaches its ultimate climax.
Overall I am quite impressed
with Goddakk. Theses soundscapes are deceptively simple. Martin Newman
achieves with this project a great deal of variety using simple means.
~ Dan Cahoon, Amplitude
Equals One Over Frequency Squared
Goddakk was formed by Martin
Newman (of the band Plumerai). The band is a solo project in which Newman
experiments with sounds and electronics. The compositions on Monument to
a Ruined Age are, for the most part, experimental electronic drone pieces
with the main instrument being a Fender bass guitar. Although Martin plays
bass, guitars, and keyboards, the majority of the instruments are mutated
and drowned in effects to the point that they are no longer recognizable.
The overall sound of this album is spooky and peculiar...it often sounds
like the soundtrack to a really weird underground film. This is the kind
of music that you either love or hate. We've always been fond of electronic
manipulation...so we were naturally drawn to this. Monument is a strangely
inviting spin that creates otherworldly moods in the mind of the listener.
~ Babysue
Experimental soundscapes
and a couple more song-like pieces. Poltergeist song circles ring and chant
in a secret electric language. Lost souls whisper through warm circuitry.
A pulse of flesh and blood runs in the same rhythm as it’s electronic semblance
to emotion. A sullen moody afternoon filled with ancient dried bouquets,
tattered remains of endless days stacked on end in attics, and trance inducing
memories recorded in layers of dust.
~ George Parsons, Dream
Magazine
The solo project of core
Plumerai member Martin Newman, Goddakk is based more in experimentation
and ambience than the output of his other projects. In some ways expanding
upon and altering Newman's original Goddakk Dos Dalen EP (read my review
here), Monument to a Ruined Age, the project's full-length debut on Silber
Records is a 9-song affair that's ambient yet highly rhythmic. Blending
often unintelligible, whispery, tremolo-processed vocals with melodic loops,
noise elements, and generous use of a Fender Bass VI that adds a more organic
air to the affair, it's an album that's sonically interesting and compelling.
While not straying far from
the formula of layered instrumental loops building sonic textures topped
by more fluid melodies and vocals, it's the sonic differences in, and interplay
of, these elements that separate them. The excellent "Unfortunates", for
example, blends a more melodic bass riff and great organ melodies, complete
with a chorus, for something far more musical, while the instrumental "Your
Guilty Prize" builds melodic layers and transforms into a more noise-based
piece throughout its 6 minute duration. The eerie "Human Beings" also stands
out, unsettling atmospherics and haunting piano melodies creating a moody
spatial void, as does the more pop-structured, ethereal "Crucify You".
While sometimes a bit formulaic,
Goddakk's Monument to a Ruined Age is, overall, an interestingly textured
and emotive foray into experimental ambience with a few dips into ethereal
pop territory. Considerably different from Newman's work with Plumerai,
it may not appeal to everyone, but will likely prove an interesting listen
for experimental/ambient/ethereal fans.
~ Joshua Heinrich, Grave
Concerns
Goddakk is the solo project
of Martin Newman from the band 'Plumerai' and it came to life as he was
trying to put together a band that would concentrate on songs with more
of a dark and oppressive character, and this CD is the project's debut
album.
This recording consists
of 9 tracks of somewhat varied and sometimes aggressive soundscapes where
you can hear many loops and sound effects, giving the music a drony but
dynamic character. There are some vocals on some of the songs which have
been processed through a tremolo pedal, giving the music an airy and spacelike
tone.
The best way to describe
this music would be like watching lava up close as it makes it's way down
a rock formation or a grassy patch. You can see as the lava flows in a
slow, repetitive pattern and if paid close attention, you can also see
how some of the outer crust starts to dry out and form cracks. This is
all of course happening in an atmosphere of intense heat, and that is the
way this music feels like.
This is not your typical
background music, and as a matter of fact it happens very much in the foreground.
The music feels intense and unrelenting. It is harsh in nature and although
it is noisy sometimes, it is not just noise because these are actually
very structured songs. The music does not expand and contract as in minimalistic
type of music where the harmonies go through an additive process, but rather
just slowly moves along.
The only 'odd' track in
this CD is track 8 where the mood actually changes drastically. Instead
of an industrial feeling, this is indeed a very melodic but sorrow sounding
track. An orchestral strings sounding tone carries along with what it seems
to be a bass in the background and vocals whispering "crucify you". Imagine
if you will as you are in the back seat of a car looking upwards to the
blue sky in total silence as you are going to your own funeral!
I am sure this music is
not for everyone because even when it does not possess any of the qualities
of say death or black metal, it still has a very dark character and easily
qualifies as very experimental music. It makes for a good interesting listen.
~ Lunar Hypnosis
Goddakk got its start as
a result of bassist Martin Newman's struggles to get his main project,
Plumerai (who, by the way, contributed an excellent track to Silber's 2004
Christmas comp), off the ground. It then dawned on Newman that he was still
able to create music on his own, after seeing performances by Pamelia Kurstin
and Brian John Mitchell (Remora). Of course, bass guitar-centric music
is nothing new — Rothko, among others, were already doing it — but as a
former master of the four-string myself, I find something especially beguiling
about Newman's harsh, brittle soundscapes.
While the press materials
draw up comparisons to the likes of Coil and The Legendary Pink Dots, I
personally hear something more along the lines of Philip Jeck's rolling,
rumbling washes of sound. The album begins with the aptly-titled "Opened",
which consists of a low frequency rumbling hum — I suspect some serious
guitar pickup abuse was involved here — as lighter, shimmering guitar filigrees
bounce back and forth. Newman's voice, shredded and whipped by a bevy of
effects pedals, gasps out from time to time, though his treated vocals
are barely able to maintain their form under the soundscape's onslaught.
"Opened", like all of the
other tracks, are by no means the pinnacle of audiophile perfection. They're
roughhewn, as if Newman decided that the only possible vessel for capturing
his sounds was a battered old 4-track and worn-down magnetic tape. However,
the noisy, abrasive quality of the recording actually makes these songs
stronger than they might have been otherwise. It imbues them with an otherworldly
quality that is both strangely beguiling (given the songs' dark, harsh
nature) and rather creepy.
However, it's not all just
sonic assaults and walls of rumbling, head-rattling guitar noise. Songs
such as "Unfortunates" and "Crucify You" are surprisingly melodic, given
the otherwise clashing sounds that Newman generates. This is especially
true of the former. The sounds as if you're locked inside a church bell
tower at midnight, the giant tolling sounds crashing all around you and
threatening to cave your head in. However, a wandering organ has something
of a structuring effect, while Newman's tremoloed vocals whisper in from
the edges.
"Crucify You" is easily
the most song-like song on the disc, as well as the most poignant, as Newman
gasps and intones the titular words with increasing desperation, leaving
the listener to wonder just who, exactly, is "you". Newman's bass guitar
takes on a cello-like facade, while additional string-like arrangements
combine with the recording's haziness, resulting in a song that would sound
quite at home on This Mortal Coil's It'll End In Tears.
Interestingly, Newman had
intended for Plumerai to take on dark, oppressive pop songs a la The Cure's
Pornography. I find that somewhat ironic because, while Goddakk's music
is much more abstract than anything The Cure ever did outside of "Carnage
Visors", there are certain parallels between Monument To A Ruined Age and
the Cure's darkest hour.
Pornography found the band
delving increasingly into heavily rhythmic songs that were much more atmospheric
and stream-of-consciousness than anything they'd done up to that point
(or since then). I don't find it too hard to imagine that, had Robert Smith
gone even farther into that darkly rhythmic, crushing sound than he did,
the result might not too dissimilar from songs such as "Unfortunates" or
"Crucify You".
~ Jason Morehead, Opus
The same Cure album Pornography
is mentioned in the press blurb of Goddakk's debut album 'Monument To A
Ruined Age'. Martin Newman was thinking of forming a band that could similar
music, but decided to keep it a solo project and be in total control himself.
I assume that somewhere along the lines he abandoned the idea of doing
songs along the lines of 'Pornography', since 'Monument To A Ruined Age'
sounds quite unlike that. Goddak plays around with loops of sounds, played
using a six string bass guitar, guitar, keyboards, and vocals, to create
songs that are somewhere half way through ambient soundscaping and real
songs. The same press blurb mentions influences of Colin Newman (not related,
but of Wire fame), The Legendary Pink Dots, and Coil, but I must admit
I can only see the influence of the latter. Despite the fact that there
are voices used, it's hard to detect them. That makes the idea of popsongs
a bit more difficult. Quite 'present' ambient music or quite 'lush' pop-music,
and whereas not always the newest or hottest thing in town, it's surely
executed with great care and imagination.
~ Frans de Waard, Vital
Weekly
Dal sottosuolo americano
la Silber riesce sempre ad estrarre talenti preziosissimi. Come quello
di Martin Newman che con l’aiuto in pratica di un solo basso fender riesce
a costruire musica gotica ed evocativa dal forte impatto emotivo. Martin
sperimenta con lo stesso vocabolario dei Coil e dei Legendary Pink Dots
anche se poi la sua arte risente del bagaglio di psichedelia che porta
con sé la sua terra. Non stupisce quindi che Unfortunates sembra
essere un vecchio tema western di John Barry riarrangiato da Mike Van Portfleet.
Né che Kalifornia, pur partendo con un omaggio ai Cure di “Pornography”,
si trasformi presto in una danza che impressionerebbe il talento visionario
di David Lynch. Quando Martin usa la voce (in One Hundreds, Crucify You
e la già citata Unfortunates) lo fa in modo assolutamente non convenzionale,
filtrandola attraverso un pedale tremolo che le dona un vibrato da B-movie
di fantascienza. Per gli amanti dell’oscurità.
~ Roberto Mandolini, Losing
Today
Martin Newman guitarrista
de Plumerai debuta en solitario con este proyecto llamado Goddakk. Apenas
hay voces en "Monument to a ruined age" editado a comienzos del pasado
año por Silber, pero sí encontrarás 9 arriesgadas
composiciones de noise y paisajismo sonoro hechas para los amantes de la
música incidental.
~ Mikel Herrero, Decadence
Online