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[Review] The Body & OAA Come Together to Unleash Agony and Hurt on ‘Enemy of Love’

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[Review] The Body Come Together With OAA to Unleash Agony and Hurt on 'Enemy of Love'

For over two decades, The Body (the duo of Lee Buford and Chip King) has remained a defiant force of sonic horror. It’s near impossible to classify The Body under one genre label, for nothing is ever straightforward in their brand of noise, electronics, and experimental metal. Barely a year apart since their previous release with BIG|BRAVE, The Body is back at it with a new collab. Accompanying them this time is that of producer OAA (AJ Wilson). What the trio share on Enemy of Love is a harrowing descent of electronic chaos that exudes anger and loneliness.

Noise music is certainly effective when it is abrasive and clashing with no restraint, and while this is a quality The Body is known to present in their material, the music throughout Enemy of Love is calculated in its flow and presentation. The album’s first single, “Barren of Joy,” makes for a strong example of what the record offers as a whole. Much like that of 2018’s I Have Fought Against It, But I Cannot Any Longer, there is a psychic presence consistently being fed through each track; the emphasis on distance and heartache growing gradually through distortion, droning, and the battering of instrumentation.

Atmospherically, The Body has always displayed a keen understanding of hypnotic presentation; in how they craft individual songs and how those songs work as a progressing tracklist, it is possible to experience a sense of disorientation. Whether it is the bombardment and frenzy of noise and electronic components or the dizzying vibe of descending into a droning abyss, Buford and Lee are masters in pulling listeners into nightmare worlds. OAA lends his skills in elevating these qualities, building upon the duo’s already abrasive, and oddly entrancing performances. Some cuts find themselves giving off a more vibrant approach, such as that of “Miserable Freedom,” where the rhythm exudes a danceable vibe (even if it is laden with industrial eeriness). That is part of the charm to The Body’s work though – the haunting discomfort they convey through music brimming with unnerving tones, while also exuding an entertaining quality.

It appears The Body never runs out of creativity. One might assume that the genre of noise lends itself to repetition – and frankly it can through the bombast of distortion and clashing instrumentals – but The Body is always demonstrating new tactics, or at least fresh spins, to their haunting material. Buford, King, and Wilson all come together on Enemy of Love to present a record reeking of misery – a work that blasts and whirls and encompasses one in horror.

[Review] The Body Come Together With OAA To Unleash Agony And Hurt On Enemy Of Love

Michael Pementel is a pop culture critic at Bloody Disgusting, primarily covering video games and anime. He writes about music for other publications, and is the creator of Bloody Disgusting's "Anime Horrors" column.

Music

John Carpenter’s New Album ‘Lost Themes IV: Noir’ NOW AVAILABLE!

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John Carpenter, Daniel Davies and Cody Carpenter are back with Lost Themes IV: Noir, a brand new album from Sacred Bones Records that was released today, May 3.

Lost Themes IV: Noir is the latest installment in a series that sees Carpenter releasing new music for John Carpenter movies that don’t actually exist. The first Lost Themes was released in 2015, followed by Lost Themes II in 2016 and Lost Themes III: Alive After Death in 2021.

The new ten song collection was loosely inspired by the noir genre and marks new territory for John Carpenter and his cohorts, imbibing their trademark synth hooks and pulsing drum machine with propulsive post punk basslines and smoldering guitar solos.

Here’s the full Lost Themes IV: Noir track list:

  1. My Name is Death (video below)
  2. Machine Fear
  3. Last Rites
  4.  The Burning Door
  5. He Walks By Night (video below)
  6. Beyond The Gallows
  7. Kiss The Blood Off My Fingers
  8. Guillotine
  9. The Demon’s Shadow
  10. Shadows Have A Thousand Eyes

Sacred Bones previews, “It’s been a decade since John Carpenter recorded the material that would become Lost Themes, his debut album of non-film music and the opening salvo in one of Hollywood’s great second acts. Those vibrant, synth-driven songs, made in collaboration with his son Cody Carpenter and godson Daniel Davies, kickstarted a musical renaissance for the pioneering composer and director. With Lost Themes IV: Noir, they’ve struck gold again, this time mining the rich history of the film noir genre for inspiration.

“Since the first Lost Themes, John has referred to these compositions as “soundtracks for the movies in your mind.” On the fourth installment in the series, those movies are noirs. Like the film genre they were influenced by, what makes these songs “noirish” is sometimes slippery and hard to define, and not merely reducible to a collection of tropes. The scores for the great American noir pictures were largely orchestral, while the Carpenters and Davies work off a sturdy synth-and-guitar backbone.

“The trio’s free-flowing chemistry means Lost Themes IV: Noir runs like a well-oiled machine—the 1951 Jaguar XK120 Roadster from Kiss Me Deadly, perhaps, or the 1958 Plymouth Fury from John’s own Christine. It’s a chemistry that’s helped power one of the most productive stretches of John’s creative life, and Noir proves that it’s nowhere near done yielding brilliant results.”

You can listen to Lost Themes IV: Noir right now!

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