By Spencer Friedman
At once gorgeous and punishing, Occulting Disk, the new record from Deathprod is nothing short of astounding. It's been quite a number of years since the Norwegian electronic musician Helge Sten -- the man behind Deathprod, and core member of Supersilent -- graced us with a set of his otherworldly sounds. And here it is; we sit and listen, in awe.
At once gorgeous and punishing, Occulting Disk, the new record from Deathprod is nothing short of astounding. It's been quite a number of years since the Norwegian electronic musician Helge Sten -- the man behind Deathprod, and core member of Supersilent -- graced us with a set of his otherworldly sounds. And here it is; we sit and listen, in awe.
Otherworldly is in fact somewhat misleading, 
however. Sten's electronics, a collection of many elements which he 
refers to as "Audio Virus," possess simultaneously a synthetic sheen and
 an organic soul. This is music from and for the
heart, indisputably. It's no wonder that this particular project 
originates from a personal, existential place for Sten, encircling 
questions regarding a politically and spiritually destitute modern 
world. Specifically, Sten describes Occulting Disk as
an "anti-fascist ritual." To my ears, I can interpret this is two ways. 
For one, the music itself has a message. It is searing, purposeful and 
triumphant. There is obviously no text, but in this music I hear 
defiance and resistance, and I also hear real love.
It feels like quite a feet to impart, with clarity, messages and pointed
 meaning within obtuse, experimental, instrumental music, but Sten 
achieves this. 
A second reading though, is that this is music to inspire resistance,
 standing-up, humanity, compassion and love. And I think it succeeds in 
doing this in a number of ways. Sten's musical worlds are emotionally 
stirring, with
two clear modes of evocation. On one side, there are tracks like 
"OCCULTATION 3" and "OCCULTATION 7" that float through, hovering around a
 central drone or harmonic space, nearly quiet. These are pensive, 
deeply thoughtful moments. Places to ruminate. Moments
to consider what's around you and within you. To inspire introspection 
and meditation -- active though, definitely not passive.
This contemplative space is facilitated by the 
unique durational quality to Sten's compositions (just one of the 
several "atypical" qualities of his music). Sometimes pieces go on 
longer than you'd think, sometimes they end sooner.
Sometimes you think a piece is over but it's not quite. Other times a 
piece ends, only to start up again somewhere very similar with the next 
track. Often tracks start with a period of real quiet that makes you 
wonder if your stereo has turned off. They are
expertly crafted liminal environments. Don't check your watch while you 
listen, it's a much more rewarding experience to not know where you are.
 All of this amounts to a pull or strain at the otherwise space of serenity-- this,
of course, feels like what truth is. 
Then, unmistakably, there are tracks 
like opener "DISAPPEARANCE/REAPPEARANCE." If we're breaking the music on
 this record into two camps of existential inspiration, this song is 
firmly of the flip side of things that inspires
strong, assertive action! This one sounds like unknown nation's lost 
anthem. It's screaming, crying and speaking directly at someone or 
some-thing. The piece is a confounding marvel. It's made up of, 
essentially, two elements, each of which take their turns
stabbing through the mix. It all plays out like a strange conversation, 
with prodigious space between strong, forceful utterances. For a little 
over two minutes, it's a monologue of sorts -- "speaker one" casting out
 a cavernous belly squall, flanked by breaths
of silence. Eventually, speaker one is answered by "speaker two" -- a 
far away yet right in front of you foghorn. which sounds of course like a
 foghorn yet like no other foghorn I've heard. These two talk for about 
five more minutes, eventually collapsing atop
one another. It's quite something to be a spectator here. It feels like a
 private world you've just secretly happened upon...
And that's another thing about OCCULTING DISK. This
 music feels at the same time familiar, yet like nothing you've ever 
heard. The aforementioned feeling of happening upon a private world 
pervades the entire record. These pieces
feel like perfect, ready-made universes, as if they always existed, or 
that Deathprod summoned them out of our collective consciousness into 
physical, aural existence.
I realize I've not actually talked much about 
specifics musically, but in a way that makes sense because it's hard to 
put into words. A few more thoughts though: witness the peak of it all 
with the terrifying "BLACK TRANSIT OF JUPITER'S
THIRD SATELLITE," one of only two tracks not entitled in the numerical 
"OCCULTATION" series. This is over twelve minutes of body shaking 
horror, surely in the more confrontation oriented type of music on the 
record (see "DISAPPEARANCE/REAPPEARANCE" as
previously described, or "OCCULTATION 6"). Elsewhere, hear the wailing 
bliss on "OCCULTATION 1," a robust yet gentle anthem in it's own right. 
This one sets the tone for the rest of the numbered pieces that follow. 
"OCCULTATION 2" feels like a ringing out of
any detritus built up from what preceded, while "OCCULTATION 3" feels 
like the needed comedown/calm before the next storm. I could go on -- 
just listen to it.
This is a monumental work (it would have
 been atop my year end list had I gotten to it before January 1) that I 
worry will go woefully under-listened to. It's speaking truth to power, 
for one, and on top of that it's hard to
classify. It sits between improvisation, avant-garde, electronic music, 
etc, in a way that may prove hard for some to dive into. I fear that not
 only might this not find enough listeners from folks with ears 
accustomed to challenging music, but by those with
fully different musical taste. Though alienating and harsh sounding (at 
first glance), its my belief that there's an access point in this music 
for anyone. It's a vital document of and for this moment in time -- 
subversive and confrontational, but with a mind
for resilience and unity, and a vision for a world beyond the one we 
know.
 






 
 
 
 
 
 
 

1 comments:
Hi sorry, do not intend to piss on your parade, and with all due respect to Mr. Sten for all the inspiring work over the years...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jzY099ihULs&feature=emb_title
At its best it's a good sci-fi soundtrack that follows the trends of the last 15 years of sound design.
No real challenges, no real confrontations or whatsoever. Moreover, pretending that it's antifascist, inspiring resistance etc, is just another take from its press release that has nothing to do with real "resistance" as the whole dynamics of this release and the business behind (following appearances in high profile festivals and the attention from the press - which goes through certain agencies) is totally capitalist hence cannot be of resistance of any sort.
Again, I do respect Mr. Sten as he has been a big influence for my generation of professionals and hobbyists, as a producer, mastering engineer and musician, but this populist tags for the "alternative" mainstream is quite ridiculous.
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