Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Gazelle Twin - Unflesh

Gazelle Twin
Unflesh
22 September 2014
Last Gang
 
4.5 stars out of 5
 
 
British composer Elizabeth Bernholz records harsh electronic music under the name Gazelle Twin, Unflesh being her second LP. The former medical student deals with themes of the human body, whether as a source of pain, anxiety, or grief. Bernholz manipulates her voice through various production effects, but these only enhance her emotive power, never obscure it. Somewhere between Pharmakon and Crystal Castles, the music of Unflesh is part techno, part industrial, but post-genre in both cases in that it’s the music that is created to serve the purpose of each unique song, rather than the songs being constructed out of various clichés of these genres.
 
In her more straight-forward compositions, like “Anti Body,” Bernholz shows a knack for using the pop song structure to build tracks that are simultaneously catchy and attractive yet creepy and unsettling. At other moments, such as “Premonition,” she is gentler, but still charged with fear and anxiety, recalling the tenser moments of Hundred Waters. The closer, “Still Life,” is a slow but relentless industrial voyage into the harrowing psychology of a miscarriage. Bernholz doesn’t shy away from discussing the open wounds of sorrow and anguish; indeed, her music thrives on it. One of the most vital records of the year.
 
reviewed by Richard Krueger

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