Room40 – RM4131
Across the middle years of the 1990s, Merzbow (Masami Akita) refined a
stochastic language for harsh noise that had emerged from his studio
experiments at the beginning of that decade.
"This technique, which involved a combination of self made instruments,
synthesisers, tabletop effects and, in the case of EXD, drum machines,
often recorded at incredible levels to create a uniquely visceral
distortion, has essentially become the benchmark for noise music in the
21st century.
A devout archivist, Merzbow’s unreleased works from this period are
finally getting the attention they deserve. Editions like Noise Mass,
issued by Room40 in 2019, are amongst a growing number of releases that
document the gradual unfolding of his signature approach to
overabundance of frequency and ceaseless sonic chaos. Recorded at the
end of 1997 and early 1998, EXD owes its title to the Bias Rockaku-kun
EXD 5ch analogue drum synthesizer. It is an exercise in maximal
minimalism. Using repeated phrases, atmospheric, but reductive drum
patterns and tightly wound pulses, Merzbow calls up a vision
proto-industrial technoscape.
Bathed in white noise, it is a music in which the reassurance of the
kick drum is largely torn away, sending the music into an uneasy orbital
decay. It’s the sound of warning systems onboard a satellite as it
begins to burn up, falling back to earth. An exquisite sonic
evisceration. What makes EXD quite unusual is it reveals, in part at
least, some of the skeletal structures Merzbow deploys in the creation
of his works. It’s especially revealing, as this period is mostly
recognised for its unending shower of brutalising harsh noise. On the
title track EXD we can a Roland TR-606 drum machine folding into and out
of focus. Its grooves ruptured by, and then become gradually consumed
in, a field of phasing noise and distortion."

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