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Kurushimi - Chaos Remains CD (album) cover

CHAOS REMAINS

Kurushimi

 

RIO/Avant-Prog

4.44 | 5 ratings

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TCat
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
5 stars Kurushimi (from Australia) is one of those bands I stumbled across by complete accident, but what a happy accident it was. While searching the internet for some possible progressive metal bands that I could send through our team, I ran across the new album called "Chaos Remains" from Kurushimi. I was drawn into the music right away as it was right up my alley, noisy and very original and a band willing to expand and explore the art of music.

The album was tagged as progressive metal, and listening to this album, I can hear the PM influence there, but there was also something else, a jazzcore style that seemed to be the actual driving force behind the music. Once I listened to a few of their other albums, I was convinced that it needed to be reviewed by the RIO/Avant Prog team as with the noisy free jazz style seemed to permeate the other albums, it seemed to me to be more like the music of Kayo Dot and John Zorn. Of course, the team agreed and this band was inducted into PA.

The music is completely improvisational along the same lines as the styles used by John Zorn and Frank Zappa. It is all directed with hand signals that allow the musicians to freely express themselves within certain boundaries, and the conductor (Simeon Bartholomew) uses hand signals to direct the musicians to flow from one style to another or adjust the style accordingly. The music is created by keyboards, turntables, samples, tenor, alto and baritone saxes, guitar, bass and drums.

As the title to this album suggests, this one is a study of the fusion of jazz with metal, so it takes the band's style to another level. The tracks on this album are further explorations and manipulations of unused tracks from the sessions of their previous album released in 2018, "What is Chaos?", so this EP is sort of a companion album to that one. The music on the 2018 album is more of a free jazz style, where on this album, the outtakes are further developed so that, according to the band, "The resulting music is harsh, wild and unexpected ? throwing jazz and avant-garde improvisational compositions together with the grind and thud of metal-driven riffs". That describes it quite well. This is accomplished by adding a few more guest musicians who provide additional vocals, synths, effects, heavier guitar and the experimental use of feedback.

Many people first listening to this EP will understand where the "experimental metal" tag comes from for this particular album. But the heaviness is a result of many growling saxes, solid bass and guitar and crazy noise. Turntable loops were created in some very imaginative ways, including putting a sticker on the record so that it would skip and loop and then inviting the conductor and the band to improvise over the top of it all.

The hand signals are based on a musical game piece (similar to the games used by Zorn and Zappa) called "Violence in Action" created by Lachlan Kerr. The music is loud but also becomes quite hypnotic at times as in the beginning of "The Mysteries of Chaos", the epic masterpiece and centerpiece of the EP. Multiple saxes meander around while sinister effects, percussion and etc. give more of an evil ambience that has a sense of wild beauty to it. This track works in contrast to the heavy and noisy music produced in the other tracks. The opener "The Omen" will give you an immediate example of this. You will soon understand why this music is hard to describe, because there is definitely a lot more to this than just "noise", its dark, heavy, sludgy and brooding. The track is inspired by the movie of the same name, in fact, Andrew Mortensen (bass) explains that he chopped up pieces of the movie score and made it into a creepy loop which the musicians improvised around. The fact that the foundation of the tracks is based around turntable looping gives it all a sense of organization, not just random squeals and squeaks, and the fact that a conductor keeps the music in some sense of boundaries, things just don't fly off in a hundred different directions. In fact, with some of the riffs and passages that suddenly come out of the improvised music are quite surprising.

"Chaos Dub" is stuck in the middle of this EP and it helps you understand the way this whole thing is created. A more "normal" beat starts it all off, but as it goes along, the saxes, guitars and effects are all layered in until it becomes all slippery and slidey. Most of the tracks on this EP are quite short, as there are ten tracks and the duration is just under 30 minutes, but those shorter tracks can definitely pack a wallop of music and sound. Just wait until you experience the multiple layers that make up "Funeral Moon" or the highly dramatic "Ambulance Run". But also be prepared to face the sinister, dark sounds of "Black" and "Necrosis", all of these fairly short, yet still quite interesting tracks.

There are 2 longer tracks here also including the already mentioned "The Mysteries of Chaos" which is over 8 minutes, and the whacky and unpredictable "Wormhole" which manages to throw out one surprise after another in over 5 minutes of jazz metal bliss.

I know that this music isn't for everyone, but for me, I absolutely love it. There have been many bands out there lately that have used metal to experiment and explore by adding different styles (like jazz) to it. However, Kurushimi takes the opposite route with this amazing album by using free jazz as the foundation and pushing it into the experimental metal category. The band promises more surprises this year with "upcoming releases which are said to include 2 EPs of "unexpected" material and a full length album bearing new arrangements", so I will be keeping an eye and an ear out for that, but as for now, this is the first album I've heard that's new in 2021 that will be a contender for the top 20 of the year. For now, anyone willing to explore their music, including this album, should be ready for it to leave quite an impression one way or another.

TCat | 5/5 |

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