$18.00
Noise, Fat Cat, Experimental, Industrial, Electronic, Harsh, Japan; CD – Ex Used condition
Japan noise-monsters XINLISUPREME’s 2002 mini LP ‘Murder License’, Whilst containing fleeting moments of respite, is an album preoccupied with frightening, crashing, unending noise — the sound of industrial culture cannibalizing itself. “I Drew a Picture of My Eyes,” “Sakae,” “Front of You” — these pieces build from thrumming basslines to staccato .50-caliber percussion drops, and the forlorn, fatalistic mutterings of humans being eaten by iron smelters. The opening title track is similarly distorted; however, it layers a wayward, keening synth over the chaos, suggesting The Cure’s “Just Like Heaven” played backward by berserkers. Later, “I.T.D.O.O.M.” discovers a lonely, flute-like instrument wallowing in a world of breezy, grimy manhole covers. The instrument repeats its simple scale as sickly sweet air swirls through sluiceways, and it’s calming, to a degree. Still, it’s clear the bone-shattering aural grime of Murder License’s more crippling material is never far away. The album closes with “Count Down,” a flawless blend of its two extremes. Fractured beats scatter like cicadas unleashed over a pounding industrial rhythm. Somewhere a melody develops, down beneath the blast doors and corrugated grating. But the machines eventually, finally burn through, silencing Murder License in peels and tears of charred shrapnel.
Roberto and his brother Maurizio are the highly advanced lifeforms crewing the mysterious starship that goes by the name of My Cat Is An Alien (MCIAA), plotting a quixotic course through three millennia of cosmic music, from the celestial drones of the Pythagorean monochord onwards, to land up in the gravity-free realm of the No-mind