Revival of the Shittest
(The Social Registry)
The Wire, 2004
by Simon Reynolds
Probably the most peculiar band to emerge from the ferment of out-rock activity inNew York
these past few years, Gang Gang Dance are a disconcerting live experience. Of
the two shows I’ve caught, the first was fairly excruciating and the second was
sublimely odd. Half the enjoyment, at least for over-acculturated hipster
types, is trying to get a handle on where the band are coming from. You might
momentarily flash on Can’s “Peking O”, The Sugarcubes’ “Birthday”, Attic Tapes-era Cabaret Voltaire, The Raincoats’ Odyshape, or forgotten downtown New York outfits from the Eighties
like Saqqara Dogs and Hugo Largo, only to have the reference point confounded
within 30 seconds as the group move back into untaggable territory. Gang Gang
Dance’s music is like a myriad-faceted polyhedron. As it gyrates before your
ears, different aspects flash into focus: No Wave, prog rock, drill’n’bass,
psychedelia, glitch, assorted world musics, and more. But there’s always a
feeling that the music is an entity, animated
by some kind of primal intent, as opposed to being the byproduct of eclecticism
and aesthetic flip-floppery.
by Simon Reynolds
Probably the most peculiar band to emerge from the ferment of out-rock activity in
Coming only a few months after their self-titled album on
Fusetron, Revival of the Shittest is
a vinyl rerelease of the group’s sort-of-debut, which originally came out in
the autumn of 2003 in an edition of one hundred CDRs. Pulled together from live tapes, studio out-takes and rehearsals recorded on a
boom-box, the six untitled tracks capture moments in the protean early life of the band. The first thing that grabs, or gouges,
your ears is singer Liz Bougatsos. It’s hard (at least for someone with my
limited grasp of technical terminology)
to pinpoint precisely what she’s doing with her pipes--singing microtonal
scales inspired by Middle Eastern music, perhaps? On Track 6, she emits what can only be
described as a muezzin miaouw, while elsewhere there’s often a kind of 4th
World/Ethnological Forgery aspect to both her vocals and the group’s music that
suggests a sort of defective Dead Can Dance. Sometimes she seems to be simply
singing every note as sharp as possible. Whatever the technique involved, the
end result ain’t exactly pleasant--indeed, her ululations have a
set-your-teeth-on-edge quality, like vinegar for the ears. But there is
something queerly captivating about the way Bougatsos weaves around the
strange, sidling groove created by her bandmates Brian DeGraw, Josh Diamon and
Tim Dewitt.
Seemingly a blend of drum sticks on electronic pads,
hand-percussion, and digital programming, Gang Gang Dance’s beats have clearly assimilated
the bent rhythmic logic of electronic
music in the post-jungle era. Heavily effected (often using reverb and delay),
the drums generate a florid textural undergrowth redolent at various points of 4 Hero, Arthur Russell, and Ryuichi
Sakomoto’s B-2 Unit. Needling guitars
and glittering keyboards, often processed so that it’s hard to tell which is
which, exacerbate the chromatic density. Writhing with garish detail, Track 5
feels like you’re plunging headfirst into a Mandelbrot whose patterns aren’t
curvaceous but geometric-- endlessly involuting cogs and spindles, the acid
trip of a clock-maker surreptitiously dosed at work. On tracks like this, Gang
Gang Dance music has a quality of deranged ornamentalism (think pagodas,
mosques, but also coral reefs and jellyfish flotilla) pitched somewhere between
exquisite and grotesque. A beautiful
horror unfurls--folds and fronds, filigree and arabesque-that reminds me of Henri
Michaux’s maniacally exact accounts of his mescalin experiences in Miserable Miracle.
At 31 minutes, Revival
of the Shittest is just long enough--anymore and you’d be worn out by its
poly-tendrilled density. At the same time, it’s this very quality of TOO
MUCH-ness that makes Gang Gang Dance so compelling.
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