Hanson Records – HN183
"As those in attendance at this year’s No Fun Fest can attest to, the
fresh-faced Ohio trio of Emeralds is one of the most exciting and
refreshing things to come out of the post-millennial Midwest drone/noise
scene. Their Saturday night performance in New York stood out amongst a
flurry of acts, and though sets from Giffoni, Whitman, Demons, and
Cluster were all synth-centric, no one’s sawtooths, sines, and other
various waveforms were so beautifully sculpted and beamed out into the
Plejades as Emeralds’. Even Cluster would by night’s end have been
smoked at the very game they created.
Released on Aaron Dilloway’s Hanson imprint, Solar Bridge is Emeralds’
first “proper” release, but don’t let that fool you into thinking it’s
the only thing they’ve put out. Like many of their Midwestern ilk, they
have accrued a treasure trove of limited-edition tapes, CD-Rs, and a few
split LPs that typically go as far as anything on Solar Bridge at
capturing their spiritually moving live performances. Older releases
like Allegory of Allergies and the comically titled Bullshit Boring
Drone Band showcase a band that seemingly never had the need to evolve,
as even these early entries into their discography showcase an innate
sophistication, uncanny considering their youth. Other gems like
Vaporizer and Dirt Weed Diaries show a penchant for heroic doses of
perhaps the most important ingredient to the Emeralds’ alchemic brew,
and while other local stoners may go for the full-on horror-tronics
schlock, Emeralds take the gaseous creep of Detroit’s Hive Mind out of
the sinkhole and send it deep into the cosmos, while musically narrating
an obsession with the striving for and attainment of beauty and
perfection shared by fellow Ohioan Burning Star Core.
Having played together since 2005, Emeralds currently employ the synth
and guitar arrangement originally utilized by several of the boys’
German kosmische influences. On Solar Bridge, the tonal suspensions of
Marc McGuire’s guitar works in symbiosis with the minuscule
manipulations of John Elliot and Steve Hauschildt, who work their mojo
on two hulking vintage analog synths, a Korg, and a Moog, respectively.
Their interplay and mastery over their instruments bring to mind those
graduates of the Berlin School of Electronic Music like Ash Ra Temple
and Popol Vuh whose lush arrangements evoked something cold and robotic
but still strongly humanistic.
Soaring sounds and eternally unfolding crescendos show a group who, like
their older Berlin brethren, are always striving for new heights. This
is evident on first track “Magic,” which opens the album like a gently
blooming lotus. As a swath of sawtooth fills your head to its utmost
cranial capacity, the gushing sonic warm tones massage your frontal
lobe. By track’s end, you’ll probably find yourself needing a dribble
cup, and don’t be too surprised if you’re levitating three inches above
the ground. Where Ash Ra guitarist Manuel Gottsching and Popol Vuh
slinger Conny Veit did their fair share of noodling, McGuire doesn’t
really “play” the guitar in any standard sense, but rather diverts
single sustained e-bowed notes into an f/x factory, softly shifting
tonal modalities, more in line with the very early Ash Ra or Eruption
jams than anything on Hosianna Mantra. Even the two “side long” jams
(yes, I know it’s a CD) are apropos, as this format is reminiscent of
the old kraut/kosmische records of yore from amazing labels like Ohr and
Brain.
Like “Magic,” “The Quaking Mess” displays a masterful sense of control
and restrained power. The flow never seems to gets away from Emeralds,
as they consistently toe the line between subliminal ambience and direct
sound-brain interaction. More cohesive and ordered than its title would
suggest, “The Quaking Mess” has all the distant howls of exploding
nebulae heard on Klaus Schulze masterpieces like Timewind or Irrlicht,
while its high-pitched frequency arpeggiations and sequencing will have
you thinking you’re hearing pan pipes from a Peruvian ayahuasca ritual.
I was tempted to give Solar Bridge a 5/5 rating, but with two pieces
clocking in at 28 minutes, it’s almost criminally too short (especially
considering that other, less available releases, like the Allegory of
Allergies cassette, ran for 120 minutes). But it also reflects my hope
that Emeralds will somehow find a way to improve their sound over the
course of their still nascent existence. For now, we’ll just have to
wait, and if Solar Bridge is not enough to whet your appetite, there is
more on the horizon, as well as a back catalog just waiting to be
discovered by loyal drone-heads worldwide."

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