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Decibel Magazine Reviews To No Avail

SURACHAI – To No Avail
HANDSHAKE, INC.
7/10

So, this is how it goes now: Everything that’s not 100 percent black metal gets tagged as experimental or post-black metal, even if its still about 196 proof? You gotta love how people strive to look down their noses at others, making themselves out to be more highly evolved while still giving the appearance of being down, yo. Whatever. In extreme music’s over saturated world, you gotta do what you gotta do in order to draw attention to yourself, though Chicago’s Surachai do well enough with artistic photography and artwork, classy packaging and, yes, black metal that does nudge at the boundaries of convention.
It must be said that the slab of vinyl that is To No Avail is a headphones record. Spin it in the background while you’re cleaning your house, getting cleaned out by the phone company or cleaning the pipes, and sure, you’ll hear some familiarity in the vein of Krallice, Tulus, Deathspell Omega and/or Bleeding First. Expect scathing speed duels and layers inspired by progressive rock, not to mention, a Swans/Neubauten-ish outro on side one that sounds like a factory imploding. However, throw on a pair of phones and you’ll be able to immerse your ears in the strata of guitars that ever-so slightly utilizes counterpoint divergence, a wealth of inadvertent overtones that add spice to the riffing, brassy effects tucked away in the second half of side two, and a cabal of specter-like vocals, which come at your ears from all directions like a swarm of possessed humming birds during the orchestral, yet soothing, outdo. – Kevin Stewart-Panko

To No Avail & Plague Diagram on Grindthieves Year End List

I’ve been battling with putting this list together for over a month. Eliminating and adding and re-adding and re-eliminating albums over and over again. I’m going to stop and just put this list out there as I see it today, at this moment.

Surachai – “Plague Diagram / To No Avail”

Chicago gave us Surachai and his two ridiculous slabs of fuzzed out freaked out metal varieties this year. Both incredibly well produced dabblings in experimental grind and black metal. When “Plague Diagram” came out, I had a couple shows to play and I ended up playing it at each one. I listened to “To No Avail” more times in a row in 24 hours than any record in the past several years. This guy is a genius when it comes to this kind of music, no question.

To No Avail on Grindthieves Year End List

To No Avail on DC Metal’s Top 10

9. Surachai- To No Avail; I reviewed this release pretty recently, so I’m not going to elaborate too much. I’ll just say that To No Avail has solidified myself as a major Surachai fan. These songs are great, and I can’t really find anything wrong with them as a grouping of songs. It’s just a solid release that pushes some boundaries and evolves Surachai as an artist. The artwork is simply killer and fits the music perfectly, which you don’t see enough of anymore.

Why it’s number 9; The only reason this isn’t higher is because it’s only two songs. While this criteria will no doubt change as the music industry continues to, in 2011, this only wet’s your appetite for more.

DC Metal’s Top 10

To No Avail on Writing is Fighting’s Year End List

Writing is Fighting

Surachai’s 2011 Playlist

2011 was one of the best years of music in recent memory. By following friends and distributors, I was introduced to a wealth of great music that made this year all the better. This list isn’t in any particular order but is separated between “electronic” and “metal” – seems to be vague and wrong enough to encompass everything I listen to.

Electronic
Sonoio – Red

Big Black Delta – BBDLP

It’s no surprise that both of these artists were on my playlist for 2010 and now again for 2011 but both of these albums are huge steps forward for their projects.

Big Black Delta utilizes a nostalgic overdriven sound palette works perfectly for his style. BBDLP finalizes and assembles the singles that have been popping up seemingly random on the internet for the past year. Sonoio’ Red sonic palette has expanded far and beyond his previous heavily Buchla specific sound, creating a huge sound beautiful full sonic spectrum album. Both are catchy as hell and difficult to wear out.

Richard Devine – Risp EP

With it’s indefinite December release date, this is the reason to wait for “best of” lists. After too many years not releasing music, Richard Devine finally has released something and as always, its proper ridiculous electronics. With a focus on analog machines, particularly the modular synth, and with post production techniques Richard explores and expands on territory few can even imagine.

Tim Hecker – Ravedeath, 1972

Ravedeath is the only LP in Tim Hecker’s discography that is played at 33RPM on vinyl which led to an interesting first listen – but honestly it doesn’t really matter what speed you play his records, they engulf and stay with you.

James Blake – Self Titled

I don’t know much about James other than he’s young, recorded this album in his place, is on Warp and has an amazing sense of style and finesse when constructing a track. This is just a recommendation, not a biography. The vinyl catches the low end properly and would recommend going that route.

Alva Noto – Univrs

Cyclo – ID

Anything Carsten Nicolai releases has a consistent aural aesthetic and fortunately for me, I love his sound. When seeing Carsten’s name on the Cyclo record next to Ryoji Ikeda, I decided to gamble and buy it – What I got was an abbreviated and more aggressive collection of songs on the ID full length. Nicolai’s solo Univrs is probably my favorite out of the Alva Noto series.

Atari Teenage Riot – Is This Hyperreal?

I always found their previous albums’ digital shrillness hard to shake off but Is This Hyperreal seems mixed friendlier. Is This Hyperreal has an audio palette like Alec Empire’s solo work which obviously still is abrasive and hard as nails but doesn’t fatigue your ears so fast. Their music makes sense when you see this crew play out live.

Metal
Tombs – Path of Totality

Stumbling upon Tombs randomly on NPR, I streamed their entire album for almost 2 days straight and months later, Path of Totality hits the turntable regularly. Somewhere between molasses thick sludge and a quick agile black tone, Tombs weaves together something beautiful: a black sludge. Since finding out about them, I hunted down their previous releases which are equally as catchy/ brutal. They’re excellent live as well.

Deafheaven – Roads to Judah

While at Reckless Records, I remember seeing this album and writing down the information, went home, downloaded it, scanned it for 15 seconds and went back to reckless and bought the record. From the 3 seconds I interact with “KLVT” metalheads a year, I found out they hate Deafheaven and pretty much anything I really like. Great! Roads to Judah is one of the best debuts in recent memory. Check out their Demo, its equally as great. They’re great live and like to play their tracks fast.

Krallice – Diotima

I’m always confused by my favorite albums on first listen. Portishead’s Third was awkward at first, Massive Attack’s Heligoland didn’t seem to fit into itself and Krallice’s Diotima seemed longwinded and sprawling. But given time, like with the other aforementioned albums, Diotima is among my favorite albums. Diotima couldn’t have been a better succession of Dimensional Bleedthrough in its maturity and increasing epic compositions. There are so many peaks and valleys of ugly passages and beautiful rays of light in Diotima – its a journey. Hope to catch these guys live one day.

Ash Borer – Self Titled LP

Fell Voices – Self Titled LP

The Ash Borer Self titled has some of the best packaging this year. A beautiful matte black foundation with red foil engraved lettering. Because of these two bands, (who will probably grow to hate being mentioned together) I grow hopeful and optimistic when great metal comes from small pockets around the country and lays waste to the major bands. Its some of the most refreshing metal I’ve heard in a while.

Decapitated – Carnival is Forever

One of my favorite bands comes out with another brutal release after some horrible circumstances. I’m glad their revisit back to Decapitated was merciless, precise and strong as ever.

Hella – Tripper

A return to their original structure. I’m probably part of the minority that liked their full band approach in “There’s no 666 in Outerspace”, it was well executed, catchy and innovative and was hoping to hear more of Hella as a complete band but Tripper is an excellent return to a twisted ‘minimalism’ that only Hella is capable of. Also its one of the ugliest design/vinyl layouts I’ve ever seen. That’s not slang, its really… just ugly.

Retox – Ugly Animals

Anything with Gabe Serbian drumming and I’m in. Ugly Animals is a perfect length album for an abrasive and intense style that I found myself coming back for more. I’m glad Retox found itself on the perfect label, Ipecac, that gets Ugly Animals the proper exposure it deserves. When Gabe stepped off their live lineup they found an excellent replacement that definitely carries the torch. Obviously Retox is great live.

Honorable Mentions:
Sulaco – Build and Burn
Altar of Plagues – Mammal
Gridlink – Orphan
Absu – Abzu
American Heritage – Sedentary
Northless – Clandestine Abuse
Deaf Center – Owl Splinters
Trap Them – Darker Handcraft
False – Untitled
Myrmyr – Firestar
This Will Destroy You – Tunnel Blanket
The Weeknd – House of Balloons

Favorite Distributors
Gilead Media

Based out of Oshkosh, Wisconsin, Gilead Media have single handedly put out some of my favorite releases in the past couple years including the entire Krallice discography and some of this years playlist favorites including Northless, Ash Borer, False and Fell Voices. Their prices are incredible, shipping is cheap and fast, and their selection is always worth checking out. Also, they’re planning on throwing an incredible two day festival featuring bands from their roster in late April.

Halo Of Flies

Cory von Bohlen’s Halo of Flies from Milwaukee, Wisconsin has a selection so diverse and cheap that I am always scared of going to the site. I’ve sat down for hours and looked up/listened to every band on their distribution pages and came away with some of my favorite current bands. Shipping is always quick since I’m in Chicago and did I mention the prices? I did? Well go buy something.

Lichens, A. Cortini, Surachai, Volunteer Park – Dec 11

I’ll be doing a destructive modular set.

Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe (Lichens)
Alessandro Cortini (Sonoio)
Surachai
Volunteer Park (Aviram Cohen)

Sunday December 11, 2011
Doors 8pm. Show 9pm

Death By Audio
49 S2nd street
Brooklyn
$7

Don’t Count On It Reviews To No Avail

My name is Ian and I do run this blog.

I do have to admit however, that at times, some of the shifts, musically, were less than stellar, like the drone ambient section that suddenly just goes into a full-on black metal part did feel a bit abrupt for me. Read the entire review below.

Don’t Count On It Reviews To No Avail

Sea of Tranquility Reviews To No Avail

The web source for progressive rock, progressive metal & jazz fusion.

Every listen returns something new, whether it’s the tremolo-picked riffs, the rapidly strummed chords, the voice that emerges from seemingly nowhere, or just the droning ambience and empty atmospheres that arrest the attention, To No Avail is utterly captivating and enthralling. Desolate, despairing, and urgent, the experience of the aesthetic pallor of this album is near-tangible. Read the entire review below.

Sea of Tranquility Reviews To No Avail

Sonidos De La Cripta Reviews To No Avail

Sonidos de la cripta surge como vía de expresión personal sobre una de mis principales pasiones desde hace ya veinte años, el metal.

Second album of this bizarre entity of Chicago resident, I hear for the first time such an impression that has caused me, and I call it that because I have no idea who or who make this project, I looked around but found nothing … . Of Me.

At first glance an innovative black metal album, but as exploration continues, I am realizing that it is something more, much more.

In just two songs catch me with those grunts get used like any other element of sound, riffs Nordic school, explosions sound at high speed, achieved melodies, dissonances and good time management among many other virtues. After a deranged acceleration comes a break, and when the artist looks at another aspect, the creation of chaotic sounds difficult to interpret, no music now, just sounds disturbing you and grab hold of you, it’s like managed to dominate your mind with a typical experiment, a psychiatric center and when you reach a strange feeling of relaxation, asaltarte again with a black metal fury unleashed. Representation of a black nightmare.

A dark and psychedelic atmosphere surrounds the work, the result, one of the best works of electronic black metal can be heard. The duration of this work, 22 minutes, could be the only downside of the project, but the truth is that it gets me with a feeling of wanting more very nice.

You can get a copy of this work on your Bandcamp, a good deal for a moment of extreme madness. – Google Translate

Sonidos De La Cripta Reviews To No Avail

Grindcore Karaoke Adds To No Avail

To No Avail was added to Grindcore Karaoke’s immense catalog that has incredible music courtesy of Randall of Agoraphobic Nosebleed. The re-release includes a new digi-booklet that unfortunately has outdated information. The vinyl master was performed by Shawn Hatfield of Audible Oddities. There is no digital master. What is on the internet is a compressed 16-bit 44.1 kHz file derived from the 24-bit 48 kHz vinyl master. So essentially the vinyl will sound better than the digital version. Enjoy!

Grindcore Karaoke – To No Avail (New Digi-booklet)