Well, I am back - a poorly laptop has been something of an inhibition - and I now present my first published review for Leeds-based music rag Soundsphere:
http://www.soundspheremag.com/?p=25419
London synth quintet Portasound return this month with their
follow-up to ‘The Second Renaissance’ EP, and a filmic sense of purpose.
Released on Blood and Biscuits – the sort of ultra-cool DIY label that
thrives on the talents of young left-field collectives – this collection
of oddball pieces comes lovingly packaged in the kind of sleeve born to
reside on a collector’s shelf.
‘Sacrifice’, in the band’s own words, was to carry “the atmosphere of
some of our favourite dystopian films and novels with the energy of a
live electronic band”. Within seconds, images of blaring lights, endless
speeding tunnels, space exploration and Kingdom Come flash before you.
There is a sense of ‘been here before’, of course, with Martin Ware-era
Human League amongst others peddling similar – albeit poppier – works.
In truth, however, this release is no throwback; with a polished sound
and glorious stereo mix that bounces from ear to ear, this is thoroughly
modern record.
Opener ‘Time Lost’ plots a voyage into the unknown, into psychedelic
territories recalling everything from the Floyd’s ‘Interstellar
Overdrive’ to Giorgio Moroder’s pioneering synth explorations; it is
strange and amorphous, yet retains enough familiars to draw the strands
together. The manic finale is as danceable as it gets, with James Dow’s
incessant vocal phrases breaking before the sprawling ‘Procession’. Its
initial march is entrancing, the off-beat drums set against a simple
bass line and steadily building melodies. A sudden drop and things
chance tack completely – fuzzed synth notes contort with minor-key
guitar stabs as if from some unearthed dark-wave bootleg – it really is
visual, watching some beautifully horrific scene unfold as you drift
away into nothingness.
Third track ‘Furore’ is upbeat by comparison, yet is still rife with
curve-balls – its stop-time middle-eight provides just enough variation
to keep things interesting amidst the tunnels and flashing lights
hurtling past. Coda ‘Ascension’ begins as a far, distant cousin of
Tangerine Dream’s ‘Ricochet’, underscored by stark guitar shards into a
far more unwieldy beast. Things really begin to take off and before long
you’re leaving your headphones behind you and traversing the
outer-reaches of your imagination, up and around the final frontiers and
touching down again as the mix begins to fade.
Portasound have created something rather remarkable here – a 20
minute aural journey across the gulf of space, through J G Ballard’s
dystopian futures and back again. Each of the four pieces has much to
commend them, but ‘Sacrifice’ needs to be digested as a whole: a
continuous, grinding cinematic adventure that will confound and intrigue
with repeated listens. Making appearances across the country with Wave
Machines and label mates Gallops, be sure to catch there travelling
futurisms in a venue near you.
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