Thursday, April 8, 2021

Lull: Cold Summer

From the extreme blasts of intense noise that was Napalm Death to the slow washes of sound built on a base material of very gradual movement of subtle rhythm with Lull in a few short years shows how much former beat blast drummer Mick Harris evolved into a distinctive architect of sonic exploration, whether through the Scorn project, collaborations with a variety of musicians like Eraldo Bernocchi, Bill Laswell and James Plotkin, or with this really remarkable recording from 1994 and released on Subharmonic, with which Laswell was associated.

It is usual to refer to this as isolationist or dark ambient and so it is common to find references to it as an album filled with foreboding, as being cold or ominous.  That's understandable, but this listener finds the experience of hearing recordings like Cold Summer to be soothing, contemplative, and relaxing, even if there are those washes of sound that do have those touches of eerieness.

The first two Lull albums, Dreamt About Dreaming (1992) and Journey Through Underworlds (1993) were more visceral with elements of often loud percussion, extended voice samples (often expressing some form of agony or angst), and stronger electronic sound sources.  Both are very interesting and will be higlighted here some day, but there is a demonstrated turn inward into a more flowing and captivating ambient soundscape with Cold Summer that directed the Lull project for the next fifteen or so years.

Music is mood and even in this largely house-bound pandemic environment (though a major emergence looks to finally be in the works), Lull has proven to be an apt musical accompaniment, though, again, not in a dark sense, but, rather, in a mood of reflection and acceptance.  Having said this, there have been quite a few times over the many years that I've listened to this music that I've thought about playing it, especially, say, "Lonely Shelter," during Halloween as trick or treaters walk up the path to the door.  Talk about "dark ambient"!

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