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Other Albums | Merchandise | Reviews

All mine enemys whispers ~ SALE $5

2008 | Projekt | PRO00209

CD

Regular Price: $16.98
Online Sale Price! $5.00

Tracks:
I What shall i sing? | MP3 Clip
II The burial club | MP3 Clip
III The Reinsch test | MP3 Clip
IV The trial | MP3 Clip
V The gates of eternity
VI Heaven is my home | MP3 Clip

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A haunting brew of darkAmbient electronic soundscapes & neo-classical strings with Ned Kirby of Stromkern, Laurie Reade of Black Tape For A Blue Girl and High Blue Star, and Erica Mulkey of Rasputina. Darkwave darling Emilie Autumn providing vocals and violins on one track. All mine enemys whispers (The Story of Mary Ann Cotton) limited first edition of 1000 includes set of 4 reproduction stickers of original victorian poison bottle labels! The first 200 copies of the limited edition sold via Projekt.com will include the booklet autographed by Attrition mastermind Martin Bowes.


A surreal nightmareish journey into the mind of a Victorian serial killer from this darkAmbient pioneer. Mary Ann Cotton was Britain's greatest female mass murderer. Poisoning upwards of 20 of her own children and partenrs with arsenic. She was arrested, tried and hanged in 1873. Attrition's Martin Bowes is a descendant of the arresting officer, Police Sergeant Tom McCutcheon.

Completed on Oct. 31, 2007, this is no ordinary Halloween album; Mary Ann Cotton's story (augmented by the real-life connection between the album's composer and the killer herself) will do a much better job keeping you up at night than any slasher film killer or long-haired Japanese ghost child. The music is a haunting brew of electronic soundscapes, neo-classical strings, and eerie children's voices. Shuffling sounds, anxiously scraped strings and electronic drones create the mood, while ex-Courtney Love band violinist Emilie Autumn conjures up a momentary sense of pity for the condemned killer with her sorrowful vocal rendition on the album's climax, a submersive darkAmbient gem which incorporates the hymn "Rock of Ages."

All mine enemys whispers features Ned Kirby of Stromkern, Erica Mulkey of Unwoman and Rasputina, and Laurie Reade of High Blue Star and Pigface.

"As subtly chilling a thing as you'll ever hear. If you're brave, you can listen to All mine enemys whispers in the dark, but you might want to pull the covers over your head just to be on the safe side." - REGEN magazine, USA

"Pushing the boundaries of dark ambient and neo-classical..." - Justin Mitchell/Cold Spring records


A review from All Music:
Martin Bowes' continuing work as Attrition has moved into some spare realms of late, with albums like Etude emphasizing a restrained fragility, but All Mine Enemies Whispers might be the most extreme he's gone in the realm of murky mood music as unsettled soundtrack for a horror film. Or in this case a docudrama, as the album is conceived as a remembrance -- not a happy one -- of Mary Ann Cotton, a mass murderer in Victorian times who an ancestor of Bowes knew and eventually arrested. Growing out of Attrition's long-established sonic history as it does, the album also suggests one of the prime moments of recent horror movie sound design, the sound of giggling children in the empty dark of night in The Blair Witch Project -- a not inappropriate comparison given the subject matter. Throughout, much of the core music consists of washes of gloomy electronics, the dour moods often emphasized or contrasted by a sole instrument or element -- a descending piano line on "What Shall I Sing?," the occasional violin from guest performer Emilie Autumn (who also provides the album's sole vocal on "The Gates of Eternity," inhabiting the character of Cotton in a disturbingly dreamlike sense). Almost as if in response to that song, the concluding "Heaven Is My Home" undercuts the entire album with its scraping crackle-distortion start after all the preternatural chill that has gone beforehand -- it's impressive; it's actually a surprise, a long looped bit of aural creepout that concludes the portrait of this disturbed soul on an appropriately unnerving note. -Ned Raggett

A review from Alternativ Musik:
Neben der eifrigen Aufarbeitung des Back-Katalogs – über den an dieser Stelle von Zeit zu Zeit immer wieder berichtet wurde – war auch bereits eine ganze Weile ein neues Album von Attrition angekündigt, das nun endlich vorliegt. Mit Unterstützung einiger prominenter Namen wie Ned Kirby von Stromkern, Laurie Reade von Pigface, Erica Mulkey von Rasputina und nicht zuletzt auch Emilie Autumn erschien ein Album, das zwar vor allem düsteren Ambient bietet, diesen Stil aber immer wieder durch (mal mehr mal weniger verschrobene) deutlich vernehmbare Anteile aus dem neoklassischen Bereich anreichert. Vertont wird dabei die Geschichte der Mary Ann Cotton.

Waren in der Laufbahn von Attrition viele Alben auch durchaus von Schönheit und manchmal auch von Tanzbarkeit mitbestimmt, so ist es diesmal wieder eindeutig die ambiente Seite von Attrition, die in den Vordergrund gerät. Düstere Klangsphären entstehen, bauen sich auf, werden durch verstörende Geräusche untermauert und bewegen sich eindeutig jenseits dessen, was man gemeinhin als das Songformat bezeichnet. Geflüsterte Samples, die gerade dadurch so verstörend wirken, dass man sie nicht wirklich versteht sowie auch Horror-Atmosphäre aufbauende Piano-Melodien, die unerwartet auf einmal in Stücken begegnen, machen die Verwirrung perfekt. Es entsteht Dark Ambient, der innovativ wirkt und nur schwer zu berechnen ist.

Ein Aspekt, der bei Attrition so gut wie nie wegzudenken war: Streicher. Diese kommen auch auf All mine enemys whispers nicht zu kurz, was beispielsweise der Cello-Einsatz wie in The Burial Club zeigt. Zu den düster-ambienten Klangsphären gesellt sich hier deutlich vernehmbar ein Cello, das Harmonien spielt, die sowohl für Schönheit als auch für Verstörung sorgen und somit für klangliche Ambivalenz sorgt. Und wenn man von Streichern redet, darf man vor allem den Titel The Gates Of Eternity nicht vergessen, denn in diesem über zehn Minuten andauernden Titel, der sich aus zwei Akten zusammensetzt, steuert Emilie Autumn perfekt ihr Violinenspiel hinzu und macht den Titel zu einem Highlight, das sowohl durch seine eigene Dramaturgie als auch durch die Dramaturgie im Gesamten des Albums besticht.

Sicherlich hat Martin Bowes mit dem neuen Attrition-Werk weder sich noch den Dark Ambient neu erfunden, aber das ist auf diesem Album auch gar nicht nötig und wäre auch vermessen gewesen, zu erwarten. Was Attrition auszeichnet und was auch dieses Werk manifestiert, ist eine faszinierende Beständigkeit – nach so vielen Jahren (über 25 inzwischen) immer noch dem eigenen Schaffen neue Facetten hinzuzufügen und derlei innovative Klänge auf CD zu bannen, ist eine reife Leistung. Und genau diese Leistung wird auf All mine enemys whispers auf sechs Stücken, die insgesamt eine Dreiviertelstunde ausmachen, präsentiert. Ein gelungener Brückenschlag von Dark Ambient hin zur Neoklassik.


A review from Compulsion:
First it was Les Sentiers Conflictuels & Andrew King setting the letters of Jack the Ripper to music, and now we have Attrition providing a musical exploration of the life and death of Mary Ann Cotton, a Victorian serial killer responsible for the death of 16-21 of her own children, lovers and husbands by arsenic poisoning. While Les Sentiers Conflictuels & Andrew King relied on history and myth, Attrition have a direct familial link: Martin Bowes is a direct descendant of the arresting police officer, whose daughter, Louisa, in a strange quirk of fate, worked for Mary Ann Cotton as a seamstress at the time of her arrest and conviction in 1873.

For All Mine Enemys Whispers Attrition have enlisted the talents of Ned Kirby (Stromkern), Laurie Reade (High Blue Star), Ute Mansell, Erica Mulkey (Rasputina) and Emilie Autumn playing out the tale of Mary Ann Cotton through haunting electronics overlaid with passages of cello, piano, Victorian nursery rhymes and Christian hymns. It's a surreal and quite chilling representation avoiding any straightforward narrative.

'What Shall I Sing', the opening track, consists of haunting electronics, a tinkering piano melody, stuttering sax sounds, sinister mutterings and the fragmented reciting of a nursery rhyme read by Bowes's young son and daughter. Shuffling feet, mordant cello, discordant and scraping strings create the chilling atmosphere of 'The Burial Club'. Better still is the 'The Reinsch Test' where curious whisperings and hissing electronics coalesce, slowly moving into classical piano score above the feint hiss of windswept atmospherics and sinister cello movements. On 'The Gates of Eternity' atmospheric electronics are augmented by the sounds of running footsteps, the clangs and bangs of the jailhouse, and the creaking wood of the trapdoor. A sorrowful violin score plays throughout, as electronic shudders signify the drop and slow and painful demise of Mary Ann Cotton. You can almost picture the body swinging on the opening bars of the Christian hymn 'Rock of Ages', sung by Emilie Autumn, her passionate rendering couched in weeping and wailing strings. A series of billowing groans and uneasy black atmospherics set against cello stabs and short bursts of saxophone create the genuinely unsettling final piece 'Heaven Is My Home'.

All Mine Enemys Whispers incorporates the dark ambient and neo-classicalism usually associated with Attrition but in order to deal with the subject matter it's performed in a rather bleak and chilling manner. It's a nice addition to the Attrition catalogue and those with a penchant for the macabre won't want to miss out. The packaging has been lovingly compiled with images of Mary Ann Cotton, her sewing box - gifted to and now in the possession of Martin Bowes, and poison bottles. The first 1000 copies include reproduction stickers of original Victorian poison bottle labels. For more information go to www.attrition.co.uk or www.projekt.com


For 28 years Martin Bowes (for Attrition is Martin and vice versa), has been producing thought-provoking music, that neither conforms to the norm (whatever that is), nor pretends to be something it's not. Martin is an artist first and a musician second. His compositions, whatever genre you want to box them in to, have been interesting at the very least and spectacular at their best.

Today, sees the release of the lavishly-packaged CD All Mine Enemy's Whispers. It tells the tale of the infamous Mary Ann Cotton (1832-1873), possibly the most notorious female mass murderer of all time. I often use the word 'haunting' to describe the musical soundscape Attrition create. This time that description is right on the button. This latest CD is, in my humble opinion, his finest work, and I mean work. This is not merely another great musical offering, this is stellar stuff, and like any great composer Martin tells the story perfectly with sound. It becomes a soundtrack to your own imagination, as it rumbles its macabre way through the half-light of a gothic Victorian nightmare. Spirit violins from seemingly nowhere fade into the chilly darkness of silence as they strive to compose their grisly tunes.

Don't expect pop or even rock tunes here, this is far more akin to the classical music genre. It's superb, and I'm proud that something as imaginative as this can come out of Coventry. -Pete Chambers


A review from Crawling Tunes:
Alptraumhaftes Hörtheater oder -kino bietet sich beim Hören einer der neuesten PROJEKT Ableger. Traurig solistische Pianotöne, Stille, ein Wind durch die lose, schon lange nicht mehr gewasche Gardine, die in dem zugigen Haus hängt, streift. Geräusche, Gebrabbel, ein heimliches, verloren klingendes Saxophon und schräge Samples bringt die werte Hörerschaft zum Nackenhärchen aufstellen. Alles in allem ein wundervolles Silberscheibchen das mehr als nur passend zu den furchterregenden Dingen ist die Mary Ann Cotton ihrerseits verübte. Ja, genau es geht um die britische Massenmörderin die weit über zwanzig ihrer eigenen Kinder und Partner mit Arsen um die Ecke brachte und dafür auch letztendlich baumeln musste. Emily Autumn, eine der zahlreichen Gaststars, spendet hier und da einige ihrer berühmt-berüchtigten Violinentöne und gibt etwas von ihrer Stimme preis. Als Beigabe kommen die ersten, auf 1000 Stück limitierten, Digipaks mit jeweils gleich vier Aufklebern mit dem Originaldesign der viktorianischen Giftfläschchenlabels.

A review from Dark Twin Cities:
Mary Ann Cotton isn't well known in the States the way other serial murderers are but considering she left approximately twenty bodies in her wake, many of them children, the tale makes for one of brutal fascination.

After a troubled childhood in Northeast England, Mary Ann got a taste for wealth when her Mother remarried to a man considerably more well-off than her Father, who had perished by falling down a large mine shaft. In her late teens she began to study as a dressmaker and met the man who would become her first husband. They had nine children together, most of whom died from gastric fever, a common ailment at that time. Her husband happened to die from a similar ailment, leaving her to collect his insurance money. A second husband also died suddenly. She was hired as a housekeeper by a man whose wife suddenly fell ill and died. He took comfort in Mary Ann's advances and they were married, but suffered great tragedy as their children died off, one by one, from gastric fever. Distraught and growing distrustful of Mary Ann and her inquiries into his insurance plans, he threw her out.

Mary Ann's Mother also died of a mysterious stomach ailment around this time. Another husband, another lover and more children fell victim to Mary Ann's scheming. A Parish official became suspicious of all the deaths around this woman and persisted in his attempts for answers. It was discovered that the "stomach ailment" which had claimed one of Cotton's children was, in fact, arsenic poisoning. Mary Ann Cotton was tried for this and other murders and hanged on March 24th, 1873.

Martin Bowes, mastermind behind the legendary, twenty-eight year old electronic act Attrition became somewhat bedeviled with this story for an interesting reason. The daughter of the arresting officer in the Cotton case, Louisa, had worked for Mary Ann as a seamstress. When the murderess was sent to jail she gave Louisa her prized sewing box as a means of payment. It was an item which was passed down through the family and ultimately found its way into the hands of Bowes after having been in his family's attic for many years.

Bowes has always displayed a curious ear for art over traditional song structure and Attrition has never been an act known to play things safe in an effort to achieve mainstream acceptance. Back in the early Eighties there were no clubs that catered to fans of Industrial music. Booking a show and building an audience came slowly, but now the name Attrition is universally lauded and accepted as an innovator, a dark and creative force unparalleled by modern musicians. Bowes' standards are very high and he handpicked some fine collaborators for this project, among them Stromkern's Ned Kirby, Erica Mulkey of Unwoman and Rasputina, Laurie Reade of High Blue Star and Pigface as well as other capable contributors. Limiting the pressing of this release to 1000 and providing, along with the artwork in the digipak, a set of 4 reproduction stickers of original Victorian poison bottle labels, this is a work for the earnest collector and the sort of release that will be mentioned for many years to come.

The intonations of children flit through a milky darkness where piano suddenly breaks out of nowhere and a static hum permeates a weighted atmosphere, serving as the only rhythm in this formless void. Welcome to the mid 19th Century and the spirits that haunt the memory of a remorseless killer, a destroyer of lives. Things take an especially dark turn with "The Reinsch Test" where the sounds grow rather expansive and considerably more eerie with a looping bass burnout and a lot of ambient metallic noises. Accusations begin to fly about a minute into "The Trial," but not in a cohesive aspect. These are ghostly, angry and pained whispers floating in a discorporate manner above an ominous, airy ambiance. It's almost revolutionary in its severe, unsettlingly framed stasis. Then the piano draws forward, highlighting the horrific drama clawing at the senses of the decent and upright while cello underscores the dread.

Accusations begin to fly about a minute into "The Trial," but not in a cohesive aspect. These are ghostly, angry and pained whispers floating in a discorporate manner above an ominous, airy ambiance. It's almost revolutionary in its severe, unsettlingly framed stasis. Then the piano draws forward, highlighting the horrific drama clawing at the senses of the decent and upright while cello underscores the dread.

"The Gates Of Eternity" don't offer any sort of salvation or provide a tidy ending to the story with cavernous, windswept sentiments and a frigid version of "Rock Of Ages" sung by Emilie Autumn with violin accompaniment. "Heaven Is My Home" isn't exactly a glimpse into the promised land, but does embrace a sort of spiritual half-light which seems to call into question any kind of universal justice or lack thereof. Label it dark ambient, experimental electro, mood piece or simply uneasy listening, All Mine Enemys Whispers is a grippingly unsettling work of piercing art that will beckon you for an interpretation. From the soul of one haunted man to the place you call home, pull down the shades, dim the lights and see if you can relive the nightmare of Mary Ann Cotton without being deeply challenged and affected. -Christopher Roddy


A review from Darkroom:
In mezzo alla massiccia opera di ristampa del folto catalogo degli Attrition, attuata dallo stesso leader Martin Bowes attraverso la sua Two Gods Recordings, trova spazio finalmente anche qualcosa di nuovo per lo storico act inglese, stavolta grazie al patrocinio della Projekt di Sam Rosenthal. Si tratta, nella fattispecie, di una release molto particolare, incentrata - come ci suggerisce il titolo - sulla storia di Mary Ann Cotton, pluriomicida nell'Inghilterra vittoriana che uccise fra le 16 e le 21 volte, avvelenando con l'arsenico attraverso gli anni figli propri, amanti e mariti. Curiosamente la Cotton, prima di morire per impiccagione nel 1873, regalò alla giovane Louisa McCutcheon (figlia del sergente Tom McCutcheon, che arrestò l'assassina seriale) la sua preziosa scatola per il cucito, considerando tale dono come l'unico modo per pagare la ragazza per i servigi resile in qualità di cucitrice. E qui la storia si intreccia con quella dello stesso Martin Bowes: suo padre Arthur, infatti, in gioventù incontrò l'ormai vecchia Louisa, entrando in seguito in possesso della suddetta scatola, che di recente è giunta nelle mani di Martin da quella che, alla fine, risulta essere una sua lontana prozia (Louisa McCutcheon, appunto). Una premessa stuzzicante per un lavoro particolare, sicuramente lontano dall'elettronica che ha dominato l'ultima parte della carriera degli Attrition, per la cui riuscita si sono resi indispensabili i servigi di ospiti quali Emilie Autumn, la sassofonista Ute Mansell, Laurie Reade (già all'opera col progetto High Blue Star), Erica Mulkey (Unwoman) e Ned Kirby (Stromkern), oltre al contributo della parentela dello stesso Martin (Naomi Bowes ed il piccolo Jordan). Un lavoro incentrato sulla vita e sulla morte della Cotton, come ci segnala Martin all'interno della pregiata confezione digipak (che include anche quattro etichette di veleni dell'epoca): "What Shall I Sing?" apre le danze in modo arcigno fra scenari dark ambient ed un piano spettrale, e con lo scorrere dei brani ci si accorge di come la matrice ambientale, nera e impenetrabile, regni sovrana in tutta l'opera. Se l'oscurità di "The Burial Club" viene a malapena squarciata dal violoncello di Erica, in "The Reinsch Test" persino il sax della Mansell riesce a generare vibrazioni plumbee, mentre è "The Trial" a svettare sul resto in virtù delle suggestive voci di fondo e del melodico piano di un sorprendentemente intenso Ned Kirby. Bene anche "The Gates Of Eternity", dove è protagonista Emilie Autumn tanto col suo violino quanto con vocals delicate che portano un barlume di luce in questa cupa release, prima della lugubre discesa agli inferi della conclusiva "Heaven Is My Home". Un lavoro di indubbio spessore che ha le potenzialità per soddisfare non solo i fans degli Attrition più sperimentali, ma anche quei curiosi che avranno la volontà di scoprirne i notevoli contenuti. Rating: 7.5 -Roberto Alessandro Filippozzi

A review from dso:
Martin Bowes has never shied away from the darker side of life but you could never say he has wallowed in it. That is... until now. But he has good reason. Mary Ann Cotton poisoned the best part of 20 of her own children and partners before she was caught and hanged in 1873. If that wasn't sufficiently compelling, get this, Bowes is the descendant of the arresting officer, and a sewing box once belonging to Mary Ann has been passed, rather uneasily, down through the generations and is now in Martin Bowes' possession. (A photograph of the box taken by Bowes can be found in the accompanying booklet.)

Completed (one speculates probably by design!) on 31st October 2007, this is a break with convention (as if Attrition ever did convention!) in that this is pretty much a straight soundtrack to a story in the same way an instrumental score for a film is a soundtrack. Here then are six lengthy compositions that dare to enter into and then explore the psyche of Britain's most prolific female serial killer. The pieces chronologically following the life and eventual death of Mary Ann Cotton.

This is a collection of atmospheres, of moods, of emotions, not a series of songs and as such is most effective when listened to in isolation. On each track, Bowes has laid down an electronic tone backing over which a variety of guest artists have contributed traditional instrumentation. Stromkern's Ned Kirby adds piano, Ute Mansell saxophone, Erica Mulkey cellos, Emilie Autumn violins and vocals. Bowes' children also contribute their voices on the opening What Shall I Sing? chanting a Victorian children's rhyme about Cotton. Laurie Reade also provides voices on a couple of tracks.

Listening to All Mine Enemys Whispers requires a sound constitution, and there are moments here that could chill the bones of the dead. When long-time Attrition fan Emilie Autumn performs her haunting rendition of the hymn Rock of Ages as part of the ten-and-a-half minute The Gates of Eternity you get a sense that far from just roundly condemning Cotton, Bowes has it within him to pity her. A remarkable work of art. (The limited edition first of 1000 includes a rather neat set of four reproduction stickers of original Victorian poison bottle labels.) 8/10 -Rob Dyer


A review from Fearnet:
My absolute favorite – and possibly one of the best dark ambient releases in recent years – comes from one of the leading names in that genre, the UK experimental outfit Attrition, alias Martin Bowes. I came upon this talented artist a few years ago – fairly late in the game, considering Attrition has been around since the early '80s – and I was instantly hooked by Bowes' solitary devotion to creating moods and atmospheres instead of catchy melodies. Back when the term “industrial music” was less mainstream and applied mainly to avant-garde acts like Throbbing Gristle, Coil and Einsturzende Neubaten, Attrition were building a revolutionary style of their own, and decades later Bowes hasn't strayed from that goal with the latest Attrition release All Mine Enemys Whispers – one of the band's finest achievements in a long and storied career.

Whispers weaves the horrific tale of Mary Ann Cotton, one of England's most notorious serial killers. Responsible for the deaths (by poisoning) of up to 21 people – most of whom were her own children – Cotton would be perfect subject matter for a horrifying Halloween concept album. But instead of taking the more overtly gruesome route, Bowes opts for a sublime ambiance of growing doom to pull you headlong into the very thoughts of this human monster... even daring to make you sympathize with her before dragging you bodily to the depths of the underworld, surrounded by the whispering chants of her many victims.

As it turns out, Cotton is more than a mere macabre curiosity as far as this artist is concerned: the project was born out of Bowes' own ancestral link to Cotton's killing spree. Not only is he a distant relative of the constable who arrested Cotton in 1872, but Bowes recently came into possession of Cotton's sewing box, which the convicted murderer gave to the officer's daughter (Bowes' great great great aunt) just before her imprisonment. A photo of the box is included in the CD liner notes, and the sound of the box being struck can be heard on the track “Gates of Eternity.”

Interwoven with Bowes' elaborate synth programming and sound effects – which range from deep drones and hums to open, airy washes and some jarringly distorted glitch-loops – are eerie contributions from variety of recognizable names in the Gothic and dark ambient/industrial genres: Emilie Autumn takes up her signature violin as well as providing one of the few conventional lyric passages (a creepy rendition of “Rock of Ages”) on “Gates of Eternity,” while Rasputina's Erica Mulkey joins on cello, Ned Kirby of Stromkern plays piano and Laurie Reade of Pigface and High Blue Star offers backing vocals. Even Bowes' children participate with a bone-chilling rendition of a Victorian children's rhyme (“Mary Ann Cotton... She's dead and she's rotten”) on opening track “What Shall I Sing?” The expanded canvas results in a more complex, focused sound than I expected, with motifs that speak to an abstract storytelling style – it all feels like the score to a sublime horror film that exists only in your mind.

Avoiding all of the pretensions that can often accompany a concept album, Whispers is one of the most unique musical realizations I've heard in a years. A completely immersive work of art, it deserves to be experienced in a darkened room, awash in your choice of incense. To top off the experience, there's even a set of collectible stickers styled after vintage poison vial labels, that you can use to keep your roommate from borrowing your favorite cologne. -Gregory S. Burkart


A review from Gothic Beauty:
Attrition's Martin Bowes must have been haunted by the story of Mary Ann Cotton, who made her way through the mid-19th century by stealthily poisoning her husbands, lovers and children with arsenic. All Mine Enemys begins apprehensively, emerging with nervous piano and saxophone, and in a miasma of exhalations digs furtive graves under God's eye. Mournful cello saddens and then quickens and closes in around the discovery of Cotton's crimes. Bowes' own ancestor was Cotton's arresting officer in 1872, and Bowes' closeness to and ambivalence towards Cotton shows in this performance. The murderess' march to the gallows is a strange mix of horror and grief attended by a plaintive hymn. This biography neither condemns nor celebrates her, but does pass her haunting along to its listeners. - Carolee

A review from Gothtronic:
The latest album of this long existing band is all about Mary Ann Cotton. The first track opens with a children’s rhyme about Mary Ann Cotton, sung by his daughter Naomi. The lyrics tell a macabre tale of how Britain’s greatest female mass murderer came to her end. The tracks together form a story about the life and death of Mary Ann as well. After opening with the 'What Shall I Sing,' the story continues with 'The Burial Club'. This has an even darker and more mysterious sound to it than the opening track, and the use of extremely short cello notes adds to the peculiar feel. The sounds are made in such a way that emotions are hidden beneath the tones. Experimentally very well done, according to my own interpretation this track corresponds to the exhumation of the victims of Mary Ann, which is followed by the 'Reinsch Test', which contains experimental saxophone play to convince you that you are in a laboratory, and prove the guilt of Mary Ann. 'The Trial' opens with the rumoury background and hushed whispers that can be heard when a suspect is brought to trial and led to the stand before the judge has entered. A dialogue follows between the judge (cello) and Mary Ann (piano). The subsequent song has two subtitles of which the first speaks to the mind the most 'A Short Drop'; especially if you take into mind she was hung for her deeds. After about 5 minutes she has died and a plea for forgiveness and hiding from hell (a part sung and played by Emilie Autumn). The closing track 'Heaven is My Home' suggests that she has died and has gotten God's forgiveness, and reached heaven. The sound of distorted church singing creates a feeling of seeing saints. It finishes with a dark twist, as the soul of Mary Ann reincarnates into the son of Martin Bowes and is set free upon the world once more, as suggested by the subtitle 'The Other Side of Jordan…'.

The inspiration for the album seems to have come from Martin Bowes' recent discovery that his great great great aunt was the daughter of the policemen who arrested Mary Ann. She also worked for Mary Ann for some time as a seamstress. A well made experimental album in which the atmosphere is really transferred into music well. When reading the booklet and listening to the music at the same time, the meaning of the mostly instrumental songs become very clear. This is still one of the harder things to manage with instrumental music. -Joost


A review from Heathen Harvest:
Every person into Darkwave knows what Attrition is. It is a band originated somewhere in the end of 70s – beginning of 80s and has a solid discography that counts more than 20 albums (issued both on cassettes and CDs), louds of LPs and appeared on a huge amount of compilations issued on different labels. This time Martin Bowes together with other musicians I’m going to mention a bit later released Attrition album, limited to 1000 copies (including a set of 4 reproduction stickers of original victorial poison bottle labels), on Projekt, a label specializing on neoclassical, ambient, darkwave, ethereal music (Black Tape for a Blue Girl, Mirabilis, Lycia, Steve Roach to name a few). Cover photographs are done by Lauren E. Simonutti.

This is an album with a conception lying under many layers of sound, being dedicated to Mary Ann Cotton, her life and death (the album itself is divided into 6 tracks reflecting periods of her dwelling each), probably the most well-known female mass murderer in Victorian England, a woman who’s poisoned with arsenic (that was easily accessible at that time in chemist stores) between 16 to 21 of her own children, lovers and former husbands over many years. But you may say, that there’s nothing new and fresh in dedicating an album to a mass murderer.. Oh, if it was so simple, but it is not. The booklet tells us an exciting story, which actually shows a connection between Martin Bowes, the mastermind of Attrition, and Mrs Cotton through...a sewing box, which she passed as the only mean of payment (on departing for jail) to a lady, that was working in her house. Arthur Bowes, Martin’s father, being a child met this by that time very old lady, Louisa was her name, in 1940s and later this box came into his possession, making its way to Martin Bowes..

Sometimes we hear different stories about the thing that spirits of dead people stay in various objects that surrounded this person when he/she was alive and the sound on the album perfectly reflects the atmosphere of mystery and the spirit of evil present in the air. This atmosphere is achieved with the help of drone dark ambient background, created professionally by Martin Bowes, with trembling and nervous or mystic, cabaret-like piano passages (performed by Ned Kirby from Stormkern) included from time to time, insistent or insinuating and timid, sometimes tremolo cellos and violins performed by Erica Mulkey and Emilie Autumn, saxophone by Ute Mansell and of course voices and vocals of many kinds, whispering, being in agony and in fear, performed by Laurie Reade, Emilie Autumn (Track The Gates of Eternity, also cabaret-like) and Naomi and Jordan Bowes. The album is opening with an eerie children’s rhyme (Naomi and Jordan Bowes) that refers to a legend. According to this legend if you sing this rhyme on Halloween over Mary Ann’s grave, you will hear the sound of children crying.

To sum it all up, the album turned to be dark, freezing, anxious, a little bit mad with referances to electronic soundscapes, neoclassical strings and dark cabaret style.


A review from Judas Kiss:
Every release has a concept, or at least some sort of nucleus of an idea behind its conception, and as the title suggests, this is very much the case with this, the latest offering from the UK based dark industrial/electronica group Attrition. Telling the story of Mary Ann Cotton, a British serial killer who left a trail of at least twenty murders (some her own children, others were partners) by poisoning with arsenic, behind her. She was arrested and hanged in 1873. ‘All Mine Enemys Whispers’ has a brilliant concept behind it, and thankfully Martin Bowes, the main driving force behind Attrition since its birth in 1982, does a hugely impressive job in transferring the murderously haunting qualities of the story into a wonderfully intense dark ambient album.

Over recent years, Attrition have become renowned for their unusual coupling of electro beats, neo-classical music arrangements and operatic female and deep male vocals, all held together by a huge swathe of darkened atmosphere. Yet just below the surface, Attrition has always strived to be more diverse than this, with a number of their releases, including their 1982 ‘Death House’ release, focusing on the more experimental recesses of dark ambient compositions and captivatingly dark soundtracks, which is pretty much where we find ourselves now.

With a strong backbone of dense layers of dark ambient soundscapes and washes of electronic drones, a suitably dark and ominous atmosphere is produced and maintained throughout the album. This is built upon with lush neo-classical string arrangements, which add a depth and tantalisingly seductive and dreamily eerie edge to the proceedings, and are joined by a lone piano piece and the slow tones of a saxophone. The dark atmosphere created by this amalgamation of traditional instruments and electronically produced soundscapes is fantastically compelling, and has captivating qualities that share a great similarity to the attributes of a musical score. However Attrition are not content with stopping there. Oh no. They want this musical interpretation of Mary Ann Cotton’s story to be even more atmospheric and chilling, which they achieve by adding vocals in a variety of different styles, ranging from barely audible whispers of incidental vocals to children’s rhymes to the beautifully seductive charms of Emilie Autumn’s vocals on ‘Rock of Ages’. The use of occasional vocals on a predominantly instrumental album is executed fantastically well, and as such just adds another dimension to the drifting soundscapes that swirl beneath them, without becoming overpowering or losing the atmosphere that the music alone creates.

I’ve always had a bit of a soft spot for Attrition, and I feel that Martin has, over the years, delivered a wide range of musical styles through his music spanning a plethora of genres and tastes, yet still, for whatever reason, the band don’t quite get the recognition in the post-industrial genre that they really deserve. I have a feeling, though, that that is likely to change finally, thanks to this release, as it offers a grand set of sombre, unilluminated soundscapes that fit more than comfortably alongside the more revered names within the genre. And the addition of stirringly alluring neo-classical arrangements may well help give them that extra edge over their contemporaries. The album is housed in an impressively designed digipack and accompanied by a six-page inset that tells the story of Mary Ann Cotton, and how this infamous mass murder can be linked to Attrition’s Martin Bowes through his ancestor, police sergeant Tom McCutcheon. Also included in the first pressing are a number of stickers reproducing the labels from the arsenic bottles that Mary Ann would have used.

There’s a huge catalogue of material out there that Attrition have produced over the years, with this album ranking near the top of the pile. It delivers the perfect exploration point for those who have yet to discover Attrition’s work, and for those already familiar with it, it delivers a dark, surreal exploration of sounds and aural textures from a band that never fails to impress. -Lee Powell


A review from Key64:
Attrition's 2008 album, All mine enemys whispers (The Story of Mary Ann Cotton) available via Projekt.com and Attrition.Co.Uk

There are tones and ranges of sound that can channel emotional response directly into one's consciousness... Rhythmic entrainment and psychoacoustics are capable of eliciting specific emotional responses and constructing narrative experience. Few musicians are able to construct tracks in such a way as to accomplish this feat successfully, and fewer still are able to sustain such an experience across an entire album.

Attrition is certainly one of those few.. this is easily the most unsettling album I've heard in years, as deeply disturbing as anything I've come across in any piece of media. The album's six tracks are spaces against which the mind unfolds the full tale of Mary Ann Cotton, a soundtrack conjuring her essence. If any sequence of music has a chance of evoking a specific entity, this is the one.

It begins with an evokation, the children's rhyme that opens the very first track

"Mary Ann Cotton, She's dead and she's rotten
She lies in her bed, With her eyes wide open
Sing, sing, oh, what can I sing,
Mary Ann Cotton is tied up with string Sellin' black puddens a penny a pair."

Legend has it that When the walls are thin between the world of the living and the dead on Halloween, reciting this rhyme over her grave was enough to call the spirits of those she'd killed to audible experience. Whispers of long dead children are heard, bemoaning their painful deaths at her hands.

In those days, arsenic was often used for murder but few were as prolific, or as reviled, as Britain's Mass Murderess Mary Ann Cotton by the time she was publicly executed. (One particularly interesting bit of trivia, newspapers had deliberately coarsened Mary Ann's features in what is likely the earliest incidents of airbrushing.)

At first listen this may seem like a soundtrack to a horror film, but this album is much more intentional and holds up to repeated listening in ways a soundtrack never could, subservient as they generally are to the director's vision--rather, this is a evocation of the essence of Mary Ann Cotton's story, linked by way of the sewing box she once held in her hand.

Martin Bowes great great great aunt Louisa McCutheon, a seamstress, recieved as payment from Mary Ann Cotton a sewing box, prior to her incarceration and subsequent public execution in March of 1873. This same sewing box can now be heard on track five, 'played' by Martin Bowes to provide texture to one of the most moving tracks on the cd.

The first track, "What shall i sing?" is available for download via Attrition's website, and provides a stunning introduction to this piece of work, but my favorite track is easily the fifth. A chilling piece entitled "The Gates of Eternity" split into two sections, i. A short Drop and ii. Rock of Ages, an incredible ten and a half minute track that sumons Cotton's public execution to the mind's eye while conjuring wind and ghosts through Bowes' soundscaping and Erica Mulkey's complex cello arrangement of Mary Ann Cotton's self-professed favorite hymnal. Emilie Autumn's vocals on ii.Rock of Ages manage to be both purifying and lost, a melodic anchor that fleshes out the mental construct the entire album creates.

The album comes to a close with the sixth track, "Heaven is my home or the other side of Jordan..." an auditory experience of the veils of space and time ripping apart to reveal some glorious afterlife and the deep fabric of souls wailing in harmonics outside of human hearing. This is an album you feel as much as hear, an album of dark ambient neoclassical compositions constructed both acoustically and electronically by a master of the craft. -Wes Unruh


A review from Liar Society:
Attrition returns with an album of lengthy ambient tracks based on the life of Victorian mass murderess Mary Ann Cotton. As suits an album inspired by a woman who poisoned friend, mother, husband, lover, and children alike, All Mine Enemys Whispers is an eerie affair that just might prickle the hair at the nap of your neck. Wending together strings, hauntological electronic soundscapes, and a chilling deployment of the hymn "Rock of Ages," the album's atmosphere is steeped in the bitterest tea of morbid Victoriana. If you enjoy watching The Others while wearing your best antiquated finery or reading the tales of J. Sheridan Le Fanu by candlelight, All Mine Enemys Whispers is the dark, cinematic record you've been waiting for. Nighttime is required for listening. -Jack

A review from Music TAP:
The latest album from Martin Bowes’ Attrition is a conceptual work that is a brilliant mix of sound, instruments, and a poisonous draught of insanity. Based on the legend of Mary Ann Cotton, who is perhaps Britain’s most prolific female serial killer, All Mine Enemys Whispers explores the darkness that led Mary Ann Cotton to systematically slaughter around 21 of her own children, lovers, and former husbands over a series of years by administration of various poisons. A telling of this story from an ambient perspective would be quite an undertaking for any musician but not so for Martin Bowes, whose previous works is no stranger to blended music and disturbances of the psyche.

In the album’s six imaginative compositions, there is a thread of an unraveling mind, conjuring evil intentions and carrying them out to grisly results. With voices, sound effects, a classical element (a hallmark of Attrition), and violin, even the use of strings to create the sound of a fly in “What Shall I Sing?,” this album is as eerie as music can possibly get.

All Mine Enemys Whispers may be Martin Bowes’ masterpiece. It also serves to show that the musical importance of Attrition is still at full strength, even after nearly 30 years.


A review from Rosa Selvaggia:
Lo storico progetto di Martin Bowes, oramai giunto a più di 25 anni di carriera (attivo dal 1982), esce con questo nuovo CD dedito a sonorità più ambient oscure, che vede la presenza di molti ospiti, come Emilie Autumn, violino e voce in "The gates of eternity", Erica Mulkey al cello e Ute Mansell al sassofono, solo per citare alcuni dei partecipanti alla registrazione di quest'album dedicato a Mary Ann Cotton, famosa serial killer inglese di fine 800, che uccise (per quanto si sappia) più di una ventina di bambini, ed anche la propria famiglia (il marito e figli), e fu poi arrestata da un avo di Martin Bowes: il sergente Tom McCutcheon. La prima edizione limitata a 1000 copie include quattro cartoline vittoriane. Un concept oscuro per una band che, purtroppo, in tutta la sua lunga carriera rimane ancora sconosciuta ai più, ma che nonostante questo ha avuto il coraggio di credere in se stessa, superando le difficoltà di chi non ha mai accettato compromessi o mode del momento. - Nikita

A review from Side-Line:
Already released a few months ago, this latest release of Attrition is a real interesting concept. First there’s the concept or central theme of the album dealing about ‘the Story Of Mary Ann Cotton’ and next there’s the dark ambient style featuring some famous guest musicians. Mary Ann Cotton was probably the greatest female mass murderer in time from England. She seemed to have poisoned 20 of her own children and partners with arsenic until she was arrested and finally hanged in 1873. Next comes the transposition into music from this story. Attrition did it in their now familiar, but still particular ambient way. It’s a style Martin Bowes has already explored a few times now. On “All Mine Enemys Whispers” he composed nothing less than a soundtrack for an imaginary movie. Some very famous guest musicians like Emilie Autumn, Ned Kirby (Stromkern), Laurie Reade (Pigface) ao contributed to this remarkable concept. The music is quite dark and I can’t even remember Attrition having been that dark in sound. Some spooky vocals on the debut-cut “What Shall I Sing” bring back to life a very old song children where singing at Halloween. This Victorian children’s rhyme was sung by Naomi and Jordan Bowes (son of Martin) and brings a spooky, childish debut to this release. Some neo-classical touch played by cello on “The Burial club” are much darker, like leading the listener in the lost time of Mary Ann Cotton. The disturbing sounds of “The Reinsch Test” perfectly reinforce the illusion of terror and horror during the last moments of agony of Mary Ann’s victims. The song “The Trial” sounds definitely different, like expressing deep sadness and melancholia perfectly awaken by the cello parts. The 2 songs left aren’t the most fascinating ones, but come to achieve the last part of the story. I really like the concept and the way it was put into music. Musical wise I already heard better things from Attrition, but this release is for sure a particular one on their impressive discography! Rating: 6/7 ED

Other Albums by This Artist
  1. Something Stirs. The beginning. CD (Two Gods Recordings, 1981-83)
  2. This Death House... ~ SALE $5 CD (Projekt: Archive, 1982)
  3. Action and reaction CD (Big Blue, 1983)
  4. The Attrition of Reason CD (Projekt: Archive, 1984)
  5. Recollection (84-89) CD (Projekt, 1984-89)
  6. Smiling, at the Hypogonder Club CD (Projekt: Archive, 1985)
  7. In the Realm of the Hungry Ghost CD (Projekt: Archive, 1986)
  8. At the Fiftieth Gate ~ SALE $5 CD (Projekt: Archive, 1988)
  9. A Tricky Business ~ SALE $5 CD (Projekt: Archive, 1991)
  10. The Hidden Agenda CD (SPV Poland, 1995)
  11. Ephemera (Incidental musics Volume II) CD (SPV Poland, 1995)
  12. 3 Arms & a Dead Cert CD (Projekt, 1996)
  13. The Eternity LP (on CD!) CD (Big Blue, 1996 - 1998)
  14. The Eternity EP CD-Single (Projekt, 1997)
  15. Étude - OUT OF PRINT CD (Projekt, 1997)
  16. Étude - Polish reissue CD (SPV Poland, 1997)
  17. Kissing A Virtual Angel - OUT OF PRINT Maxi-CD (Ars Benevola Mater, 1999)
  18. The Jeopardy Maze CD (Projekt, 1999)
  19. Esoteria CD (Brudenia Records, 2000)
  20. The Hand That Feeds ("the remix album") CD (Invisible Records, 2000)
  21. Heretic Angels: Live in the USA ~ SALE $7.98 CD (Two Gods, 2000)
  22. Keepsakes and Reflections CD (SPV Poland, 2002)
  23. Dante's Kitchen CD (Underground Inc / Invisible, 2004)
  24. Tearing arms from Deities. 1980 - 2005 CD (Two Gods Recordings, 2006)
  25. Across the Divide: Live in Holland CD (Two Gods, 2009)
  26. Kill The Buddha! (with Laurie Reade of Black Tape For A Blue Girl) ~ SALE $5 CD (Projekt, 2009)
  27. Wrapped in the Guise of my Friend - The Covers ~ SALE $7.98 CD (Two Gods / WTII, 2009)
  28. Dreamtime Collectors (the best of 1984-2010) CD (Metropolis, 2010)
  29. The Truth in Dark Corners: Live in Holland 1985 CD (Other Voices, 2011)
  30. an introduction Digital Only (Projekt, 2012)
  31. Invocation CD (Infinite Fog, 2012)
  32. The Unraveller of Angels PRE-ORDER CD (Two Gods, 2013)
Merchandise by This Artist None at this time.