|
Automating Volume Two
|
Tracks
|
-
The Strange Play of the Mouth (8:58) [
UD015
,
LM4716
,
PS1
,
TM1
,
TMT04
] [
MP3
]
-
Old Man River [
YANGKI001
] / Dance of Fools (11:10)
-
Lonely Poisonous Mushroom (8:50) [
VAC01
]
-
Wolfi (6:11) [
BRU002
]
-
Human, Human, Human (5:48) [
SX004
,
SX012
] [
MP3
]
-
New Dress (9:43) [
BAR001
,
UD059
] [
MP3
]
|
|
Label
|
United Dairies
|
|
Country
|
UK
|
|
Catalogue
|
UD054CD
|
|
Format
|
CD
|
|
Date
|
2002
|
|
Edition
|
UD054CD. Edition in digipak
Containing an insert with artwork by
Matt Waldron
and Roland Topor.
|
|
Sleeve Notes
|
thanks
Matt Waldron - insert drawing
Babs Santini
- cover art
Jeremy Cantwell - Calligraphy
Matt Black - Photoshop stuff
Denis Blackham - Digital Transfer
|
|
Notes
|
"New Dress" is identical to "A New Dress (Remix)" from Crumb Duck [
UD059
].
Insert reveals track listing of Automating Volume 1 [
UD053CD
].
|
|
Reviews
|
This CD release of Nurse With Wound's compilation
track collection LP from 1989 will not come as a surprise to any of the
insane fans, who, like me, have already tracked down this material long
ago and are very familiar with it. However, it's always nice when these
works are given the CD treatment—often it means improved sound and
extra tracks. Well, I can't detect any difference in sound from the LP
edition. As for extras, the one bonus track, "New Dress," is not really
that special, having already been issued (and still readily available)
on the United Dairies edition of 'Crumb Duck,' the Stereolab
collaboration. It is an awesome track, however, one of Stapleton's
better ambient works. The tracks on 'Automating Vol 2' run the gamut of
Stapleton's various styles. The first track "The Strange Play of the
Mouth" is a good example: It begins with a woman singing, her voice
being distorted and phased into psychedelic oblivion. Then the track
suddenly shifts into an industrial drill attack along the lines of
'Thunder Perfect Mind', then the voice returns and is placed into a
sound patchwork featuring old records and wacky sound manipulations a
la 'Sylvie and Babs.' All in the span of eight minutes. "Elderly Man
River/Dance of Fools" is a Jacques Berrocal-style free-jazz
improvisation, with one of the most absurd takes on the old standard
"Old Man River" that you will ever hear. The absurdity quickly segues
into an aggressive Whitehouse noise attack, then a chorus of girls
saying some deeply weird things about a hobby horse. "Lonely Poisonous
Mushroom" (a collaboration with Organum) and "Lea Tantaaria" (renamed
as "Wolfi") are eerie, atmospheric sound collages, featuring bell
tones, randomly plucked guitars and nonsense piano. "Human, Human,
Human" is my favorite on the album, utilizing the mutated sounds of a
typewriter behind a truly odd New Age cult indoctrination record. A
male and female speaker read a text aloud that is so full of
psychobabble, twisted logic, and space cadet reasoning, it puts
Heaven's Gate propaganda to shame. Although it's far from a great Nurse
With Wound album, the variety of music on this disc might be a pretty
good place for NWW novices to get an idea of the breadth and scope of
Stapleton's oevre. - Jonathan Dean
|
|