REVIEW: BALACLAVAS - INFERNO

August 6th, 2008 · 2 Comments

The second circle of hell is reserved for the souls of those who, when in the flesh, could not tamp down their desire for the flesh of others. The lusty. Those who hid away the love all hearts are meant to experience for the quick kill; the fleeting romance; the adultery; the cheat. In this place, and in all the circles of hell, the condemned are punished not by having their acts held before their faces to eternally bemoan or suffer endless Groundhog Days where they are the victims of the same heart-crimes they committed. Rather, they are exposed to metaphoric punishments, exacting their toll in much the same way the consequences of their own actions haunted them while they were still living. In the kingdom of men, the lusty drift aimlessly, guided without sea chart and only the dumb zeal of their organs as helmsman. They can never find the arms of another to call home forever, and so come and go with the wind and the tides looking eagerly for land through their telescope. But for whatever cruel and secret missive written by a Commodore they do not understand and cannot mutiny away, they never drop anchor. So too, in the second circle, do they find their souls angrily blown about by a violent storm. Never finding stability or foundation or peace anymore than they could find a spouse with which to carry out Genesis 1:28.

We think alot about the second circle when we listen to Inferno.

It’s a seductive record, one that catches you looking from across the gallery and is warmed by the attention. It doesn’t run or shout so much as it slinks and coos its way not into your heart, but into your sweating back with its seething scarlet nails. There’s nothing wholesome about it. Though you enjoy it instinctively, you can’t help but feel like it’s a little dirty. It has the sound of the darkness in a strange room where a familiar activity is about to take place - noises echoing and disturbing without a visual reference, like unfamiliar beltbuckles falling unseen onto unfamiliar floors.

The songwriting template that Balaclavas established in their first release has been honed, sharpened and intensified. Though they were already crafting some of the most unclassifiable and incomparable music in town, in this release we find them to be submariners at even greater depths. The bass is massive and formless, pendulating back and forth with such heavy subsonics that it sounds as if it should be bumping out of the trunk of a chopped 300M instead of cornering you in a dark parking garage of indie disquiet. It’s the amorphous wrapper around what is still the most distinctive rock sound in the 713, 281 or 832 for that matter. The drums keep a sort of a time but are far more accentual than backbeat. The guitar is often punctuation to the vocals, a cranky and craggy friend that alone carries the sins of the melodies along in a cave lit by only a single candle. The vocals are the ghost of a fallen man, but one who knows it could have been much worse.

Even when these four relatively simple instruments momentarily lock into a groove together, such as in the refrain for “Ashes,” the effect is a complex bouquet and more generally a reminder that, for most of the time, you simply can’t believe these individual elements are happening in the same song at the same time and working so brilliantly together. Balaclavas, we would imagine, are easy for some to dismiss as just too weird for their taste. We can’t really begrudge anyone who doesn’t connect with what they’re doing, because, frankly, we’ve never heard anything like it either. But it has most certainly sauntered up to the right sucker at the bar, because we’re taking it home with us tonight, even though we shouldn’t.  We hope when we die, it’ll be playing in the second circle. Highly Recommended.

Inferno actually came out late last year on CD and has been selectively available in the finer record stores around town ever since. What it’s getting here is the full Phonograpic Arts treatment, including a re-mastering and a release on Vinyl. Phonographic Arts is the outfit that put out Jordan Graber’s beautiful (and scene packed) full color photozine “I’m In A Tight Spot”, as well as the “Gulewave” zine, whose introduction includes the advice “hey buddy why don’t you print your blog so it has a pulse.” In our own defense, we did actually create a printed version of all our stories from 2007 in sefer Torah format (you know, the scrolls), but due to the expense of the gold in its handles and its 300+ lb weight, we weren’t able to sell to many of them. We think Sound Exchange is using their copy as a doorstop. Get the decidedly more manageably sized Inferno at Balaclavas release show Thursday night, August 7th, at Walter’s on Washington, where they’re part of the opening talent pool (alongside The Wiggins) for Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti.

File Under: Reviews

2 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Ramon LP4 Medina // Aug 7, 2008 at 7:29 am

    Freaking great album! I grabbed a copy of the LP at Sound Ex last week even though I already had a copy of the CD - quite worthy of owning in multiple formats.

  • 2 MOOBS // Aug 7, 2008 at 9:17 am

    The thing i like most about Balaclavas is their ability to incorporate experimental stuff into a listener freindly format without emasculating the true nature of the experimental stuff. In my opinion, songwritting is difficult enough. To see these guys pull it off in a studio, and seamlessly translate it live, is truely impressive and inspiring.

    Piece,
    MOOBALICIOUS

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