We use cookies on our website to provide you with the best experience. Most of these are essential and already present.
We do require your explicit consent to save your cart and browsing history between visits. Read about cookies we use here.
Your cart and preferences will not be saved if you leave the site.
play
Out of stock
File under: Array

CONSUMER ELECTRONICS

Nobody's Ugly

Label: No Fun Productions

Format: Vinyl LP

Genre: Noise

Out of stock

Original, long out of print, few available: Whitehouse's Philip Best goes it alone on this outing as Consumer Electronics (although since William Bennett takes the production credit for the album, you pretty much take this as a standalone Whitehouse release in its own right). This time around Best's verbal abominations are left at home, and there's really nothing to indicate an explicit vocal presence over the course of the LP. Instead, you're treated to a symphonic tirade of distortion and industrial noise signals. Where this week's other No Fun LP sounds comparatively analog, grounded in a more psychedelic mindset, this is strictly digital, throwing some DSP weight around whilst never letting up on the eviscerating sonic pressure. There's a density to all this but the production clarity permits a few glimpses at individual elements of the music, such that none of this ever melts into a featureless auditory soup. Over the expanse of the first side ('Black Cotton Wool') there's some rampaging, squealing menace lurking beneath the surface, whereas B-side 'Grubbing' relies upon a low frequency throb that seems to have undergone some sort of timestretching and EQing to maximise it's stomach-upsetting potential. There's still plenty of detail here though: the throb wavers and lurches around ominously throughout the side, whilst beams of reverberant synthnoise break from beneath the surface. Great stuff.
Details
File under: Array
Cat. number: NFP-14LP
Year: 2007

More by CONSUMER ELECTRONICS