For our first review, I will be covering a personal favorite of mine from both a genre and artist who most of us may not know (hipster me eh mates?)
Genre:
Dark Ambient /
"Isolationism"Artist/Band Name: Lull (One Artist: Mick Harris of napalm death, Scorn, and Painkiller)
Facts About the Artist/Band: Lull is a Dark Ambient side project of Napalm Death's Mick Harris in which he had created the genre known as "Isolationism". The side project had premiered in 1992 with the release of Lull's first album "Dreamt about dreaming". with this album being created, Isolationism was born.
Album: Cold Summer
Cover Art:
Track Listing:
1) Slow Fall Inward 23:552) Lonely Shelter 15:563) Long Way Home 23:384) Lost Sanctum 15:57Review:
(Mick Harris) Lull's "Cold Summer" (released in 1994)
At first glance, Cold Summer may seem boring and uneventful to the average listener of today's modern era. But if you are willing to "leave yourself behind" and simply listen, and then feel more than you listen, you may begin to feel the Soundscapes created by Mick Harris in this album, Cold Summer, wash you away and wear away at your soul.
The album, Cold Summer, is probably the best album ever released by Mick Harris under the recording name/handle "Lull". Among other Lull albums, Cold Summer continues to be the single most minimalistic and downright chilling album ever released by Lull.
The tracks consist mainly of a very deep Sub-Bass that in one track may come off as nearly
deafening while in the next it is barely audible, coupled with small bits of isolated noise that you only seem to notice after they have either stopped, or while waiting in anticipation for it to repeat, Cold Summer creates a new form of isolationism that has still never been fully outclassed. The sheer amount of minimalism that was cleverly planned out by Mick Harris in Cold Summer makes it a very uncertain and mysterious
"Fall Inward" as the listeners may find themselves discovering very "animalistic" and instinctual sides of themselves that introduce them to a brand new kind of fear. This fear consists greatly of feelings of
helplessness, isolation, and confronting the unknown. In short, it is best to imagine that you are falling down and seeing the world fall away with you as you begin to wonder just how you began to fall to begin with. soon after the fear and realization that you fell kicks in, and the rush begins.
Each and every isolated sound beyond the Sub-Bass is like a sliver of light in the all consuming darkness that slips away, or even like the sensation of small cuts of steel on flesh. The sounds range from soothing to the mind, to mind crushingly terrifying on a level that to new listeners is guaranteed un-felt before. But to experienced dark ambient listeners, the horror is all too familiar, and because of this, all the more horrifying and potent. Thus making Cold Summer a fantastically terrifying trip through the mind that can be both enjoyed, and feared, by listeners of all kinds, over and over again.
The Beginning track (and my favorite track) "Slow Fall Inward" starts the listener off on their journey through wicked and broken soundscapes with a slow and gradual fall inwards toward madness and fear, covered by the sensation of sanity peeling away like paint from a wall. It may also be stated that this "wall" is much like the metaphorical wall that was displayed in Pink Floyd's "The Wall". The wall itself represents the purest isolation and fear. But this time, instead of "tearing down the wall", you will find yourself building 4 walls, no door, putting a roof on it, and sitting in the corner for the remainder of the album. During this time you may find yourself thinking deeply upon what exactly it is you are hearing and feeling. When the album is over and all is complete, you may afterwards begin to feel that life seems so much safer and clearer. After listening to this album for the first time, that is exactly how I felt.
Out of 5, I would rate "Cold Summer" a full 5 stars. The album hits the listener in sensitive places that never seem to be explored or delved upon without guidance. This album, Cold Summer, as well as many other Lull albums, is just the right kind of guide into those places in your mind.
Click here for a link to "Slow Fall Inward"