Archive for the 'ADULT.' Category

Nervousness, anxiety and decampment

Just when I’d begun to worry that they’d beheaded themselves like they did Sam Consiglio, the Detroit noise-punk duo ADULT. (beloved here at Res for the way they’ve eschewed any sort of electronic pop trend while continuing to hammer out literate, dark, anxiously jittery tech-punk) release what can only be described as the best news for lovers of the uncomfortable and disconcerting ever: ADULT. have moved into film.

From an email update (also posted at the ADULT. homepage) today:

Part I
ADULT. will be premiering their new silent-experimental-short

-horror film DECAMPMENT May 9, 2008 at 7:00pm and 8:30pm at the Detroit Institute of Arts accompanied by their own peculiar electronic horror music especially scored for the film. DECAMPMENT was written, produced and directed by ADULT. in early 2008 and follows a women’s transmigration from her “normal” life into a new society of deceit. Filmed entirely in Michigan, DECAMPMENT explores ADULT.’s obsession with an often overlooked and distinctive aesthetic that they call “midwestern horror”. The all new soundtrack will be performed live by ADULT. during the screening of the film and will be a mutation of instrumental film music and more ADULT.-like irregularities.

 

But wait…there’s more:

 

PART II
ADULT. will be releasing their first new release in over a year. The DECAMPMENT TRILOGY is an extremely limited 7″ series to be released on ERSATZ AUDIO. Three 7″s -each strictly limited to 100 copies- will tell the story of DECAMPMENT through music, lyrics and photographs. Each hand numbered 7″ will come in a full color jacket along with a limited 16″ x 20″ photographic print from Nicola Kuperus signed and numbered. Collect the entire 7″ trilogy to piece together the narrative of DECAMPMENT, plus own the limited edition 7″s and the Kuperus Triptych available ONLY through the ADULT. website. One 7″ will be released each month starting May 13th. More info coming soon concerning this project.

If you’re unfamiliar with the gorgeous(ly unsettling) artistic/photographic work of Nicola Kuperus, you need only tour through her online album at the ADULT. site.


This news makes requisite the (long-overdue) posting of my favorite ADULT. song (barely edging out “Disappoint The Youth”), from 2006’s Why Bother?:

ADULT.: You Don’t Worry Enough

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And now, begin making plans for Detroit. And take me. If I don’t get to witness this merge of ADULT. nausea-noise on screen, well, in the words of Nicola herself, I’m just suggesting that something undesirable is likely to happen.





Cause Shari Vari’s really it

So all the kids are, apparently, going crazy over any and everything that Strut Records has thrown onto their upcoming Disco Not Disco compilation.

Among the highlights: A Number Of Names’ beyond-classic “Shari Vari”, a Detroit slab of hotness that, inevitably, found an Electrocla$$$$$h-in resurrection (not undeserved, mind you); with its over-stoic, European-esque vocal delivery and the dark, slicing synth undercurrent, “Shari Vari” has long been a gem just laying in wait for generations of various phases of electronic music to find it.

Now, though, with folks like JUSTICE having not just removed the dance music prejudice but pushed the whole genre into the fore-front of popular music, it’s about time the phenomenal no-wave of Detroit, New York and Berlin found its way back to the top.

A Number of Names: Shari Vari

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A Number Of Names vaguely-gothic, vaguely-disco, kinda-tech all-in-all confusing, befuddling and entrancing original.


A Number Of Names: Shari Vari (ADULT. fembot mix)

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The amount which I adore the freakish, electronic massacre that is Adam and Nicola of ADULT. is belabored. The greatness with which they handled this, a re-take of the original “Shari Vari”, isn’t. In fact, I daresay it’s my favorite version out of the billions done in appreciation of the song, but it oft gets passed over (in the same way ADULT. themselves too often get passed over). If you need colder, more frozen, more removed-this is it.

Educate yourself-check the full Shari Vari remix 12′ at Boomkat.





How to feel worse: on ADULT. live

There are two camps of those who attend a performance made up of the claustrophobic neo no-wave electropunk composed, arranged and produced by Nicola Kuperus and Adam Lee Miller. The first group are those who are only familiar with early Resuscitation-era ADULT., from when they were sterile and sounding remotely of Berlin (and, fortunately, I mean the city and not the band). The second are those to whom the band ADULT. is entirely unfamiliar.

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It’s easier in a live setting for ADULT. to win over the second group, as their current sound is more crushed Ritalin mixed with Adderall and bloodletting than the cold muted white IKEA electro toned that formerly trademarked their 12” of dance-floor apathy, most notably and memorably the anti-communication ode “Hand To Phone”. It’s that song that made them and that song that earned them both their place in “This Is Electroclash” history and parody-if you don’t believe me, check out Kevin Blechdom’s awesome in-joke “Always Frank”, which nails, to the blank-eyed head-turn and snarl, the early sound of ADULT.

Kevin Blechdom: Always Frank

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Since their second actual compact disc release, Anxiety Always, Adam and Nicola have had a job fit for graduate Marketing student in terms of re-establishing their mission statement, their idea, their ADULT. brand. It’s been through no lack of their own efforts-from the mathy drone of Gimmie Trouble to the ungodly paranoid fusion of rave and noise that is Why Bother?, this is obviously not your Winter Music Conference ADULT. Most, however, have stepped away from the table, mistakenly labeling the newer ADULT. output as something less than what they fell in love with.

It’s in their live show that ADULT. take this misconception, hold it up to blinding red and yellow strobe lighting, and shred it to bloody, pulpy bits. The duo each have their parts to play in this Theatre De Anxiety-Adam, the barely moving, nearly-invisible behind-the scenes orchestrator, with his bass slung low and deep, and Nicola the worst nightmare torrent of moaning, shrieking and in-your-face aggression, lit from below and behind as though a walking ad for proof that scurvy leads to schizophrenia.

The Why Bother? Tour, at least its one-night stop in Atlanta (with a crowd somewhere between the capacity crowd Atlanta date and the 10-person plus Chan “Cat Power” Marshall attendance of the Athens show from 2005), is, as is the titular album release, the perfect amalgam of all ADULT. that has come before. Fittingly, they completely ignore both D.U.M.E. and Gimmie Trouble songs all together-both albums were written and recorded with perma-not third member Sam Consiglio of Tamion 12”, and their absence both allows a silent acknowledgment of his presence while allocating set-space for songs neglected last time ‘round. During a conversation with Consiglio before the Atlanta “Gimmie Trouble” show, he asked me if I wanted to hear anything specific that night. When I requested Anxiety Always staples “Shake Your Head” and “Kick In The Shins” he shook his head sadly. “Can’t play ‘em, didn’t bring the equipment for that programming”, he told me. This time, laptop-possessing, gear-heavy and stripped of moving parts (other than the banshee whirlwind that is Kuperus’ stage presence), those two songs rail out of Nicola and Adam in a neo-punk fashion, sped up, stripped of glamor and razor-sharp. Resuscitation’s “Minors at Nite” is less mournful and now spiteful, and the new songs, specifically the hardcore head-fuck “I Feel Worse When I’m With You”, became essentially unbearable.

All in all, it’s absolutely amazing, and an experience in having one’s internal panic button pushed to collapse.

It’s weird to be a devoted, up-to-date fan of this stuff, though, because there are inevitable those in the audience who are there for the opening band, and who scream things like “play a song about KRISTIIIN WOOOHOOO” and then point to their sequined halter-top wearing friend. From the stage, though, this goes ignored. However, the standard response when the request comes (as it always does) for “Hand To Phone” is to simply turn the fucking noise up. I spent about fifteen minutes in Athens attempting to convince Nicola to attempt a stripped-down, sped-up, reconstructed version of the piece of her own work she loathes most, in a fashion similar in concept to Blind Melon’s SNL version of “No Rain” (though minus the patchouli, hopefully). That hasn’t happened, to my knowledge, and on this night, “Plagued By Fear” kills that fuss.

It’s that very, very evident disdain, held by Nicola (and Adam also, I assume) for all things early in the maturation of ADULT. that caused my jaw to drop when the closing double-hit medly (a now-tradition of ADULT. shows) consisted of early, forgotten moments-their “telephone game” 12” “Don’t You Stop” and “Nite Life”, a long-lost single on Ghostly’s Disco Nouveau compilation. They’re bitter, they’re pointed, and, when Nicola marches into the crowd like, to borrow wording from R. Kelly, “a ghost from the dead” and begins a half-taunt dance with the crowd, it’s simultaneously creepy and amazing.

This is a band that knows how to push a crowd against the music, against themselves, and into a frenzied, paranoid fit of disbelief and excitement. Unfortunately, those who could be won over from expecting the sound of particleboard hitting a tin toaster in 4/4 time would never give the more-grown ADULT. the time of day. As such, it’s best to view this as an entirely new band, a no-wave neo-proto-post-punk electronic drone duo, one made of angst, noise, and that beloved anxiety. It’s an unwieldy, uncomfortable label, but then the music of ADULT. is nothing if not uncomfortable.

ADULT.: Don’t You Stop

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ADULT.: Nite Life

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Our review of Why Bother?

ADULT. online





Anxious Inclination

I keep on hearing all this stuff about Justice. All this stuff, really, about all this hot, twisted electronic music coming out of various camps in France (or Switzerland, or New York-same thing, right?).

I’ve listened to the Klaxons, I’ve listened to Justice, I listened to the god-awful Teddy Bears album that was supposed to change the freaking world last year, and I don’t hear what everyone else hears-the anxious, jerky, nervous energy that’s both heart-accelerating and heart-stopping.

And then, just in time to cause my heart rate to accelerate to a dangerous high and push me to a knees-to-chest panic attack in the best way possible, there’s a new ADULT. album.

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Make no mistake- ADULT., the husband and wife team of Nicole Kuperus and Adam Lee Miller remains one of the most cutting-edge bands in existence right now, but in recent years (read as: since 2005’s spitsnarl Gimmie Trouble) they’ve pushed the limits of what eviscerating, confrontational punk mixed with the most atonal, harshest electronic sounds can do. And, with Why Bother?, they’ve created a No-Rave masterpiece (and again, accompanied by the most fun-to-read press sheet I’ll see this year).

In ADULT.’s mind, this is a folk record. An album discussing the common experience. In the case of ADULT., that common experience is as it’s always been-the extreme social anxiety and phobia from day-to-day interaction. However, if the folk you’re thinking of is the soothing, coffee-house and atlas sound of Sufjan, or the hipster acoustic-freak of Joanna Newsom or Devendra Beardhart, erm, Banhart, Why Bother will sound like a beautiful, brilliant atonal crush of a sonic palette-and that’s exactly what it is. It’s a record that will either send you running towards or away from the speakers, to bury your head in safety or to bury your head in the sound.

Prior to this album, there’s always been a sense of melody accompanying even the harshest thrashes of ADULT.-now, however, in place of the jerky-yet-hummable “In My Nerves” (from Gimmie Trouble) is the ferocious, stormy hardcore rave meets hardcore punk anti-love letter “I Feel Worse When I’m With You”. Similar sentiments are echoed on the throat-shredding “I’m Inclined To Vomit”, which sees Nicola Kuperus upping her vocal ante-last record she started singing, this album she begins fucking killing. There’s a homage to their Crass-esque roots in the muddled, confrontational vocals of “You Don’t Worry Enough”, but there’s also an off-kilter, jerky no-wave snap that’s enough to break the hips and spine of any passerby (if, that is, they aren’t destroyed).

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With the departure of the “permanent/not permanent” Gimmie Trouble-era third member, Tamion 12” bassist Sam Consiglio, ADULT. have behind the earthly trappings of any real instruments, instead beating the fuck out of their Moogs and drum machines until they become the sound of Paxil withdrawal. All in all, Why Bother? has, finally, the perfect marriage of sound and idea, intensity and echo (see the instrumental “Importance of Being Folk” compositions that bookend the album), insanity and venom that Adam and Nicole have always reached for-this time, however, they’ve pushed their electronics to the limit, and not in that obnoxious “robots-on-parade” bullshit way that heralded the Electroclash scene. No, ADULT. have now positioned themselves as the poster-children for the shirt-and-tie social-phobic electronic punk folkster army, and there’s no longer any turning back.. Not only are ADULT. your favorite punk band, they just killed your favorite folk band.

ADULT.:Inclined To Vomit

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From Why Bother?-a ripping freak-out of an ode to social nausea, and one of the most fierce things ADULT.’ve ever done.

ADULT.: Don’t Talk (Redux)

A D.U.M.E. reworking of one of ADULT.’s oldest tracks-it’s the moment, at the end, when an army of Nicolas close in, insisting “don’t talk, just listen”, that this song reaches new heights of paranoia.

On Why Bother?, ADULT. return to making gloriously harsh instrumental tracks. This, the first Why Bother? vid, collects all three parts of “Importance of Being Folk” into one story, directed by Adam and Nicola themselves.

Ah, the tragecomic not-lovestory that is “I Feel Worse When I’m With You”, again directed by ADULT.

Buy Why Bother? at Thrill Jockey

ADULT. online