Tuesday, March 15, 2011

I'll Be Back To Shine Light On Your Sins



The material on Medication's "Judgement Day" EP is miles past anything on the "This Town" LP that preceeded it, which isn't to say that the songs were recorded all fancy or anything. The overall sound is still fairly sparse and echo-y, and you can still hear stuff that sounds like someone bumping into the tape machine, or something else hitting the floor in the background... which is pretty great, actually, because it lends even more to the sense that this is just someone who sat down in a room in front of a microphone and wants to tell you something. I think the only song here that has a strong similarity to anything on "This Town" is the title track, "Judgement Day"; other than that, the performances seem to be on a much different level. I used to think that songs like "Your Heart" and "Don't Die" pretty much summed up "bleak", but songs like "Factory Made", "Rise/Sink", and "Whore" make the previous record seem like a bunch of jangly pop songs in comparison-- I mean, maybe "Farewell Letter" was similar, but that's about it.

There's probably a hundred things that I like about this record, but the way that the first half of the record fits together is particularly amazing. The first track, "Intro", is made up of 25 seconds' worth of throbbing noises, stabbing like a pulse and leading directly into "Factory Made", which undoubtedly is the centerpiece of this record. "Factory Made" carries a gentle, loping stride, yet it's also tightly-wound and mechanized, like an old watch. Mikey's voice carries as if he's way off on the other side of an abandoned building, sounding resigned yet defiant: "I was factory made, from spare parts/Got half a brain but twice the heart." Then the mournful "When I'm Gone" follows, appearing sad and wistful for about a full minute-- "Why don't you just think about all the things you could've had/Had you not known me"-- before breaking up into a sudden wash of furiously strummed guitar noises. When listened to as one long piece, the effect of all three tracks put together is stunning. He's not just writing songs here, he's making up whole scripts using sound and rhythm.

I'd have a hard time finding something to compare this record to, unless it would be Jandek or Pink Reason, except that I haven't listened to enough of either of those two to know the difference. I seem to be listening to a lot of blissed-out stuff like Disappears and Blank Realm lately, moreso than the usual rock stuff, and "Judgement Day" fights right in with those listening habits. Sacred Bones made 50 copies of this 12" as a special edition, fitted inside a white envelope with a red wax seal; my copy is #15, but I checked the Sacred Bones web site the other day and it seems like they're all gone. Either way, the record comes with a free download, though the track I'm posting here is my own vinyl rip.




Medication -

"Factory Made"








5 comments:

Jere said...

I have this weird memory of being at some carnival in like 1999, one where you could take a smash at an old car with a baseball bat. And borrowing $5 from that funny dude who played in Daybed--Matt something--and offering to pay him back in installments, a dollar at a time. And then Mikey Hyde reminding me months or years later at a Newtown show that I'd done that and telling me how funny he thought that was.

But anyway, I love the Connecticut scene family tree, and how I can come to One Base... and read about people I knew from bands that came before mine, and, even cooler, reading about bands done by people who were teenagers coming to see my band back in the day. But I shoulda known--I mean, who else was gonna start new bands if not the kids who started out in the audience?

Brushback said...

I've never seen one of those 'swing a sledge hammer for 5 bucks' things, it always seemed like a fun thing to do... as long as there was still a headlight or a mirror left, of course.

Jere said...

Yeah it was like sloppy 82nds by the time we were there. I think that carnival was in Danbury, but in a strange part I never went to before or after that.

Tim Daltrey said...

Ah man my copy didn't come w/ anything other than the lp itself. Really excited to listen to this.

Brushback said...

You didn't get the little scrap of paper with the download code on it?

I actually almost missed mine, static cling made it stick to the inside of the jacket.