/////////////////RECENT
PRESS.........
::Accolades for BRG004 MGR vs. Xela /
Barge Split Series Vol. I::
////MUSIQUE
MACHINE
This split release, available only on LP and download, presents
a couple of unique performers who are quite dissimilar to one another
in approach. Barge Recordings are touting this as the first in
a series of unlikely pairings, and they're off to a good start.
MGR stands for the Mustard Gas and Roses, a name drawn from Vonnegut's
Slaughterhouse Five. Mike Gallagher, chiefly known for his involvement
in the art metal unit Isis, is the sole proprietor of said acronym.
For my money, it's the better album side by a shade; The single
piece is a sixteen minute-plus piece known as Shipping Gold. It
starts off with some seemingly benign minor key electric ambient
guitar, which in steps is accented with finger-picked acoustic
and slide notes. It takes about half of its length before you realise
that the bending, echo laden guitar tones are slowly transforming
into an abstract and nightmarish dreamworld. It's a patiently tempered
work whose simplicity and single-mindedness is laudable. Yet at
the same time, the technical complexity and tasteful layering of
the various guitar sounds grants it worthy of repeated experiences.
The Xela side is an entirely different cup of tea; The title Calling
for Vanished Faces (a name shared by a Current 93 compilation)
is based on a prose poem by Thomas de Quincy, an English author
who was a direct influence to Baudelaire and Poe, among many others.
Xela is John Twells, this time assisted by drummer Jed Binderman
of Heavy Winged. The Xela side is twenty three and a half minutes
of music loaded with sounds and ideas. Mr. Twells seems intent
on telling a story with these sounds. There are choral "early
music" vocals, along with electronic washes, buzzes, guitar
feedback, backward loops and, of course, drum rolls and accents.
The piece is very active for the first half or so, then it becomes
mellow and relaxed, albeit with a tinge of sadness, accented by
the slight creepiness of the choral vocals which return in subdued
form. It's a complex and interesting piece, completing a fine album
which is well worth seeking out.
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////AQUARIUS
RECORDS
This long in the works split finally sees the light of day. Two
aQ faves together on one super limited lp. MGR, the solo project
of Mike Gallagher from the mighty Isis, and Xela, the project of
John Twells, who also runs the kick ass Type label.
We've yet to get around to reviewing the new MGR full length, but
this track is definitely whetting our appetite. Simple finger picked
guitar over, shimmering streaks of sound, layers of glimmering
gossamer whir, loping and laid back, eventually some BIG guitar
comes in, huge crashing chords, allowed to ring out and slowly
fade away, the notes pulsing and beating against each other, building
to an epic coda, all majestic and intense, like a stripped down
Isis, the original guitar slipping into the ether, the huge chords
crashing further and further apart, eventually stopping all together,
leaving murky blurs of guitar cacophony, smoothed into dense swells,
still intense and almost heavy, but more blurred and washed out,
the notes and chords and harmonics swirling in a roiling sonic
sea.
The Xela track begins with a squall of feedback and squiggly distorted
electronics, harsh and jagged, eventually drums surface, the electronics
are reigned in a bit, angelic voices drift in, everything bathed
in some ethereal shimmer, the drums stumble and skitter, cymbals
crash and sizzle, the electronics flit and flutter like clouds
of lightning bugs, the sound gradually grows heavier and more dense,
a low end gathering beneath the surface, the sound is almost like
some free noise Arvo Part, haunting and choral, but those electronics
continue to squelch and glitch, the drums skittering chaotically,
the vocals wreathed in effects that turn them into shadowy blurs,
the track becoming blurrier by the minute, more tranquil, the vocals
smeared into glistening chords, the whole track like the soundtrack
to staring into a dying sun. Really amazing, and unlike anything
we've heard from Xela before.
SUPER LIMITED! ONLY 350 COPIES!!! All hand screened with some seriously
creepy cover art. We only got 30 copies, and will not be able to
get more!
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////DELUSIONS
OF ADEQUACY
Here's one you might've overlooked. Released on the young (founded
in 2005) but unquestionably respectable Barge Recordings, this
limited LP (also available as a quality digital download) devotes
a side each to Isis guitarist Mike Gallagher's MGR (Mustard Gas
and Roses, a Slaughterhouse Five reference) and Xela, the project
of an individual named John Twells.
For those familiar only with Gallagher through his pummeling work
with Isis, "Shipping Gold" may provide a bit of a head-turn.
Though easy-listening by no standard, the composition is more of
an exercise in subtle tension than the aural aggression one may
anticipate. And anticipation settles as the overriding sentiment
here as electric and acoustic guitars find themselves layered and
appropriated into deliberative drones, the tune's movement glacial
and fluid. From "Shipping Gold"'s core emanates a thorough
melancholy, though you're granted space to breath not always present
in such low-spirited post-metal dirges. It's heavy, but with a
side of transcendence.
Even more elevating, at times, is the reverse side, Xela's "Calling
for Vanished Faces." Though beginning with a sound akin to
a fax machine gone haywire, Twells's therapeutic noise morphs over
the course of the composition and begins to sound like a choir
of vocoded angels, his lush sound constructions a heavenly foil
to MGR's earthiness. These lush electronic ruminations find a worthy
ally in the drumming of collaborator Jed Binderman, member of the
avant-metal act Heavy Winged. "Calling for Vanished Faces" accounts
for more than 20 minutes, and it's worth every second attentively
sacrificed.
What're you waiting for? Experience this release!
-Jacob Price
05/15/08
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////TEXTURA
MGR / Xela: Shipping Gold / Calling for Vanished Faces
Barge Recordings
Barge Recordings is proving itself to be rather guitar-centric
as its catalogue grows, with its follow-up to Geoff Mullen's Armory
Radio a split release from MGR (an acronym of Mustard Gas and Roses
adopted by Isis axe-smith Mike Gallagher) and Xela (Type Records'
head John Twells) that's available in vinyl and digital download
formats. Not that there's anything wrong with that, of course,
especially when the results are as fully-developed and epic as
the two pieces on display here.
MGR's sixteen-minute “Shipping Gold” weaves acoustic
picking and haunted electric streams into a multi-layered, dread-filled
nightscape. Gallagher sets a slow and measured course throughout,
with acoustic patterns laying a firm foundation that offsets the
anguished shudders and molten slabs detonating around them. Massed
guitars stab the gloom and leave billowing trails of black smoke
in their wake until the front-line guitars morph into a vortex
of charred chords.
Anyone looking for the placid Xela of Tangled Wool won't find
him anywhere near “Calling For Vanished Faces,” an
incinerating, twenty-three-minute meltdown of guitar feedback and
distortion. Twells is joined by drummer Jed Bindeman (Heavy Winged),
who improvises with abandon in tandem with the guitar playing.
The maelstrom of sound conjured by the two is augmented by choir-like
vocal harmonies that rain down upon the two throughout the epic.
It's an awesome piece and the intensity level never flags—Twells'
playing often assumes the form of a thunderous atmospheric presence
hovering over the blurry vocal wail and Bindeman's frenetic attack—though
the storm does turn slightly less violent in the closing moments.
The take-no-prisoners spirit exemplified by this first volume in
the split series makes one looks forward with anticipation to future
installments.
May 2008
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////STEREOGUM
Mike Gallagher, who plays guitar in Isis, is also productive in
his solo form, MGR. He has three full lengths to the MGR name,
but my favorite of his works is a split with Xela, simply titled
after each band's contributions. Gallagher's is "Shipping
Gold." This is an excerpt from the 16-minute piece.
MGR - "Shipping Gold (Edit)" (MP3) (*non active...see
original article)
MGR comes from Slaughter House Five ... "mustard gas and
roses."
Xela, the excellent project of John Twells, who's the co-owner
of Type in the UK (Svarte Greiner, Grouper, the North Sea, Sylvain
Chauveau, Goldmund, etc), is MGR's neighbor on the release. Continuing
with the textual thing, the song's title ("Calling For Vanished
Faces") comes from a Thomas de Quincy prose poem (Google the
phrase...). Musically, the drums here are played by Jed Brindeman
of Heavy Winged. The piece runs to a dizzying 23 minutes in its
non-excerpted entirety.
Xela - "Calling For Vanished Faces (Edit)" (MP3) (*non
active...see original article)
If you liked that piece, I highly recommend the last Xela album
The Dead Sea. Or, at least listen to this waterlogged track from
it. The MGR/Xela split's available as a vinyl LP or digital download
via Barge.
- From Outsiders: Vol 11
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////BOOMKAT
If the sleeve is anything to go by,
our John is currently restyling himself as the 'strawberry blonde'
George Michael of noise (circa 'Jesus To A Child'), and accordingly,
the music takes on a wholly more digestible aesthetic to the decayed,
black metal influenced sounds that populated the recent cassette
release on Digitalis. Heck, John's even restored a bit of low frequency
presence since we last heard from him, resulting in a far more
contoured, more evenly proportioned assault on the ears. The primitive
analogue synth oscillations set the tone early on, underscoring
the deluge of scuzz with a biting, penetrative edge, and some suggestion
of an underlying contrapuntal sheen to offset all that muck. Quite
unexpectedly, John cleans up his act altogether and introduces
a network of harmonised, falsetto vocal layers, sailing through
a euphoric freetime drum solo and disruptive synth tones only to
arrive at something that sounds perversely ecclesiastical. This
might well be the most unreservedly pretty din John's ever made
- the escalating grandeur of the piece is definitely something
new in the Xela repertoire, and that contrast between the cool,
evenness of the vocal and the tumultuous backdrop works a treat.
Isis guitarist Mike Gallagher assumes his MGR moniker on the flipside,
laying down spooked post-metal textures on the darkly atmospheric
'Shipping Gold', setting crunched up guitar drones against brooding
fingerpicking and shards of feedback. It takes a while before the
piece reaches that point however, and the build-up is half the
fun, pensively climbing towards a fearsome, monolithic crescendo.
MGR's acoustic guitar lines might be likened to one of the clean,
arpeggiated passages you'd hear on a Metallica album now and then
(there's definitely a 'Nothing Else Matters' feel to a lot of this)
but when Gallagher steps on the gas (or more pertinently, his distortion
pedal) there's a far more contemporary, far gloomier kind of heaviness
to his sound. Two great sides, one hilarious sleeve. You know what
to do...
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////THE
METAL MINUTE
I'll be honest; when I first got into the music critiquing game,
one of the vibes I was having troubling clicking with was coldwave.
So much of what I was initially subjected to in the deep-buried
noise underground that fell under the banner of coldwave ranged
from 20 minutes of regurgitated echo to sadomasochistic whipping
and screaming sounds (think of Stallagh) to a full hour of radio
static (yes, radio static) submitted by a Ukrainian artist that
challenged his listeners to find their own concrete conclusions
amidst the blatantly abstract.
Rubbish to a lot of it, I thought back then, but over the years
I've fallen in love with the sounds of Isis, Pelican, Long Distance
Calling and Rosetta and certainly between the heavy-handed sculpturing
process of these groups there's allotments for boundary-stretching
coldwave. When done correctly, I get it now, so long as the artist
sees a tasteful point in which to let go of the hollow din and
bridge it to something more tactile.
Of course, the point of a large portion of coldwave is to submit
yourself to the unnerving din to the latitude it creates its own
dark aesthetic, and its inspiration can be traced back to the more
psychedelic overtones of Pink Floyd as well as Wendy Carlos' harrowing--and
sometimes cathartic--synth gloom of "Timesteps" from
A Clockwork Orange, not to mention her terrifying opening theme.
Put yourself into this mindframe as Isis' Mike Gallagher pairs
off with England's John Twells in this split release of metallic
coldwave under their creative alter egos, MGR and Xela respectively.
While the intial spin of Shipping Gold / Calling For Vanished Faces
to ears unfamiliar with this style of canal-punishing ersatz (particularly
Xela's shrill machina-gone-berserk sound of Calling For Vanished
Faces) is going to be a serious challenge, a second listening just
might reveal something you didn't catch on the first go-round.
For Mike Gallagher, his 16-minute Shipping Gold is a dexterously-conceived
dirge mantra that, like his home band Isis, layers itself as it
explores the central ohm of madness that grows in intensity, so
much the objective of the composition is the intensity itself.
Go back to A Clockwork Orange--particularly if you own the soundtrack--and
listen to Wendy Carlos's figurative layers that notch and build
all the way to explosive aural cadence, and here seems to be the
mindframe of Gallagher with Shipping Gold. Initially sounding like
an Isis remix, he abandons cohesion and drifts into a powerful
death blare that possesses grandeur amidst its inherent trepidation.
John Twells, on the other hand, is more interested in creating
chaos atop his central shriek tone, so much that after he scrapes
your ears with a high-pitched bleepfest, he sends Calling For Vanished
Faces into an erratic sequence of deliberately off-kilter drum
rolls, amplified feedback, sequencer tweaks and even stray saxophone
blats that mystifyingly slide into something of aquatic soothingness.
The track becomes a literal trance until Twells rudely snaps you
out of it with repeat barrages of noise flotsam, all in the apparent
interest of divulging beauty and ugliness in the context of tonal
sound art.
By no means is this split album easy to consume. Chances are more
than not you're going to scream bloody murder like Malcolm McDowell
with his pupils yanked open, forced to watch rape and brutality
with the more roughneck portions of "Timesteps" assisting
his enforced mania. When you conjure up that image, then perhaps
you can identify an inherent inspiration to this pair of mutated
noise collisions. Of course, in John Twells' case, the cult horror
film Suspiria has a lot to do with his creative process, which
explains quite a bit of where he's coming from.
Dig in if you dare...
Rating: ***1/2
Posted by Ray Van Horn, Jr
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////NOTHING
AT ALL.NET
Title: MGR/Xela - Split
Label: Barge Recordings
Cataloge No: BRG004
Type: LP
Reviewer: Rich
Date: 13, March, 2008
I'm really starting to love Barge Recordings, somehow every release
so far (this is their fourth, count em) has been a stunner, from
their first compilation to this, their first split release. This
one is MGR (aka Isis guitarist Mike Gallagher) vs Xela (John Twells
of Type Records fame) and it's a great slab of ominous melodic
drone and experimental sound that again is a thrilling listen.
MGR kicks off proceedings with a 16 minute dark guitar piece which
is something relatively heavy for the label. It doesn't take long
for things to build to a dark and formidable assault of chainsaw
style guitar noise and overdriven guitar swells. All the while
a steady acoustic guitar base trundles along adding another layer
to this rich and fascinatingly dense piece.
Xela's side is much more awkward and in some ways quite a contrast
to the other. Starting off with a rash of scrambled static and
tape noise, slowly this disintegrates into wonderful vocal harmonies
and unexpected clattering percussion. Sounds fly from everywhere,
but not in a suffocating sludgy way, there is something beautiful
to it all and each time there is something new to this, the small
and precise little things. This doesn't get boring though, over
its 23 minutes new sounds come in and drop out, the distorted guitar
squeals and electronic buzzing feel perfect not ever taking over
the harmonies too much but not ever hiding in the background quietly.
Though through all this, there is nothing aggressive here, possibly
it is harrowing but then the more you listen the more rewarding
it becomes. Both sides beautifully compliment each other on this
release. Neither is better or worse than the other which is often
the case with split releases. And apparently the vinyl is going
to be a limited pressing in a lovely screen printed jacket. Once
again, I'm impressed.
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////EARLABS
Not so long ago I got a promo cd in the mailbox from a, to me,
new label called Barge Recordings. On the release is music by the
musicians MGR & Xela that I have been following for quite a
while now. The first thing that came to mind was “Hmm, a
cd as medium. That’s so wrong for this music; this can’t
be right at all”. And as if they had been listening to me
at Barge Recordings on further reading I noticed the word vinyl
on the whole package. Phew, luckily for all of us this music will
officially be released on a nice slice of vinyl.
With that being of chest now let’s get on to the more important
things.
This release is the first in a series of split albums on Barge
Recordings and for this they asked the musicians MGR and Xela.
Side A is for Mike Gallagher, guitarist in the metal band ISIS
and solo active as MGR. So far he has released 3 full-length albums
under the name MGR. For this split he has created the track Shipping
Gold.
Inspired by the Dresden massacre during World War II and the book
Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut, that deals with this massacre,
MGR (Mustard Gas & Roses) makes dark ambient music with post-rock
influences.
Shipping Gold is no different in theme than his previous albums,
but shows a different approach to the music. Where on albums like
Nova Lux and Wavering On The Cresting Heft the music is build around
drones with guitars in the background swelling up and fading out
not much different as in Post-Rock music, here the use of guitar
is much more prominent. In such a way that the guitar melodies
have move to the front and the soundscapes have moved to the background
adding subtle changes to the music that makes it less noticeable,
but much more interesting to listen to. By this approach the music
tends more to melancholy than depression as on his previous albums.
After 6 minutes the music becomes louder and distortion takes over
the guitar sound. The tension is build and a massive wall of sound
overruns everything. But in the end Gallagher keeps everything
in control and guides us through the dark.
A great piece of harmony, melody, dissonance and noise in one and
a good development in style.
Side B is for the young British musician John Twells who runs
the label Type Records and performs music as Xela. In 2002 the
publishing career of Xela started with an mp3 release on Monotonik,
but fast he grew out of the mp3 scene and got his first release
For Frosty Mornings And Summer Nights out on Neo Ouija which is
an album full with lush beats and ambient soundscapes, seen as
a classic within the IDM scene.
Now 6 years later Xela has completely changed in music style. The
only remnant from earlier days is his ongoing inspiration he gets
from the world Italian horror and cinema in general.
For Calling For Vanished Faces there is an indirect inspiration
through the poem Levana and Our Ladies Of Sorrow by Thomas de Quincy
which inspired Dario Argento to make the film Suspiria.
For his mission of fear and despair this time Xela does not work
alone, but is supported by Jed Bindeman (from Heavy Winged) on
drums.
Music wise this brings a really interesting combination. Twells
creates some gifted ethereal soundscapes from voices, guitar feedback
and effects that are serene and haunting in the same time. While
on the other spectrum Bindeman goes completely wild on his drums
improvising as if the devil is on his tail.
The result turns out as a great thing that grows on you with every
listen. Maybe it is nothing similar to Xela his old work, but still
a interesting listen and recommended.
For those unfamiliar with the development Xela has gone through
the past 6 years the combination of MGR and Xela might seem crazy
but I must admit that it does work very well. After playing this
release on cdr a few times I could do only one thing and that was
ordering the real deal. I can’t wait to play this album in
its proper medium. Leaves me to compliment Barge Recordings on
this excellent choice in combining these two people on one release.
A splendid release, go check it out.
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////THE
LOOP.CL
This is the first in a series of split LP’s released by
Brooklyn’s based Barge Recordings label.
In one side comes MGR aka well-known ISIS guitarist Mike Gallagher
with ‘Shipping Gold’.
Gallagher plays both acoustic and electric guitar.
‘Shipping Gold’ stars very slowly with an acoustic
guitar chord together with a guitar distortion. The guitar seems
they are trapped in monotone like waiting to take a breath before
a new soundclash of pedals splashing sustained drones. Then the
atmosphere is full by drifting ambient guitar washes.
On the other side Xela’s ‘Calling For Vanished Faces’ starts
with a soundclash of digital noises but then the things calm down
with slow drumming by Jed Bindeman of New York/Portland avant-metal
band Heavy Winged and lament vocals.
In sum ‘Calling For Vanished Faces’ creates a beautiful
orchestra with harmonies and noise working at the same time.
This split really marks something fresh in the guitar noise scene.
www.bargerecordings.com
Guillermo Escudero
March 2008
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////THE
SOUND PROJECTOR
A split LP of guitar music is available
from Barge Recordings in Brooklyn NY. MGR VS XELA (BRG 004) has
been sent as a CDR but you can buy the LP or get a digital download
from the label website. MGR is Mike Gallagher, a guitarist from
the redoubtable Isis, and on Shipping Gold he presents 16 minutes
of extremely troubling post-post-avant metal guitar stylings played
in a relentlessly slow mode. Anguish-inducing frown-music at its
finest…XELA is John Twells from the UK, and his allotted
23 minutes are used to present Calling For Vanished Faces, a fascinating
construct of detailed sound-collage. Choirs of eerie voices float
around this quagmire of noise, competing for air with a mad jazz
drummer and waves of guitar feedback. In its way no less suffocating
than the MGR side, yet the angelic voices seem to offer some cause
for hope. Boy, I’d certainly like to get a vinyl of this
one…
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////////OTHER PRESS////
BRG001 : INNATURE : VARIOUS ARTISTS
BRG002 : THE
FUN YEARS : LIFE-SIZED PSYCHOSES
BRG003 : GEOFF
MULLEN : ARMORY RADIO
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