Sometimes German, sometimes English. • The title of this blog used to change from time to time. • Interested in me reviewing your music? Please read this! • I'm also a writer for VeilOfSound.com. • Please like and follow Audiovisual Ohlsen Overkill on Facebook!
Posts mit dem Label 2024 werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label 2024 werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

2025-07-24

cassette craze chronicles XLI feat. CH'AHOM, DÉLIRANT, DIRK SERRIES, GORGONIS, HAGER/KAPUTT, MIIRA, NEVER SOL, THE MOND and URN


Phew, they keep piling up! Time to spin some tapes again!






DIRK SERRIES - Fog Curtains (2025)

Let's start with the elephant in the room, the one which obviously sticks out in the picture above! Released by Momentarily Records, a label specialized on small cassette releases in special packaging, Dirk Serries' latest(ish?) solo album comes as an unexpected haptic experience in a grey block of concrete.
There's something oddly satisfying about this inconvenient housing which you cannot even fully close. Just holding this solid thing in your hand, feeling its surface - and also being glad that this is not the standard for all tapes.

The music fits the grey colour and just like the concrete surface is a rather textural experience, in which maybe three or four layers of sound keep meandering around each other, just like... uhm... "Fog Curtains". Droning, whooshing, resonating, this is a pure sound experience, the core of Ambient guitar music.

The Bandcamp description actually almost says it all:
"The four songs on the album are a beautiful and captivating journey through a misty landscape. The artwork consists of a self-cast concrete shell and a colourful credit inlay, which perfectly matches the slightly hazy colour of the tape."

One might only add that you probably won't even notice that these forty minutes are divided into four parts, because all changes are very subtle, the principle of organic formlessness never changes. "Fog Curtains" certainly requieres attention and deep listening - yet the album rewards you with a freeing and relaxing sensation not meant to be put into words.







GORGONIS - Choice Paralysis (2025)

A pink mutant cat shooting lasers from its eyes - yeah, this release by Fuzzed Up & Astromoon Records surely caught my attention with its packaging, too. Even though I was at work I immediately checked it out hoping that the music would be good enough to justify ordering it. And damn, this shit is not just good, but absolutely on fire!

Gorgonis from Boston are a big band project with a Rock'n'Roll line-up plus a brass section and additional gang vocals, combining a wide array of styles like Garage Punk, Rockabilly, Horror and Morricone soundtrack music, Psychedelic Rock and johnzornish Avantgarde Jazz to an exciting wild ride that could totally work as the score for a Super 8 Tarantino tribute short film.

Speaking of short: The songs are compactly on point, so the nine tracks don't even add up to a total playing time of twenty-five minutes. But that's just the right length for this fun little album. You can - and should - just always spin it again if you need more. It's a feral, loudly meowing killer!







DÉLIRANT - Thoughteater (2025)

I've already reviewed this deliciously horrifying slab of Dissonant Deathened Black Metal back in February, but as so often with releases from Sentient Ruin Laboratories it took a while until this awesome looking tape became available for a reasonable price in Europe.

And not that this fact needed further confirmation - but yes, Délirant's "Thoughteater", a sonic nightmare in seven chapters, remains of of the sickest Extreme Metal releases of the year. Yet after almost six months I still cannot close my review of this gloriously discordant maelstrom better then I already did, so I'll just lazily copy that whole last paragraph:

"Thoughteater" feels like the horrific freeze frame of the moment Saturn's son realizes that Francisco Goya is making his father fucking eat him alive. What a dickhead! And what a brain-levelling blast!







CH'AHOM - Knots Of Abhorrence (2023)

Alongside Délirant I also purhased a Sentient Ruin tape, which is a little older. Ch'ahom's debut album has been released in 2023, the same year I got the compilation of their first four demos.

"Knots Of Abhorrence" doesn't stray from the band's former path, yet only increases the quality of the German Death/Black Metal group's music. It's still dedicated to Aztec blood cults, intercuts its attacks of dissonant brutality with accordingly ritualistic flutes and percussions - and almost tries to hide its Progressive influences and technical masterclass in a swampy low-fi aesthetic. So if you don't pay attention you might miss that this actually a pretty amazing, atmospherically dense Death Metal killer.

With "Path to Ixtab" there's only one track that had already been released previously, the other five tracks (including the digital only twelve-minute bonus "Ts'Ono'Ot") are all new - or were new in 2023 -, so there's absolutely no reason not to include this in your sick collection of advanced ghoulish insanity.








NEVER SOL - Tell The Sea I'm Coming Back (2024)

From Sentient Ruin Laboratories to a label which dedicates itself even more to tapes, the diverse Czech underground herald Stoned To Death!

A while ago I couldn't resist their friendly discounts, which introduced me to the singer and solo artist Sára Vondrášková aka Never Sol. Her three-song EP "Tell the Sea I'm Coming Back" is based on the full droning sound of the pipe organ, so there's of course no way around comparisons to the great Anna von Hausswolff. And concerning the slowly moving monolithic instrumentals this is more than fair.

Vocally however Never Sol doesn't reach the same eccentric Kate Bush heights, but mostly stays more reserved inside a warm range which reminds me of the lower registers of Angel Olsen.
It's only during the mini album's second half that the singer explores a higher, more mystical and dramatic tone with higher notes. Both organ (plus some added synths) and voice build a huge and intense atmosphere, contributing to a very good release.

Even though I don't feel that Vondrášková has reached her full potential in terms of songwriting yet - the pieces are still missing a certain something to really make them stand out - I can only recommend this tape.








URN - Self Sabotage (2024)

Slovak composer, guitar player and long-time Danish resident (now living in Tuscany) Jakub Volovár released another album of tracks recorded in Aarhus under the moniker URN. And no, "Self Sabotage" isn't much easier to put into a box than "Recitál" from 2019.

Or maybe it actually is? Yeah, especially since with very few exceptions the upright bass and drumming remain stylistically consistent this can all in all safely be labeled as Jazz, even if the guitar occasionally explores other territories like Blues, Flamenco or Experimental Ambient.

Reading the description on Bandcamp I would argue that I don't experience the album by far as depressively melancholic as intended. The vibe of "Self Sabotage" is intimate and most the thirteen tracks seem rather relaxed - at least on the surface. There are subtly interwoven dark undertones. And there are also hints of funkier Fusion on one and rebellious Heavy Jazz on the other side. But URN doesn't approach these influences in a radical way, yet rather introduces everything harmonious and playfully. This whole album by design feels more like an eased juggling of ideas than a presentation of completely finished songs - and that's what actually makes up a large part of its appeal.

An interesting, somehow very private take on contemporary Jazz.








THE MOND - The Mond (2016)

The third Stoned To Death tape of this bunch is clearly the oldest release here. Yet as I am writing this there's still one last copy of this insane live recording available! So if you're a friend of chaotic improvisations between Psychedelic Rock, Avantgarde Jazz and Noise - don't think twice and get it!

The 2016 debut of Experimental maniacs The Mond delivers a very enjoyable take on free musical madness, mainly because the trio's instrumentation of "electrified trumpet", modular synths, drums and keyboards establishes an interesting, recognizable and hands down just cool trademark sound. "The Mond" is not the reinvention of music, but a very fun album for fans of raw Heavy Jazz and pleasently weird soundtracks to stuff falling down stairs.







MIIRA / HAGER/KAPUTT - Split (2025)

Am I saving the best for last? Maybe. I actually don't want to tie myself down on that. Yet undoubtly this split cassette on Nasse Records (limited to fifty copies) is something special.

Side A belongs to the German guitar/drums duo Miira and their twenty minute Post Rock epic "Unfollow Function". It's just amazing how big their sound feels. And this piece is more emotional, sophisticated and dynamic than their previous album "Wellness".  Huge and heartfelt.

Framed by church bells side B belongs to the duo of Philipp Hager (Zement) and Franz Joseph Kaputt, whose even longer track called "Beschluss der Ewigen Anbetung" ("Decree of Perpetual Adoration") is a calmer affair, which mixes a beautiful saxophone with acoustic guitar and Ambient sounds. It feels as if Smooth Jazz was meeting Appalachian Folk under the umbrella of Post Something on a small, softly lit living room stage.

Both sides complement each other perfectly, making this cassette an exemplary split release, which leaves nothing to be desired. 







2025-05-18

cassette craze chronicles XL feat. BONG-RA, BRUIT ≤, DEEPSKY, LÉSION ÉTRANGE and TEMPÊTE SOLAIRE


Even though my player is driving me insane sometimes with complete unpredictability when a tape is worthy of being played and when not; eventually the machine will bend to my will. And I will keep feeding it with new stuff. Here the most recent additions to my cassette collection:







DEEPSKY - 1 Galactic Instant (2024)

At least as long as I haven't been to a full festival again, I'm still affected by the Post Roadburn Blues, so it seems fitting to begin with a tape I bought directly from the artists after their Offroad show in Tilburg's public library.

In little over forty minutes "1 Galactic Instant" features cosmic Ambient improvisations from 2023, recorded during two shows in Tilburg and one live stream.
Deepsky live in Tilburg 2025 
The guitar and effects / drums and percussions duo doesn't linger on ideas as endlessly as many other Psychedelic artists would do, but they're also not changing things up so fast that it could pull you out of the floating escapist state this music creates.

And even when Carmen Ra and Koen Wijnen get a bit louder and daring like towards the end of "Neptune" or play with a certain tension when they are "Circling the Ice Giant", the're always doing it within the atmospheric framework they've established.

Deepsky aren't on a mission to reinvent the wheel of relaxing Space music, but they're putting an interesting personal spin on it.








TEMPÊTE SOLAIRE - Heliospheric Dialogues (2024)

My second tape souvenir wasn't actually for sale at the festival, but a gift I received from a fellow Roadburner, who brought it with him from Montreal, because he thought I might appreciate it more than other people who he could have given it to. And you can be sure that I'm indeed enjoying it very much.

Tempête Solaire is a trio featuring Drone guitar master Eric Quach (thisquietarmy), which is already a plus. Yet this also fuels expectations this EP is subverting y being much more Jazz-oriented than what I've heard of his huge output so far.
His role next to Eric Craven on drums and Elyze Venne-Deshaies on saxophone is not even playing guitar, but eight-string bass. In "Nuages Magnétiques" they are starting on a vivid Free Jazz journey with some eery modern effect twists. It's dark and droning, yet also Spiritual and transcendent.

Both the "Dove Manoeuvre" and "Syzygy" show a more Psychedelic, yet also faster and much funkier side of Tempête Solaire. But don't think you have figured these tracks out too quick, because the unsettling Space sounds and distortions you wouldn't have heard in your grandpa's Jazz trio, will probably correct your assumptions immediately. It's a special niche sound. And I wish we could hear more of it that these very fine nineteen minutes.  








BONG-RA - Black Noise (2025)

It took me a while to decide in which format I wanted to purchase the new album of Jason Köhnen's main band, which once again has shifted its shape significantly.
I ultimately chose the tape from Tartarus Records over vinyl or CD, because the simple black box just fits the album title "Black Noise" the best.

Musically Bong-Ra partly returns to the Electronic break-beat solo project days as last celebrated on "Vaseline", completely abandons the saxophone Jazz elements of "Meditations", but definitely keeps the riff power and heaviness of "Antediluvian".
You can also expect sludgy Doom influences, yet embedded in a very different context, because the now Industrial Metal trio (which has since also released a cover of Godflesh's "Cold World") just is a different beast.

As I haven't been too keen on every of Köhnen's past combinations of Metal and electronic beats I came in a bit sceptical and needed a couple of listens until I was fully hooked, but boy, these nine tracks are actually an enormously satisfying throwback to the heydays of Nineties Industrial Metal, including a certain two-dimensional flatness of its synthetic sounds and sawing guitars. But somehow it's just what this delightfully demonic soundtrack to the demolition of mankind needs.

Select influences from Jourgensen and Broadrick, killer riffs, distorted hollow screams, obligatory voice samples and a mad drum computer going berserk. And the gruesome hopeless darkness of the closer "Blissful Ignorance" alone... Yeah, that's some great brutal noise. "Black Noise" rules. 








LÉSION ÉTRANGE - Lésion Étrange (2025)

Think there's an easy cheat code for writing music reviews by just reading the Bandcamp tags? Well, then try this release by Arsenic Solaris: "black metal  experimental  extreme metal  drone  free improvisation  jazz  jazzgaze  noise  postrock  Lyon".

Well, ok... forget what I've just said, because this actually helps, I guess. So why do I even bother always to find my own angle? Whatever, these two longtracks of twenty-three ("Alpha") and eighteen ("Omega") minutes by Lésion Étrange are really something!

Imagine Olhava's infinity-embracing Blackgaze, but with a more Heavy Jazz-reminisent drumming. A hypnotic swirl of Post Rock guitar licks and layers of Noise spiraling towards... a resolution in smooth yet menacing, dynamically grooving Ambient atmosphere, which finally grows back into the beautiful primal chaos of creation.
A dissonant yet magnetically transfixing meditation fades into celestial Drone. Ghost winds are howling through the void until they are blasted away by an annihilating Blut Aus Nord cacaphony. Only a soothing triumvirate of Swing, Folk and Ambient can bring you down after this.

Phew, what a journey!








BRUIT ≤ - The Age Of Ephemerality (2025)

The surely most noted album of this lot has to be the new work of the French Post Rockers Bruit ≤, which comes with a self-conception the word ambituous seems almost too small for.

Recorded as a patchwork of different techniques and approaches, from programmed demos over free improvisations to explorations of sonic space in a church with a variety of guest musicians on brass and guitars, "The Age Of Ephemerality" feels like a snapshot of humanity from a cosmic perspective.

What happened so suddenly between the age of a depopulated Europe under feudal religious reign and the post-capitalist chains of global digital slaverey?
You could write books upon books about questions like this. Or you let this band which talks remarkably loud and detailed about its process and message for an instrumental group, actually deliver on the promise of their words and give you at least a highly impressive idea of an answer while they melt together centuries of musical expression from church organ and classical strings to analogue synthesizers, digital programming and the huge dynamic potential of dreaming, contemplating, urging and devastating Post Rock to a towering whole that can hardly be believed to be created just by four dudes from France and their friends.

Even though it's put together from a lot more fragmented, sometimes seemingly random pieces, this album even eclipses the band's widely lauded 2021 release "The Machine Is Burning And Now Everyone Knows It Could Happen Again". This is how you fill instrumental Post Rock with meaning to the brim. Absolutely huge!

Thankfully the creators of this tape edition from Frozen Records took it as serious as it deserves and didn't half-ass its design.








2025-04-12

Hanging in the Void with ODIOUS SPIRIT, SARMAT, SLEEP PARALYSIS and THE OVERMOLD


Who doesn't like a package from the weird Avantgarde and Extreme Metal specialist label I. Voidhanger Records? Here's my latest one. It contains four CDs, two of them in regular, the other two in DVD-tray-sized digipaks.

We're starting with the arguably most traditional release, a Death Metal banger from last year:






ODIOUS SPIRIT - The Treason Of Consciousness (CD) (2024)

Well, actually... Don't let yourself be fooled by my usage of the word traditional, since we're in very subjective territory here!

Because while in theory Odious Spirit are playing a quite oldschool brand of technical Death Metal with lots of sick lead guitars, blast and double bass attacks, their slightly Blackened Dissonant sound completely refuses to feel nostalgic - not due to some special shtick, but just because mastermind James Oskarbski has an oustanding flair for composing classicaly inspired riffs and melodies which somehow feel completely fresh, even though they are undeniably one hundred percent Metal and should all have been used by other artists decades ago.

An impressive proof of Death Metal not being dead at all - with the fitting and appropriately presented cover artwork.








SARMAT - Upgrade (CD) (2025)

Obviously Sarmat's spiritual successor to the 2023 "Dubious Disk" EP is a very different beast. While their ferocious Progressive Death Metal is just as strong, the New Yorkers also make sure to bring the Jazz with trumpets, keytar (!) and upright bass. And yeah, they're bringing a lot of it, with a cast of musicians that knows exactly what it's doing.

Both the fourteen-minute title track, which includes themes from "Landform" of their full album "Determined To Strike", and the shorter, but even wilder trumpet trip "Serum Visions" are prime examples of how to merge creative Extreme Metal with Jazz Fusion and unhinged John Zorn school Avantgarde. Bonkers and brilliant stuff for everyone who would like a much jazzier and mr.bunglishly insane version of Imperial Triumphant (whose bass player is also contributing to this EP again).

You know I fucking love this shit - and you should too. How else could I possibly take you serious from now on?   







THE OVERMOLD - The Overmold (CD) (2025)

Also an album which feels very much inspired by New York Avantgarde, but in a completely different way, much more akin to "Choirs Of The Eye" era Kayo Dot, is the self-titled debut of the Drone Doom duo The Overmold.

Drummer Tim Wyskida and guitarist / bassist Mick Barr open the album with a over twelve minutes of atmospheric rise and decay, crescendo and descent, over and over again... until finally you realize that a song has arrived. Or has it? It's almost to slow to tell. But don't think the whole thrirty-five minutes of this track will stay this way! No, this will soon go into much more agile directions you won't expect... The whole thing is a super dynamic and suspenseful unorthodox journey for friends of Toby Driver, Dylan Carlson, Insect Ark (where Wyskida is drumming too), but also Sumac, Swans and minimalist Experimental Jazz.

Even though on paper the three following - only four to six minutes short - pieces may look like an afterthought, but being a little more "to the point" and featuring more prominent vocals, they're actually an important completion of the album as a whole.

The Overmold demand patience and attention, but once you let their sound in it will captivate and fascinate you. 








SLEEP PARALYSIS - Sleep Paralysis (CD) (2025)

You think we've already talked about the wildest release in this bunch? Think again! Conceptually Sleep Paralysis's debut is a very stringent work dealing with all kinds of nightly mental horrors. And musically there are also the clear leitmotifs of a base in Black Metal on one and a lot of piano on the other side.

That piano opens the album like the prologue to a silent movie, but remains a key element through most of album's eleven tracks. It seems inspired by Italo horror cinema and Classical composers, but it also swings, does the Honky Tonk or erupts in Free Jazz explosions like in the Deathjazz chaos of "Sarmat" (the album, not the band!) by Effluence.

With these pillars in place Stephan Knapp's solo project would already provide a sufficient reign of brilliant psychological terror, but like the randomness of a "Fever Dream" and the mind illogically jumping around during "Stress", Sleep Paralysis doesn't stop there.
At any given moment the album can also surprise you with Electronic stuff like menacingly glitchy beats in combination with Vaporwave (of all things!) keyboards or a hilarious use of a Windows error sound effect, which is really confusing when you're listening to the this the first time on your PC.

No, despite the bloodcurling idea this album doesn't shy away from musical  humour. If you're still not over that possibility in a Black metal context in 2025, why are you even reading my blog? Hush and away with you! All others: Enjoy this fantastic phantasmagoric madness!







2025-02-07

cassette craze chronicles XXXIX feat. DAVID WALLRAF, 大鬼众 GHOSTMASS and WILLIAM FOWLER COLLINS


Ready to dance, clap and sing along? Well sorry, the latest three additions to my tape collection certainly aren't. Or actually... at least the first one might actually be down for a crazy rabid mosh pit.








大鬼众 GHOSTMASS - 大抱散 Improvisation for Dusty Ballz (2025)

Not long ago I reviewed Ghostmass' album "Ghost Meditation", collaboratively released by WV Sorcerer Productions and Dusty Ballz Records. The latter hopefully explains the weird title for this second joint release: It simply is a live session the Chinese group played for that label.

Even though the instrumentation on this recording - with bass, drums and lots of electronics - is the same, the band shows us a pretty different face. The slow Drone, traditional Chinese/Mongolian undertones, the meditative vibes - you have to look way harder for all those here.
Instead chaotically fast and aggressive sounds dominate most of these forty minutes. At first it seems mainly like a wild explosion of Noise and Grindcore, with all the sick screams, shouts and screeches. A demolishing fun party - with some surprisingly satisfying sounds mixed with the raw in-your-face brutality.

But somehow there is more... a Heavy Free Jazz element that keeps getting more prominent until on side B the album turns into an unexpected mass of John Coltrane worship in the most brute outlandish, but strangely enough not in he least disrespectful way, with throat singing emulating the ecstatic saxophone of Trane's later works and the two long tracks even being called "Ascension" and "Om". Purists may get one or two heart attacks on the way, but what else is the finale of this album if not Free Drone Jazz? Just the appropriate manner of coming down after this wild whatthefuckery.

Do I have to mention that the punk-ish artwork rules? That's how you design a tape!








WILLIAM FOWLER COLLINS - The Devil And The River, Volume One (2024)

New Mexican solo performer William Fowler Collins brushes his electric guitar. With a calligraphy brush. While holding one chord. For half an hour. And that's all this is.

Shouldn't there be more? No, this is absoluty fine. Excellent minimalism that sounds indefinitely more cinematic than anything you're imagining right now. Trust me!

The subtle artwork and violet/clear tape shell don't try to direct too much attention away from the beautifully rich simplicity of the music. Thank you Karlrecords for bringing this super slo-mo soundwave to my ears!








DAVID WALLRAF - Crudeltá Necessaria (2025)

Coming with a lot more explanation in liner notes about the necessity of cruelty in art as "a last line of defense in the political and artistic struggle against societal and political pressure" the noises on this second Karlrecords mini album are a lot more antagonistic than Fowler's meditation. However it's not a completely abrasive Harsh assault, but a very controlled, meticulously fine-tuned recording.

David Wallraf, Noise artist and theorist from Hamburg, who actually regularly gives lectures on the subject, approaches his work from a very academic angle. But fear not, the music here is still enjoyable without a degree in theoretical musicology!

With a firm stance in Electro-Acoustic Avantgarde, in conceptual connection to the cinematic works of Pier Paolo Pasolini and using sound design fragments of his movies from the 1960's on tape loops, Walraff creates intriguing Experimental soundscapes of Ambient, Drone and Noise which get more and more imaginative and narrational as the thirty-four minute running time of "Crudeltá Necessaria" go on.

The closing long track "Petrolio" alone justifies listening to this album, as it combines the vibrations of cosmic Berlin school Electronics with The Bug style Dub and the majestic organ Drone of Anna von Hausswolff in a timelessly evocative way.

And while you should never misplace the anonymously clear shell, the artwork of this hand-numbered tape is a classy beauty.
  





2025-01-31

TUSKS - Gold In Synths And Strings

Isn't it neat when the review almost writes itself?


TUSKS - Gold In Synths And Strings (Download) (2024)

The title of this digital EP Electronic Alternative Pop artist Tusks released back in November couldn't be more self-explanatory:
"Gold" was her previous release, hands-down one of the best - at least one of my personal favorite albums - of 2024. The songs and sounds on it will mercilessly stick in your ears; just deep but catchy amazing stuff.

And now - just as the title says - four of its tracks got the stripping down treatment without beats and bass, just reduced to her vocals on top of beautiful floating synths and strings.

No, it's not a new idea. Countless artist from B (as in Björk) to Z (Zola Jesus) have done it. Just as people have slimmed down their songs to only acoustic guitar or piano or transferred their material into other genres... The idea is not the point here, but the quality. Because if the songs are great and the artist lives up to them, these concepts will always work.

So that's what this is: Just four achingly beautiful songs which should work with or without prior knowledge of "Gold". If you love the album, there's no way you won't appreciate this EP.  And if this is the first thing you hear from Tusks, it will surely be a powerful invitation to also experience her in her "full form". (And I can assure you it will be worth it!)






2025-01-27

SWANS - Live Rope

What? This is Roadburn Festival preview content yet again? Well, not directly, since it certainly won't get as loud, but Michael Gira and Kristof Hahn actually will be playing a show there. So I guess it counts.

But do I even need to write about the latest Swans live album - again?

SWANS - Live Rope (2CD) (2024)

I have already featured this two and a half hour coloss before, and not just anywhere, but as my number one favorite live album of 2024. But I hadn't taken pictures of the double CD then. And it simply would feel amiss not to give it some more love.

Over fifty minutes strong the album's rendition of "The Beggar" alone would already make a fantastic live release on its own, as  does the at least in parts of its thirty-seven minutes remarkably ethereal "Birthing".

The twenty-five minute opener "Rope" is mostly just an incredibly patentiently rolled out crescendo. And even though the rest of the six tracks are significantly shorter in comparison - Swans love taking their time to milk their ideas to maximal effect. The dramatic craftsmanship and dynamic intensity they are creating on the spot to achieve that is bordering on the inconceivable.

Swans live 2023
Of course that's nothing new. Since the reunion in 2010 the band has constantly escalated the sheer scale of their operation while also improving on the musicality.
In consequence Swans have become an entity whose very existence is hard to believe. And there have been multiple occasion - like the 2017 live album "Deliquescence" - where I called the ultimate culmination of what they were striving for, only to be proven wrong later.

And here we go again: How could any aspect of this possibly enhanced? With the new textures of acoustic guitar and more lap steel guitar and bass instead of regular guitar Swans reach a new clarity and even greater dynamics between the wall of unfathomably mighty Noise and the brittle breaks from it, while sustaining all their monolithic impact. It's an uncompromising, overwhelming, just marvellous experience.

Swans live in 2023/2024 is just music at its best. It's as simple as that.

The only thing which could have been improved here is the presentation of drummer Phil Puleo's hilarious animal caricatures of the band. In the vinyl version this surely works, but all six pictures on one CD-format cardboard is just a little too tiny. The swirly cover artwork may not be among the most exciting of Michael Gira's creations so far, but in context with the familiar established design of the digipak it works.

All in all - and maybe even more so than some of the latest studio albums - this is a vital release for all Swans fans old and new.