Sunday 27 March 2016

#316: GNOD - MIRROR

2016
Noise Rock, Drone, Psychedelia
Rocket Recordings


Fellow Salfordians GNOD are an experimental collective who are a sort of mysterious cult act becoming more popular across Manchester. They have already put out many releases, from Krautrock and Psychedelic Rock inspired LPs, to Noise and Drone cassette only experiments. "Mirror" has been released by Rocket Recordings on CD and Vinyl and is more of a canon album from the group, who recorded it at Islington Mill in Salford.

I picked up the CD of "Mirror" that is presented in a blank shiny reflective silver sleeve. My first impression of this album is that it is seriously some heavy shit! Though it is one of those albums that builds in weight and intensity as it goes on. The opening title track is the most relatively tuneful one here. It hangs on a Jah Wobble inspired bassline that repeats throughout the 8 minute duration. It moves quite slowly, but a splattering of scatty psyched out guitar keeps things interesting. The vocals are very interesting, with these washed out demented screams, with lyrics only half decipherable through the reverb. A minimalist dirge that definitely reminds me of early PIL.

After this, things take a tumble down a rabbit hole of gloom, misery and insanity! "Learn to Forgive" is practically Drone Metal, with a filthy fuzz bassline and noisy guitars that scream in agony. The vocalist sounds like Mark E Smith if he had been impaled on a spike and was slowly bleeding to death. Though it is based on the same chords throughout its 8 and a half minutes, the song just builds and builds in density and by the end it becomes so intense and noisy, but in a beautiful way. This track makes me feel like I am being slowly boiled in a giant pan. The use of what sounds like an air raid siren in the background is subtly effective. GNOD sound like they are channelling acts such as Boris, Jesu and Swans here, and the Industrial despair of the derelict ruined buildings on nearby Salford Crescent is captured perfectly. Third track "Sodom & Gomorrah" expands these nightmarish feelings even further. Weighing in at 18 minutes, this song is even slower and heavier. A clanging bassline of Doom will destroy your eardrums. Realising that they can't get away with a repetitive bass hook for too long, this song tends to drift in an out of quieter dark ambient parts. The jangling percussion and ghostly wailing voices give an occult and ritualistic kind of feel, and it is one of my favourite parts of the record, showing a whole other kind of intensity. The fourth and final track is somewhat of an anti-climax. This remix of the opening track by Raikes Parade doesn't really feel necessary and could be considered a bonus track. It isn't really that much different from the track the opened the album. The bass is more pronounced here and there is much more reverb added to the mix. This version of the track kind of reminds me of 90s Ambient Dub Industrialists Scorn.

If you have ever lived in Salford, or a city full of council houses, high rise flats and industrial factories, you will find a kindred spirit with "Mirror". I think it perfectly captures the feel of walking through Salford on a rainy night. The red bricks and the grey skies. But aside from that, GNOD have made a colossal droning album that will give you nightmares. It is very serious, heavy and laced with anarchic lyrics and menacing thoughts. "Mirror" exists somewhere inbetween the Krautrock of Can, the Drone experiments of This Heat and the full on crushing Doom misery of bands like Man Is the Bastard and Conan. The whole album feels like it has been buried in dirt and sewage, and I can see this appealing to fans of Psychedelic Rock, Hardcore Punk and Extreme Metal! Though minimalist and repetitive, "Mirror" speaks many languages. 8/10.

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