Projekt logo
Search

Store
Pre-Order
eList
Podcast
Blog
Projektfest
Slice-10
Slice-11
Contact
About
Artists
Black tape for a blue girl
Slice-16
Other Albums | Merchandise | Reviews
Martial Canterel

Refuge Underneath

2008 | Wierd | WIE00003

CD

No longer stocking this item. Please buy something else!
Tracks:
  1. Refuge Underneath (4:19)
  2. Lips Not Listening (3:25)
  3. Two Before Four (4:31)
  4. Frozen Ghetto (3:40)
  5. Foreign Birthplace (3:38)
  6. Drilling Backwards (3:40)
  7. Open And Shut (3:09)
  8. 3 Days (4:21)
  9. Assault (3:56)
  10. Vision (4:34)
  11. Sister Age (3:57)
  12. Silence (4:39)
  13. Firmament (3:40)
  14. Listener Dead (4:32)
  15. Hausmann (4:40)
  16. Harbours And Martyrs (4:33)
  17. Instincts (4:44)
  18. Page And Fold (3:56)

We Recommend


Blacklist
Solidaire EP ~ SALE $7.98


Various Artists
Wierd Compilation 3-LP + 7" + 26 page book


Various Artists
Wierd Compilation Volume II: Analogue Electronic Music 4-LP with 32 page booklet

Wierd Records is proud to present Martial Canterel‘s first full-length CD release entitled Refuge Underneath, a compilation of the artist‘s first two long-deleted self-released cassette tapes Drilling Backwards (2006) and Sister Age (2004) as well as 5 previously unreleased tracks, all digitally re-mastered.

Over the past 5 years the state of electronic music has seen artists slowly remove themselves from their work and visceral musical ‘expression‘ in general. Traditional electronic machines have been replaced by the computer as the dominant generator of contemporary sounds. It is in this climate that Sean McBride, aka Martial Canterel, began performing at bars, clubs and private parties in Brooklyn, NY in 2002, functioning singlehandedly as the pioneer and instigator of what has now become a new movement of minimal electronic bands in the United States.

Martial Canterel records and performs using only vintage analogue synthesizers and sequencers, producing a highly-crafted, complex, and idiosyncratic form of electronic music that is simultaneously romantically melancholic and affirmatively aggressive. Inspired both by the first wave of relatively unknown minimal electronic bands in Northern Europe(a musical genre also often referred to as ‘minimal synth‘) and the seminal industrial noise bands such as Throbbing Gristle, SPK, and Cabaret Voltaire, Martial Canterel presents a new optimistic paradigm for electronic music in which the analogue synthesizer functions anew as a folk instrument of humanist resistance to a virtual ‘soft synth‘, iPod, and iTunes saturated world of ‘click and drag‘ dematerialized abstraction.


A review from Big Takeover:
With the staccato surge and somber vocalizing of DAF, the distorted synthetic soundscapes of DIRK IVENS’ eeriest work, and the industrial strength of THE YOUNG GODS, MARTIAL CANTEREL’s Refuge Underneath is a bleak intellectual exercise in the dark and danceable. Like other releases on New York City’s icy hot Wierd Records [sic], the form is just as intriguing as the content. The cover, coarse and yellowed as if with age, features a black and white scene of remote ruins. The font, as if smudged by a hasty typist, only adds to the feeling of spare decay and cold inquisitiveness that permeates the music. The song titles attest to this, with names like “Lips Not Listening,” “Drilling Backwards,” and “Harbors & Martyrs.” My interest was aroused well before I heard the sounds on the CD.

Refuge Underneath is culled from work previously released only on cassette tape and welcomes a wider audience for SEAN MCBRIDE, a pioneer of the new wave of minimal synth emerging in the States. But while Martial Canterel has links across the country and overseas, it is a decidedly New York City affair. The project was conceived in Brooklyn in 2002, and these days one can find McBride DJing or performing at Wierd Records’ weekly Wednesday party, filling up the underground concrete cavern of Home Sweet Home with the inimitable strains of his vintage analogue synthesizers and sequencers. The eager and eccentric crowds that pack the room for his shows say a lot about Martial Canterel’s appeal.

Unlike some minimal electronic music that’s best suited for static contemplation, the songs on the album invite much more motion. They are surprisingly accessible for those (myself included) who aren’t entrenched in the very rare recesses of the genre. The dark pulsing synth, melancholic vocal line, and whip-like crack of the drum machine on “Sister Age” are an invitation to indulge. Even listers into synth pop of the Top 40 variety would be hard pressed not to lose themselves on the dancefloor. And if your tastes are of the colder and crueler kind, “Two Before Four” is foreboding incarnate and “Hausmann” is the perfect aural approximation of jouissance. Unknown pleasures lurk in its sharp moments of pointed, squealing distortion, accompanied by tiny twinges of pain that signal the execution of each sound.

Simply put, if you revel in the smart, the sepulchral, and the spare, then this is most certainly for you. There are many ways to enjoy Refuge Underneath: both through corporeality and cognition, through dance and debate. But if you are suspect of such Cartesian dualism as some tend to be, you’ll just thank McBride for appealing to all of your faculties on Martial Canterel’s recent release.

And then you’ll want more. -Kristen Sollee


Other Albums by This Artist None at this time.
Merchandise by This Artist None at this time.