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System Noise EP - 2005
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Reviews
"Blondie + Fugazi + Hillbilly Frankenstein + Talking Heads
+ P.I.L. + Television + King Crimson = System Noise. Art rock
for a whole new generation."
-J.R. Oliver, Ear Candy Magazine
www.earcandymag.com
(Scroll
about 1/4 of the way down the page)
"System Noise is quite capable of some good sonic range."
-J. Wallace http://www.indie-music.com/
"System Noise itself is well-rehearsed, employing scales
from outer space..."
-Thom
White, Citizine
http://www.citizinemag.com/
"Honest-to-goodness rock-n-roll with style and skill..."
- David Hurst, Show Business Weekly
www.showbusinessweekly.com
Choice Pick
by Alan Young Trifectagram
Powerful, groundbreaking, even paradigm-shifting first release
by NYCs most indelibly unique, instantly recognizable
band.
They are unmatched in intensity by any other band in town right
now. System Noise are going places nobodys gone before,
blending elements of noise rock, art rock, funk, metal and even
hip-hop with a scorching, high-voltage live show. Produced at
Lucid Production, arguably the best-sounding new rock and pop
studio in New York, this ep adds a richness of textures and
subtleties that dont always make it to the stage. Most
of it is ferociously loud rock, yet imbued with the kind of
dynamics you typically expect from a jazz group. Theyre
fearlessly political, but their sense of humor makes them more
likely to get their point across than if they thrust it in your
face. You can dance to System Noise, but this cd is also a treat
to listen to on headphones. Its the kind of album that
stoners, punks and hip-hop kids people you dont
necessarily expect to find in the same room, let alone getting
along with each other can all agree on.
Its what happens when you put four type
A personalities in a locked room with a bunch of guitars and
loud amps. Frontwoman Sarah Mucho honed her spectacular vocal
chops singing over crowds of drunks in cabaret bars. Kurt Leege
played lead guitar with avant-funksters Mlumbo, noisy
indie rockers Noxes Pond, goth-tinged art-rockers Ninth House
and mod punk revivalists the Dog Show. Bassist Sanford Arisumi
slides and swoops out of the murky depths to the heights of
ecstasy with a full-tilt intensity and melodicism unmatched
by any other four-string player in rock today. No wanky Jaco
Pastorius bullshit, just melody, groove, then more melody and
groove. Drummer Pouth pushes the unit with a spectacular precision,
sense of humor and uncommon subtlety for someone who hits as
hard as he does.
To their credit, they avoid the virtuosity trap
where everybody in the band is always soloing at the same time.
While a lot of the playing is way over the edge, theyre
very terse when they need to be. The ep opens with The Dark
Side, a wild, King Crimson-inflected noise rock/funk number
with all kinds of unexpected time changes and a surprise ending.
Everyday Hustler, with its catchy, recurrent central hook evokes
what a great funk band like Defunkt might have done with a Talking
Heads song. The albums centerpiece, Prom Night is a shockingly
beautiful, macabre ballad inspired by the film Carrie, and could
be the best single song released this year, creeping along on
over eerie arpeggios to a murderously explosive chorus. Other
standout tunes on the cd include the noisy hip-hop number Shitkickers,
which kicks the shit out of Fox News and the rest of the propaganda
industry, and Unresolved, with its ominous bass intro exploding
into a practically heavy metal crescendo and it only
gets more intense from there.
Everybody I know who is a hardcore music fan
eventually reaches the point where they suddenly discover something
totally different, unlike anything they ever heard, that completely
changes and enriches the way they hear music. For me, that was
Second Edition by PiL. For you it might have been Sonic Youth,
My Bloody Valentine, Coltrane, Skip James or something considerably
more obscure or exotic. I think System Noise will have that
same effect on a new generation of listeners who might not know
any of those particular artists, who all pushed the envelope
just as System Noise are doing now. This album is essential
for anyone who thinks they know something about music
or
who likes to throw parties where people can dance. Its
available at shows and soon online and at better retailers.
System Noise plays the cd release for this ep at the Cutting
Room, 24th St. just west of 5th Ave. Tues May 31 at 10 PM. http://www.systemnoisenyc.com
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