Cabaret Voltaire The Voice Of America Rar
Cabaret Voltaire - The Voice of America Pioneers of the industrial mouvement, Cabaret Voltaire was at the time playing noise with their synths and disturbing your senses. The music was not violent with the rythms, it was violent with the emotion, the emptiness, the electricity. Anemia Akibat Perdarahan Pdf. Find a Cabaret Voltaire - The Voice Of America first pressing or reissue. Complete your Cabaret Voltaire collection. Shop Vinyl and CDs. Tracklist: 1. The Voice of America / Damage Is Done 2. Partially Submerged 3. Kneel to the Boss 4. Premonition 5. This Is Entertainment 6.
Introduces itself with a Southern policeman delivering instructions to what could be a riot squad. Part of the instructions direct those offering security to a first aid van to obtain earplugs, 'so as to keep you from having a headache.' A little self-mocking humor? Some thinly veiled advice for the listener, perhaps? Probably both. Like, displays in various ways how noisy, abrasive, and unpleasant an album can be in the oft-used ten-song/40-minute format, providing the nag-nag-nag that does so well without the drag-drag-drag associated with a lot of electronic experimentalism.
Generally speaking, has more of an anchor than with its increased use of rhythm, whether it's from those rickety drum machines or actual drums. The sickly and sometimes demented drones of cacophony are twisted and doctored in new ways and make for more compelling listening.
In 'News From Nowhere,' it sounds as if recordings of dive-bombing war planes have been intertwined and distorted, which is only part of the thrill; there's a dubby rhythm that's equally anemic in the background. 'Premonition' is the most antagonistic moment, placing a number of electro-surges behind a deep, growling voice that can only be described as comic doom. On the closing 'Messages Received,' the structure is similar to that of 'Nag Nag Nag,' but all the assaultiveness of that song is wiped away and turned into a melancholy number, helped especially by an emotionally drained vocal turn.
Not as spectacular as what would follow, and not without its own set of thrills.