Hverheij – Afterlight (Triplicate Records)

Label Description:

Hverheij returns with his third Triplicate LP, serving up a mature and moody collection of dark symphonies that sound plucked directly from some award winning Scandinavian drama. 11 tightly constructed and neatly sequenced excursions to the other side await you. Dig in.

****************
INTERVIEW
****************
George Ernst AKA Suncastle: This album kinda spooked me. Did you go into this intending to make such a foreboding piece of music?

Harry Verheijen AKA Hverheij: My idea when working on this album was focused on the concept of how creation evolved from void at the dawning of the world. From nothing comes something. How to take the abstract of that and give it some substance through my Push 2 offered me a way of producing sound further removed from other recent projects. I hadn’t really thought about doing anything deliberately foreboding as such, but I found immediate direction with ambient-based sounds in capturing nuances of the void. The first track I worked on was “In The Rising”, which portrays a quiet kind of disturbance and a type of uneasy anticipation, but nothing particularly foretelling of what would come later when doing other tracks. Once I started working on the Outreach pieces in particular, though, some of the music took on darker elements very naturally. How those foreboding elements interplay with the concept of creation as it evolves by the album’s conclusion is open to interpretation, of course.

GE: Are moodier pieces as fun to work on as joyous ones? I enjoy listening to both in more or less equal measure.

HV: Moody pieces are great fun! In the last 6 months I’ve had the pleasure of working in a unique collaborative venture online, where artists contribute without knowing in advance exactly what anyone else will be contributing. It has been a rare improvisation of eclectic sound, dark intonations, progressive directions and bright energy all rolled into one. It’s exciting to work on music against typecast of any kind because it stretches the imagination to produce by design something in that context.Maybe the horrendous weather we were having out here on the wet coast during the time I was working on Afterlight helped the imaging for some of the moodier tracks included in the final selection. Dark, gloomy days certainly acted as a catharsis. What I liked about working on those tracks was that I could use synth sounds not usually experimented with and that’s a fun thing to do at any time. And when the music heads off into the beyond, that’s satisfying. The last thing I want to do is repeat same old, same old. To quote Buzz Lighyear, “To infinity and beyond!” Of course, sometimes that takes it outward to show the dark side. And may the force be with you!
Similarly, I get excited when I hear music produced by anyone where the sound is inventive and pushes into new boundaries. That just opens up the world and inspires! Like you, George, I enjoy the music in equal measure, whether its darker in mood or brighter in spirit. My choice of listening preference on a given day is occasionally filtered by the mood I may already be in, but my appreciation of what I hear isn’t limited that way. I let the artist take me on the road less travelled as the music plays when I listen. So I feel enriched – my personal music collection has a broad range.

GE: Played any good video games lately?

HV:Out of the swings of Assassin’s Creed II, it was easy to see the appeal of Fortnight some years back. Then Riot Games brought out Legends of Runeterra, which is based on a “free” mobile platform of collecting cards for power competing against multi-players. I like that it also has a single player mode. But, like a number of these types of games, there’s a certain investment needed to progress, too. As a strategy game with action, it’s been fun and very addictive once I got started. Easy to get lost in the imaginary world of it. But the complexity of keeping character cards clearly identified in my head with their rankings of spells, powers, and abilities is surreal. Just not enough hours to dedicate to keeping that game going consistently, which is the whole idea if you want to be really good with it. Go, Ezreal! Under their smaller sister company, Riot Games will be putting out a single player game for PC or console called Convergence that looks intriguing and is probably more in line with my particular time investment constraints. As a spin-off to the League of Legends universe, Convergence aims to follow the story of Ekko in the city of Zaun. In the outline, Ekko is a young inventor who creates a device that can manipulate time but encounters serious consequences to doing so. Preliminary action sequences look really cool! I’m looking forward to seeing what they do with it at the final release coming out later this year. And since I’m probably better shooting from the hip than casting cards, this might be a new fun diversion between music projects and other goings on.

GE: The structure and sequencing here are excellent. I love how you play with the listener’s mood, for instance, placing the bright and hopeful ‘Beyond Cubism’ after one of the darkest tunes on the record. Was this a challenge to get right?

HV: Yes, there were a few challenges. The order of the tracks on the album were not the order in which I actually worked on them, so I was progressing from a very abstract album concept at the outset and wasn’t sure how it would literally play out. Only when most of them were completed did I have a better idea of how the tracks might fit together. To give a clue to this, my original idea was that I would have started the album with “Outreach 1” and then followed with tracks in a different order from what you see in the final version. I changed the opening track choice because I felt that such a stark initiation to the album would have misrepresented what I later conceptualized as a better lead-in. There were also a couple of tracks that were dropped in the making, so there was a bit of private push and pull to album content before I sent in the demo. Not the first time for that, likely not the last time that happens, either. Anyway, in the end I decided the order of the tracks for Afterlight as you now see it presented. But it took a few shuffles to get it there. Your kind words give me confidence that maybe I got it right. So thanks for that!

GE: Would you rather the floor was lava (and your furniture was miraculously resistant to it) or wherever room you’re in, you’re constantly sharing it with no less than five wasps?

HV: These most dire members of the order of Entomons hold little appeal to the tranquility of my Zen. No less than five, you posit? But more you might deposit? I’ll take my vorpal sword in hand; so long time these manxome foes I sought— and rest me by the Tumtum tree, to stand awhile in thought……nay, they cannot stay. Sword of action would prove pure, the Raid more sure. I’ll use the spray!
So raised against the buzz I made attack, my vorpal blade went snicker-snack with earnest wack; and released deep vapours hung with flack – followed that with wheezing hack. By one’s, and two’s, then three’s they fell – these wasps alighted as from hell. I left them dead, and with their manxome heads went galumphing back.
“And hast thou slain the Entomon? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!” Judge Poon loud chortled in his joy. Justified under retreating insecticidal glower, I pleaded to the hour of this power.
Therewith a vincebus eruptum to newfound incorruptum – I took contemplation of lava over a sweet cup of java. Now, as in uffish thought I stand on lava floor, tongues of flame come whiffling through the tulgey wood and burbles my furniture as it comes! In char, like tar, it splinters that apart. How must I make a start?
‘Twas scrillig, and the plithy toves did myre and kimble in the glabe; All flimsy were the horogoves, and the tome paths outstrabe. (LC…/hv)

GE: What does the concept of Afterlight signify on this album?

HV: Afterlight is meant to signify a conscious response to the creative force – both the metaphysical and the internal. Recognition is fluid and often illuminated through universal expressions: ars est celare artem. The music of this album is a reflection of these broad strokes and conveyed emotionally.
The main unifying elements of the album shift through aspects of half-light – or the interplay between light that filters through darkness. As life emanates from light, spirit rises out of void. These elements are inseparable as creation reaches outward. Let there be growth!

****************
REVIEW
****************
No two Hverheij records sound alike. The only consistent theme is quality. Afterlight is his third release on Triplicate Records, following last Halloween’s Fringe Telemetry LP, and his wonderful label debut ‘If not Now’ from Xmas 2020.Sufficed to say like any of our quality artists, he lives and breathes this stuff. Indeed, it feels as though he’s breathing life into music itself on the organic and airy opening tracks ‘Nothing but the Pest u Lent’ and ‘In the Rising’. The former subtly tells us this record is going to be filled to the brim with menace. Colder themes are to be explored. The latter supplemented by a gorgeous yet foreboding voice, sung over cold knifepoint synthesizers. It’s all quite haunting and alarming, but it’s all just so beautifully arranged that you’ll find yourself quite contented to ride Hverheij’s ghost train to the next uneasy stop.First of a trilogy, ‘Outreach 1’ sounds like just that. A long forgotten destination on a ghostly line long since decommissioned, and in the same way that such real life locations can be thrilling to visit, the third track on the record has an undeniable magnetism to its murk. Elsewhere, ‘Biomorphology’, at nine and a half minutes into the album is the first glimmer of hope. The cold and desolation have been enjoyable to bask in, yet there’s no escaping the dopamine those pretty pipes releases. Soon accompanied by a smartly programmed arpeggio and string section, this extremely sonically varied tune is a pure delight to imbibe from start to finish.The slick arp-work continues on ‘Becoming’, their immediate revival announced by a warped and otherworldly horn arrangement. It feels as though the preceding themes are being married here. There’s bright notes of hope in the aforementioned arps playfulness, but the heaviness of the overall mood, and the cynical melodies threaten to swallow it.Appropriately titled, ‘Big Sky Dreaming’ has the most bombastic sound on the album. Punchy drums, soaring pads and a thumping, bubbling bass bound joyously into the moodier ‘Outreach 2′, a desolate frightening piece of music that conjures half remembered nightmares of running in place from the unidentifiable threat, represented here by the ominous pounding of drums.’Beyond Cubism’ feels like a beacon of hope, a decisive answer from the future to the pain-soaked question posed by its predecessor, though it’s not without edge. The erratic synth work gels dreamily with the returning vocals, and by the end, you’re not so sure whether you’ve been handed a life raft or an anchor. The sound of pulsing, sharp electricity becomes a recurring theme towards the end of the album, and is well represented on the following ‘All Reason Fled’. With a title like that, there’s not a lot of room for goofing around. Sure enough, it’s an intricately composed, mature piece of electronica that might feel therapeutic under the right listening conditions. Packed with delightful textures, funky organ stabs and warping effects, it’s an undeniably fun listen, and a definite highlight.Penultimately we arrive at the final instalment of the Outreach trilogy. Grandiose in its darkness and decidedly conclusive in sound. Tentative half-human sounding vocal flourishes, interspersed with Harsh blasts of noise and reverb-laden loose drum swings coalesce to create a cavernous and chaotic gem, which crumbles peacefully into our (sort of) title track, ‘A is for Afterlight’. Pretty keys that sound like the aural equivalent of bioluminescence are scattered across this simple, yet effective closer. The choice of simplicity here feels deliberate. In equal parts a sweet pudding after a rich and characterful main course of an album, and a palette cleanser for the next slice of genius Hverheij is sure to serve up. Dig in.

George Ernst
Triplicate Records

Written & Produced by Harry Verheijen
Mastered by Michael Southard
Artwork by Bryan Kraft

chaircrusher – Stars Have Fallen (Triplicate Records)

Label Description:

Chaircrusher has found his way back onto the main stage of the Triplicate roadhouse. He’s exhaling more beautifully bizarre and mesmerizing compositions for your listening pleasure with the same laid back yet experimental vigour that made last year’s 3Phase such a rewarding listen. Pick up Stars have Fallen right the heck now. It’s every bit as grandiose and fascinating to listen to as the heaviness of the title implies.

All tracks written & Produced by Kent Williams except for:
#1 Written by Kent Williams featuring samples (with permission) from Caroline MacKenzie
blackcirclerecords.bandcamp.com/track/some-stars-have-fallen
Mastered by Michael Southard
Artwork by Chang Terhune
www.charlesrterhune.com

Chloroforms – Lay Low And Be Held (Triplicate Records)

Label Description:

Immediately, the industrial beats of the opening track ‘Rattle Can Paint Job’ tell you all you need to know about Chloroforms’ Triplicate debut ‘Lay Low and Be Held’. 1. The beats and fire and will consistently catch you off guard. 2. You’re gonna be taking in a genre, or subgenre at least that’s not immediately clear, but you’ll notice it’s seldom heard on our label. 3. You’re about to have a good time. Time to make it happen!

~~~~~~~~~~~~
INTERVIEW
~~~~~~~~~~~~
George Ernst, Triplicate Records: OK before I ask anything else, please, can you give some context to the mysterious MC referring to you by name on ‘Sonar for Sore Eyes’?

Michael Marchant aka Chloroforms: Yes. I like to collect audio snippets of things I hear out in the world and recontextualize them to besmirch my name. Ha! This was the first time I’ve used one from my collection. I’d be super curious if someone could place where this was taken from! We’d probably have an annoying amount of things in common.

GE: What IS heat vision? Or was that a Jeopardy answer?

MM: That is MY question, sir! WHAT IS HEAT VISION?! A question that randomly popped into my head while trying to name the project file for this song. Instead of making myself a separate note so I could go look up what heat vision was later, I named the song “What is Heat Vision?” as a reminder. Which reminds me…According to Wikipedia, heat vision is ‘the fictional ability to burn objects with one’s gaze’. Perfect.

GE: Was MX-80 a reference to the noise-rock band from Indiana?

MM: You know, it wasn’t; but my noise-rock band, IfIHadAHiFi, has played quite a few shows in Bloomington. And I really like the MX-80 album Out of the Tunnel. When I was making the track “MX-80” I was trying to make it sound like the musical equivalent of an old dot matrix printer shaking itself off of a desk. I named it after the Epson MX-80 which would be an incredibly bitchin’ instrument in the hands of the right noise-rock band.

GE: Can you tell us a little about both the name of your project Chloroforms’, and the inspiration behind the album title?

MM: I’m going to show my age here, but Colorforms were a toy from my childhood that were these little vinyl clings in the shape of cartoon characters that you could stick to smooth surfaces. That was BIG entertainment to a small child at the time, but life goes on and I had fully forgotten they existed.

Then one day not too long ago I see them for sale out in the world, the first time since I was a child. I instantly recognize their iconic logo, but my brain reads it as CHLOROFORMS. Instant band name. FONT FACT, the font that I used for the free_refills_or_die EP is the closest to the Colorforms logo I could find.

As far as the album title goes, Lay Low and Be Held is two things to me. First, it’s a play on the phrase “lo and behold”. Second, it’s just a nice thing to aspire to.

GE: Your honest opinion on kangaroos: give it to me please. I’ll know if
you try to lie.

MM: I love these questions. I am strongly in favor of kangaroos. Especially YouTube videos of kangaroos who are keeping it real. One long night after a show in Louisville, Kentucky my bandmates and I watched a video titled ‘Kangaroo Shoved Through Fence During Tussle at Canberra Nature Reserve’ approximately 135 times and almost died from laughter.
Link to the good stuff:
youtu.be/N7M6lhzYOow?si=rAjq4gzSz2tsNJ6m

GE: What was your favourite track to work on? I really love Maximum
Capacity Dry Spell.

MM: Thank you! I was 100% happy with everything on this album so it’s difficult to choose a favorite. “Maximum Capacity” has a great groove and was the quickest thing I wrote for the album. Satisfying when that happens. “Cadaver Chiropractic” was written in 5/4 which is strange and proggy and took the longest to get right, so that sticks out. “Hide the Smoke” was an exercise in subtlety which is not always where my brain leads me. “The Proud Parer” might be the winner (for today) since it was my attempt to write a Chloroforms version of “I Wanna Dance
with Somebody (Who Loves Me)”. I think I nailed it.

~~~~~~~~~~~~
REVIEW
~~~~~~~~~~~~

Chloroforms: ‘Lay Low and Be Held’. A fascinating project from Milwaukee that we couldn’t be more excited to share with you! With dark titles like ‘Mugger’s Lullaby’, ‘Cemetery Symmetry’, and ‘Cadaver Chiropractic’, no one has tricked you. You’re going to be diving head first into some extremely danceable murk. Let’s analyze!

As soon as the industrial beats of ‘Rattle Can Paint Job’ blast out from the periphery and into the forefront, you know you’re in for something engaging, something you’ve not heard before. Hardcore, relentless pounding, interspersed with light-speed wooshing and a bassline that perfectly flirts with fuzz without leaving it feeling overbearing.

There’s also a paranoid bent to several of the songs on show here, the first bearing such baggage is the fraught yet funky ‘What is Heat Vision’. Alienated fear-beats or funk-laden bop. You be the judge. But really it’s both, and manages to pull these vibes off in a spectacularly grandiose manner. ‘Mugger’s Lullaby’ on the other hand, tricks you. You think you’re in for a straightforward stripped down macho-sounding THUNK-THUNK beat, then half way through, the gentleman responsible for this record, whose first name I know but will henceforth be referred to as ‘Mr. Chloroforms’, swipes the floor away, and you’re left in a void of ultra-fast IDM. It’s a trip that comes out of nowhere and pulls off a perfect bait and switch!

‘Lay Low’ on the other hand offers a lighter collection of melodies and textures than the opening trio. That’s not to say it’s some breezy intermission. The tambourine jangle works beautifully with a series of warbling synths, and I mean, hey! (extreme Ron Howard Voice) ‘That’s partially the name of the record!’. We segue neatly then, into the equally brief, yet decidedly more Lynchian-static-laden eccentricity of the aforementioned ‘Cadaver Chiropractic’, which to be fair does indeed give the old bones a good thorough shake. As does the similarly darkly titled ‘Cemetery Symmetry’, which offers a bag full of beat-treats, and Mr. Chloroforms’ isn’t shy about switching things up on a dime, creating a blistering, disorienting, but undeniably appealing effect. This three-minute microcosm of an industrial mixtape is done when he damn well says so, ok?

Then we have ‘MX-80’. At several points this track feels like it’s pursuing you. You know? No? Just me? Ok… moving on.
‘Hide the Smoke’ conjures the misty atmosphere in your mind that the title promises. Whirring disembodied wind-enveloped synths haunt the mix, while a stark and sparingly-riffed-on bit of percussion rumbles away in the dark. It’s effective and fun, even if it’s not meant to be. Meanwhile ‘Route Driver, Asleep at the Wheel’ feels so hyper-charged with dark static that it might combust at any second. Here the drums pound with greater grit and otherworldly malaise than ever, and coalesce to make a murky and melodically fascinating piece of music, increasingly frantic until the half-point switch up, the delightfully batshit-ramifications of which, you need to hear and draw your own conclusions. (But if they’re not positive, you’re wrong.)

‘Maximum Capacity Dry Spell’ Starts as a ultra-focused, borderline synth-wavey bop, and for the most part maintains its slick composure in the face of equally slick percussive flourishes. The rubbery, cool-as-shit bassline compliments the arrangement perfectly and cements MCDS as a highlight. Similarly fun, yet decided more off-kilter is the mysterious ‘Sonar for Sore Eyes’, a relentless slammer, soaked in spooky vibrations and prefixed by an equally unnerving recording of a woman referring to Mr. Chloroforms by his government name. What does it all mean? Well keep reading to find out, hopefully. Otherwise, it just slaps!

Equally slapworthy is the final, ‘The Proud Parer’. A fun pun, and a decidedly chill way to end a record. While ‘Lay Low and Be Held’ can at times feel like a mission statement akin to ‘make cool weird music and set yourself apart from the herd’ (stop me if I’m way off), the music is utterly unpretentious. Borrowing its studious delights from sources across the electronic spectrum, with some good industrial rock thrown in for good measure, the album ends as it started: with a fabulous piece of music that puts you in a lively mood. That was all I ever wanted. I want that for you too, dear reader.
 


Written and Produced by Michael Marchant
Artwork by Michael Marchant
Mastered by Michael Southard