Friday, March 8, 2013

Sleeping In Vilna - Why Waste Time [Ayler]

Sleeping In Vilna:
Dave Randall - guitar
Dirk Rothbrust - drums & percussion
Carol Robinson - clarinets & voice
Mike Ladd - voice and & synth

Ayler Records 2012




Sleeping In Vilna "Why Waste Time" is one of those recordings that caught me by surprise. Even no expectations whatsover can't prepare you for the music on this album. The cd juggles styles and moods without any regard for genres, musical labels or cohesity. 


The cd starts with "Let Nobody", after a few mysterious, eerie notes the band breaks into a simple punk rhythm with bass clarinet giving the push. As suddenly as it started, it stops, to wield the space for surreal and lyrical "Million Knots". Hard rock riff, and rock rap of "Entropy" (featuring some fantastic pecussion playing - light yet groovy). Melancholic, pensieve "Angels Crazy" soothes your senses with modest melody swaying delicately, based on a singular bass clarinet note. "Why Waste Time" circles, tense yet focuos, on a repetitive guitar chord figure while the "Past Chaser" let the tension out with shout out lyrcis and rhythmical, mechanical groove of screeches and wails. We're about a half into the cd...

The compact form of the songs (most of them between 2 and 3 minutes long) don't leave much space for any instrumental extravaganza but all four members of the band have their strong impact on the sound, whether its floating guitar, delicate clarinet musings and subtle drumbeat or fuzzy riff, crying bass clairnet and hard hit on the tom. Mike Ladd's voice can be both poetically delicate as well as theatrically expressive. If you're looking for any musical relatives for this band you might start with Tom Waitts.

"Why Waste Time" jumps back and forth between creepy and soothing, surreal and raw, subtle and direct with a sort of dirty pleasure. It's theatrical, slightly absurd, and captivating. For the 13 songs and 37 minutes they keep your attention, fuel your curiosity the way you never what to expect for the next minute.

Sleeping in Vilna may care less about particular style throughout but thruth be told, every particular track of this album has its own form and structure. You'll find echoes of punk, rap, poetry, rock cabaret, improv and more but If this is a musical anarchy, it's a very thoughtfull one.

A wonderfully weird creation. Love it. 

2 comments:

  1. You like knowing someone is reading... We love knowing that you are listening.
    Carol R. for SIV

    ReplyDelete
  2. An excellent concert yesterday with "sleeping in vilna" ...
    highly recommended

    http://beyond-the-coda.blogspot.fr/2013/03/sleeping-in-vilna.html

    ReplyDelete

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