
*Artist: Scorn
*Album: Colossus
*Year: 1993
*Genre: Industrial/Dark Ambient
*Country: United Kingdom

*Format: mp3@CBR320kbps
*Size: 168MB
Tracklist:
01. Endless
02. Crimson Seed
03. Blackout
04. The Sky is Loaded
05. Nothing, Hunger
06. Beyond
07. Little Angel
08. White Irises Blind
09. Scorpionic
10. Nights Ash Black
11. Sunstroke
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Total playing time: 1:07:32
Extended info
Classic duo line up Scorn with a big nasty sound, yet still very much good brain food. One of the best albums from this very prolific outfit featuring Michael Harris and Nicolas Bullen.
Isolationism was the term used in describing the brooding, post-industrial music of bands like Scorn that was emanating out of England in the early '90s. Not a bad descriptor given the throbbing drum'n'bass lines overlaid by atonal electronic washes and the remote, disaffected vocals and unsettling sampled voices. A duo consisting of Mike Harris and Nicholas James Bullen, Scorn built thick, slab-like layers of sludgy sound, a viscous current kicked along by steady, if plodding, drums. Darkness is decidedly the order of the day. That said, the Harris/Bullen team creates a number of fascinating textures along the way like the ragged, clockwork fabric of "The Sky Is Loaded" or the loopy strains of "White Irises Blind." But in general, there's a kind of sameness enveloping the disc. A tinge of dub here, a smattering of psychedelia there, perhaps, but after five or six tracks, the unremitting heaviness of the drums begins to wear on the listener. And the more varied atmospheric sounds, while enjoyable, cover little ground uninvestigated by, say, Fripp & Eno in "An Index of Metals." Of course, this may be entirely what both Scorn and their fans love and expect, but as a movement isolationism lasted only a few years and, despite its several attractive moments, Colossus might offer a good reason why.
Mick Harris, Nik Bullen: Bass, Drums, Drum Programming, Sampler, Percussion, Voice
Isolationism was the term used in describing the brooding, post-industrial music of bands like Scorn that was emanating out of England in the early '90s. Not a bad descriptor given the throbbing drum'n'bass lines overlaid by atonal electronic washes and the remote, disaffected vocals and unsettling sampled voices. A duo consisting of Mike Harris and Nicholas James Bullen, Scorn built thick, slab-like layers of sludgy sound, a viscous current kicked along by steady, if plodding, drums. Darkness is decidedly the order of the day. That said, the Harris/Bullen team creates a number of fascinating textures along the way like the ragged, clockwork fabric of "The Sky Is Loaded" or the loopy strains of "White Irises Blind." But in general, there's a kind of sameness enveloping the disc. A tinge of dub here, a smattering of psychedelia there, perhaps, but after five or six tracks, the unremitting heaviness of the drums begins to wear on the listener. And the more varied atmospheric sounds, while enjoyable, cover little ground uninvestigated by, say, Fripp & Eno in "An Index of Metals." Of course, this may be entirely what both Scorn and their fans love and expect, but as a movement isolationism lasted only a few years and, despite its several attractive moments, Colossus might offer a good reason why.
Mick Harris, Nik Bullen: Bass, Drums, Drum Programming, Sampler, Percussion, Voice
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