|
M. GIRA
/ D. MATZ
What We Did
Young God Records CD
by Jim Haynes
originally published in The Wire, 216: January 2002
During one of the final Swans tours across the US, leader
Michael Gira employed the Texan post-rock ensemble Windsor
For The Derby as support. Up until this collaboration between
Gira and the latter's Dan Matz, Windsor had appeared to
be an unusual choice, as Swans' might and emotional catharsis
clearly overwhelmed Windsor's pristine repetitions and understated,
Slintish punctuations. Yet in the synthesis of What We Did
it becomes clear that Swans and Windsor merely took different
approaches towards the same impetus to control sound in
order to communicate through it. Where Gira's late period
Swans built a furious trance-rock from baroque slabs of
hypnotic guitar noise to augment his poetic mythologies
of sex, hate, love and death, Windsor rendered an awe of
the sublime through the surgical removal of bombast and
a technically precise applications of mathematical compositions.
Thus Gira could be seen as the Shaman and Matz the Anaesthetist.
To a certain extent, Gira's collaboration with Matz picks
up where Swans left off with their tense, droning grooves.
Yet, Gira is speaking truthfully when he said What We Did
was founded on mutual respect. As testament to such claims
the album opens with "Pacing The Locks" a duet
that sets Matz's whispered vocals against Gira's dignified
baritone while the two share guitar duties, gently strolling
through their spartan chords. Almost comically upbeat, "
Lines"' could have been lifted from the Gram Parsons
songbook. Backed by a locomotive-themed arrangement with
its mandatory claw-fisted banjo picking and steam-whistle
harmonica, Gira poises himself at the train station waiting
for the love of his life coming down the tracks - only to
gleefully spoil the image with the reality of how contemporary
romance is now transcribed "down through the optic
line, then sifted through the screen."
While both Matz and Gira offer up a few tracks like "Lines"
the most enthralling moments here are when the two lock
into taut grooves and extended arpeggiations that incrementally
multiply in density, bringing the song to a crescendo. "Is/Was"
begins with a repetition of a plaintive Delta blues chord,
adds a sustained organ drone, followed by the tinkling of
a vibraphone; Matz's voice joins Gira's, and so on, until
the song becomes a very subtly constructed mass of nervous
rhythms. "17 Hours" for guitars, drum machine
and organs, increases the tension considerably, but with
far more rigidity and brittleness in the arrangement. inversion
of reality in which the improbabilities of dreams have become
the laws of nature.
|
|
 |
 |
|