Merzbuddha

Merzbow
Release Date: 04/19/2005
Original Release:  2005
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 551096_CD
UPC # 793447505220
Label: Important Records
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Track Details Credits Artist Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. Mantra 1 sound samples  real  |  windows media
2. Mantra 2 sound samples  real  |  windows media
3. Mantra 3 sound samples  real  |  windows media

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Performer: Merzbow
Distributor: Allegro Corporation (Dist

Notes: Recording information: bedroom (09/2004/10/2004). Photographer: Jenny Akita. According to the press materials, Masami Akita (who records under the name Merzbow) spent the months leading up to the recording of this album "listening to Horace Andy, Dennis Bovell, Keith Hudson, and a whole pipe full of other dub mavericks." If you think that means that Akita's trademark hideous noise would be displaced on this album by rolling, bass-heavy grooves and dubwise special effects, then you're either remarkably na�ve or (like most people) simply unfamiliar with his modus operandi. Merzbuddha's three long tracks, titled "Mantra 1," "Mantra 2," and "Mantra 3" and clocking in at an average of about 19 minutes each, do offer something like a regular pulse, but that's as close as you get to anything like a groove. "Mantra 1" juxtaposes smooshed-up analog grunginess, including what sounds like a deeply messed-up modem, with an off-kilter 4/4 bass belch (and does it for 21 minutes, y'all); "Mantra 2" is made up primarily of layers of hiss and glitch undergirded with a lurching 11/8 rhythm; "Mantra 3" sounds like an extended variation on "Mantra 2," only with more hisses and blips and a nearly constant skiff of white noise. In other words, it's just another party at Merzbow's house, where all the drinks taste a little bit scary and skinny people with expensively bad haircuts nod their unsmiling heads to music that's supposed to be good for you. And who knows, maybe it really is. ~ Rick Anderson
Merzbow, aka Masami Akita, is one of the most important figures in the Japanese noise music movement. Releasing an astounding amount of work since the early 1980s, Merzbow's sound is a brutal amalgamation of electronically generated screeches, squeals, and drones that while certainly not accessible in any traditional sense is often beautifully entrancing in its unrelenting brutality. Skewing convention on every creative level, Merzbow released the enormous 50-CD box set MERZBOX in 2000.
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PID # 4031019


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