Cyclic Defrost

An Australian magazine focusing on interesting music

Strategy – Music For Lamping (Audio Dregs Records)

There is a mechanism in the human eye which stops us from being able to focus on a single point for more than a handful of seconds. Try it. No matter how hard you concentrate, the eye continually shifts its point of focus to surrounding points, or the mind wanders to other matters and forgets to focus at all. Music For Lamping by Strategy is a fairly good aural analogy of this phenomenon. Trying to keep the mind focused on its sounds is near impossible. This is not necessarily a criticism, more advice on how to approach listening.

The modus operandi of creator Paul Dickow is that of drone. These drones tend to be based on synthesised sounds with garnishes of heavily processed electric guitars. Each track barely shifts in tone over its duration. There are hints at slow moving, simple chordal progressions. ‘Cathederal Spark’ features what sounds like distantly recorded fire bells and some subtle creaking to make it a little more thought provoking. On tracks such as ‘All Day…’ and ‘World Service’ there is an overall, well-polished sheen to the synths and, in the case of the latter, processed voices, which, while undoubtedly peaceful, defy active engagement on the part of the listener. 15 minute album closer, ‘Lower Macleay’, is the exception that really proves this rule. It overtly utilises the hiss, static and ambiguity of field recordings and so contains the minute grains of sound the ear can latch onto which is absent from much of the rest of the album. It travels and builds from almost nothing to an ecstatic avalanche of phasing white noise, water, footsteps and birdsong. It is also the track that most easily holds interest, in spite of its epic length.

Music For Lamping is an album worth allowing time to sink in. While much of it will act as true ambience – a layer of sound which is no more important than any other you can simultaneously hear – there is much beauty and a worthy climax to proceedings.

Adrian Elmer

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

*

  • futureStar

    Paul Dickow does many things, all of them well. Whether donning a hat of a record company label entrepreneur, working with friend Honey Owens in her varied incarnations such as the Valet project, kick starting Japanese chanteuse electronic artist Sawako’s stateside career, or projecting his main man Strategy on the Kranky label dude, he ready to kick your behind right into the left-field bleachers of something outside of center that sounds original, fresh, immediate, and lasting. He has helped make Portland one of the best-kept musical secrets of underground wunderkinds. He doubly promotes and blends well with all the varied factions within. He not only owns the map, he helped make it.

    His Future Rock album from last year wound up on many ‘best of the year list’ and his deal with Boomkat to make his entire catalog of his community library of artist available to download worldwide showed his business savvy and ability to adapt for survival and the long-road. The fact that he can gather up six select titles from his probable b-sides into a cohesive whole indicates how solid the ground is he operates under. This is not some sideshow experiment. This is a half-decade of thoughtful, introspective sound scape journeys into the further realms of listening pleasures. To say kick back and relax is too soothing. This holds up better than that but lays down right just when your day has had all it can from the outside world. Discover is word and a world unto your own. Delve deep into it.

Slow Flow Rec Click Clack Project Running On Air Get a web advert! Audego Get a web advert!
Subscribe to posts via email

Cyclic Defrost is Australia’s only specialist electronic music magazine. We cover independent electronic music, avant-rock, experimental sound art and leftfield hip hop. Read more

Postal Address:
P.O.Box A2073
Sydney South
NSW, 1235
Australia

Email: info[at]cyclicdefrost.com

australia council Wordpress

RSS feed icon RSS

The views contained herein are not necessarily the views of the publisher nor the staff of Cyclic Defrost. Copyright remains with the authors and/or Cyclic Defrost.