Barge Recordings – BRG007
"The people behind Brooklyn's Barge imprint have clearly spent the last
six months trying to work out how to follow up last year's jaw-dropping
"Baby, It's Cold Inside" album from the oddly monikered 'The Fun Years',
one of the most satisfying and immersive releases of the year. Their
response? Why they've only gone and produced this astonishing,
multi-layered epic from Kevin Micka, aka Animal Hospital. "Memory" is a
record that engages with familiar techniques and proceeds to completely
f*ck with the programme. The album starts with a shimmering duet for
music box and guitar, laying the foundations for what's to follow.
Except things don't quite develop in the manner you might expect if
you're into this sort of delicate, engrossing home listening, "His Belly
Burst" is up next and slowly evolves from the sound of a mournful,
solitary Cello (beautifully played by Jonah Sacks), to a rumbling,
droney, sometimes distorted mass of sound that brings to mind the
post-post-rock of, say, the Constellation label, or Mogwai's quiet/loud
blueprints but with a completely unfamiliar backbone shaped by
electronic, experimental and classical traditions. By the time "2nd
Anniversary" sweeps in it becomes hard to really identify what sort of
album you're listening to, finding yourself in the presence of
distilled, affected guitar noises that lie somewhere between late,
treated John Fahey and Neil Young's amazing soundtrack for the film
"Dead Man" - the dissonance at once jarring and deeply moving. In turn,
"A Safe Place" sounds like a cross between Oval, Tortoise, Mika Vainio
and Radiohead, rearranging and rewiring human sounds inside
reverberating bass and malfunctioning electronics before Micka's voice
resonates through the sparse elements to ground the music in a deep,
mournful clearing. Fuelled by coffee and heartache and recorded in an
old bank, an antiquated movie theater lobby, and various apartments
around Virginia and Cape Cod, It's left to the 17 minute title track to
close the album with perhaps its most astonishing and heart-wrenching
segement. The opening once again seems indebted to Tortoise, but the
unusual, wordless vocal layering introduces entirely different
dimensions. 8 minutes in and things become quietly colossal, merging
sweeping strings, twangy, edgy drops with extraordinary arrangements
that keep you at once transfixed and disturbed. And that's the thing
about this amazing album - it has all these different, wildly
incompatible ideas that somehow come together and merge into eachother,
making use of electronic devices, shelves of effects, delay units, as
well as shiny guitar tones, vocal washes, and dramatic build-ups that
create a unique sound you're unlikely to come across again despite all
the familiar elements squeezed in. It's the realisation of one man's
messed up vision, held together by things that shouldnt work but somehow
really do. Just awesome."

















































