eMEGO 089 / KTL
IV
- 1. Paraug (3:55)
- 2. Paratrooper (21:23)
- 3. Wicked Way (4:13)
- 4. Benbbet (15:21)
- 5. Eternal Winter (5:25)
- 6. Natural Trouble (9:24)
Total Time: 59:36
Written and performed by KTL
Produced by Jim O'Rourke
Recorded and mixed at Studio GOK Sound, Tokyo, September 2008
Mastered at Piethopraxis, Köln, October 2008
Stephen O'Malley: Guitar
Peter Rehberg: Computer & Synthesizer
Atsuo: Drums on 2 and Gong on 6
Design by SOMA
And how things have evolved. Long awaited new album by the ongoing duo of Stephen O’Malley and Peter Rehberg.
KTL’s first full length release that is not commissioned work for theatre or film, showcases their approach to composition and structure as a highly active live band. Whereas the ‘Kindertotenlieder’ trilogy of 1, 2 and 3 were blurred washes of fog and noise polished in by ambient shine, IV is a more direct and demanding beast, referencing such diverse projects as; volume era Swans, Mecca period Cabaret Voltaire, phase one Wire, Fushitsusha and This Heat.....
Developed and composed over the spring and summer of 2008, KTL brought the material to Tokyo the following September and worked with Jim O’Rourke at the desk & controls, IV is a stunning new direction and great addition to both artists' already impressive canon.
The opening and shortest track, ‘Paraug’ is a dark shadow of previous KTL sounds, with its blowtorch riffs and sub bass rumbles. This leads the way for the album's monster ‘Paratrooper’. Over 21 minutes of driving bass pulse interwoven with razor sharp guitar from O’Malley & synth and organ blasts from Rehberg. Atsuo, from Japanese top-rockers Boris, glues it together with his arhythmic and punishing drumming. ‘Wicked Way’ is a breezy upbeat number, which if we were that way inclined would be the album's single. ‘Benbbet’ on the other hand is whole different ball game: a distant guitar loop is joined by slamming No Step beats and making way for a guitar riff to straddle all valleys and computer bass rattles. Possibly KTL’s most detailed recording. ‘Eternal Winter’ is an exercise in black frozen resonant harmonics, whereas ‘Natural Trouble’ is a slowly evolving twister of a track which is both spontaneous and focused.
KTL IV is issued on CD for the world (except Japan) on Editions Mego.
Daymere will be releasing the Japanese version, with Inoxia issuing a special vinyl edition.