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Angry Eelectric Finger (Spitch'cock One)
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Tracks
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Root Canal Splinter (Penetration mix) (11:19) - Nurse With Wound
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Paraparaparallelogrammatica (12:18) - Cyclobe / Nurse With Wound [
MT086
] [
MP3
]
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Mute Bell Extinction Process (10:38) - Irr. App. (Ext.) / Nurse With Wound [
MT087
] [
MP3
]
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Tape Monkey Mooch (10:58) - Jim O'Rourke / Nurse With Wound [
MT085
] [
MP3
]
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Label
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United Dairies
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Country
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UK
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Catalogue
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UDCD0300
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Format
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CD / LP
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Date
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March 2004
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Edition
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UDCD0300. Edition of 2000 CD copies in digipak.
Edition of 3 vinyl test pressings in handmade sleeves.
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Sleeve Notes
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A selection that may or may not be included on the forthcoming 3 disc set ANGRY
EELECTRIC FINGER.
Cover art by
Babs Santini
. Thanks to Paul Jackson.
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Notes
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Apparently 3 vinyl test pressings of this release were made - no catalog
numbers - with handmade sleeves.
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Review
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Though Steven Stapleton is inevitably characterized as a something of a "lone
wolf" a vaguely psychotic outsider, compulsively and prolifically pumping
out mysterious and inscrutable musical esoterica from some dilapidated shack
deep in the Irish countryside he has, in fact, remained a thoroughly
collaborative artist throughout his long career. It took 1999's compilation The
Swinging Reflective: Favourite Moments of Mutual Ecstasy to finally demonstrate
the impressive array of artists that Stapleton has worked with over the years:
from contemporaries like Foetus, Tony Wakeford and The Legendary Pink Dots to
artists like Stereolab, who are situated well outside of NWW's post-industrial
milieu. It is this same intensely collaborative spirit that manifests on Angry
Eelectric Finger (Spitch'Cock One), a newly-issued prologue to an upcoming
triple-album set featuring collaborations with Cyclobe, irr.app.(ext.), Jim
O'Rourke and Xhol Caravan. These were long-distance reciprocations, with
Stapleton sending raw materials to each of the artists, who were free to
recontextualize and mutate the sounds as they saw fit. These longform remixes
were sent back to Stapleton, who added some finishing production touches and
let them stand. This unique process has yielded a series of tracks in which the
personalities of Stapleton's musical accomplices come through very strongly,
even as they each reverently pay homage to the work of Nurse With Wound. The
disc opens with a piece credited only to NWW, a classic 11-minute brain-twister
that utilizes bending, distorted bass guitar strings to disorienting effect.
Each metallic pluck swoops and dithers around a senseless insectoid rhythm, the
piece eventually expanding into a blasted Cold War furnace factory dominated by
an ancient, wheezing iron lung. Erudite Nurse-o-philes will recognize these
sounds from An Akward Pause and the Current 93 collaboration Bright Yellow
Moon, Stapleton clearly enforcing the "recycled sound" aesthetic from the
outset. Next up is Cyclobe's "Paraparaparallelogrammatica," certainly the most
gorgeous track on the album, a stately science-fiction mind excursion of the
kind that dominated Simon and Stephen's immeasurably wonderful The Visitors.
It's a texturally rich space fanfare of the kind not heard since Atem-era
Tangerine Dream, and perhaps not even then. Its indulgent cinematic sensuality
bears little similarity to Stapleton's cod surrealism, save for the narrative
unfolding and nuanced, lysergic vibrations that dominate the track. It's one of
the best things I've heard from Cyclobe, and regardless of whether or not it
bears any resemblance to the original NWW source material, I'm certain that
this would have appeared on the infamous NWW Influence List had it been
released on some obscure German prog label in the early 1970s. Matt Waldron's
irr.app.(ext.) project has been responsible for some of the most intensely
rendered audio phenomena outside of the NWW camp, and their match-up
tellingly entitled "Mute Bell Extinction Process" again reflects primarily
the interests of the remixer, rather than the remixed. While eerily recalling
such creepy NWW classics as "Fashioned to a Device Behind a Tree,"
irr.app.(ext.) once again shows a unique talent for thought cancellation,
creating an insistently clandestine, industrial trance-scape that uses
repetition to progressively wipe clean all thoughts and prepare the listener
for the loss of physical cohesion. The last track is Jim O'Rourke's "Tape
Monkey Mooch," a laptop-concrete take on the history and mystery of Nurse With
Wound. In its own unique way, O'Rourke's contribution is probably the oddest on
this record. Strange to think this was created by a current member of art-punk
darlings Sonic Youth and the creator of an endless barrage of John
Fahey-influenced indie-pop; not so strange, however, to anyone who has ever
witnessed one of O'Rourke's freeform laptop collage performances, which often
reference the 80's post-industrial tape-music underground of Roger Doyle and
HNAS. O'Rourke sound collage creates an abstract web of richly-detailed sounds,
compounding details that give way to form and structure, which melt into
abstraction and back into structure. It's a gloriously baffling riddle, and if
its quality is at all indicative of the material on the forthcoming three-album
set, I can hardly wait. - Jonathan Dean
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