Haco, THNMF2013 Opener photo Brad Serls |
From the first muffled sub pulses under swathes of low pass filter sweeps and fuzzy feedback fluttering we were altered by sonic morphine. Ourobonic Plague launched long form trips of heavy textures modulated to the sweet spot of distortion on what used to be syncopated high-hats, coupled with an insistent, subsuming sub-kick. The set organically pieced itself together with chromatic synths like pneumatic drills in sheet metal, tight snares, stutters and bass warbles. This was an expertly-prepared set with a few tactful ancillary interventions by the performer.
In a distinct break from the previous set, Haco greets the crowd with reverberating vibraphone tones that ring out and sit with you. Reverse-delayed synth strings shift and fall backwards as Haco hypnotises us with serene incantations that repeatedly fade away. She is like glass, creaking glass, crackling bright particles of glass over sustained sinusoidal feedback. Ringing bells and singing bowls ping, ting and ding as the bass inconspicuously yawns. Haco lulls us with these ebb tides for some time before building to a climax, finally bridging the sonic spectrum with crushed kicks and slap-back snares. This is the future the nineties promised.
Barn Owl, THNMF2013 Opener photo Brad Serls |
The sound technician and The Bakery's sound system deserve special mention. Facing the stage you are totally engrossed in and enveloped by sound, but turn to a friend for commentary and all is audible. This phenomenon still confounds me.
The artists at this Festival Opener have raised the expectations for the next eight days. One cannot help but be excited by what remains to come.
Totally Huge New Music Festival Opener: Haco, Ourobonic Plague, Barn Owl, The Bakery, Perth, 9 August, 2013
Steve Paraskos is a Perth-based, studious craftsman who aims to have risk as his only idiosyncrasy. He has won multiple awards for his film compositions and recently finished his four-month artist residency at The Perth Artifactory's NoizeMaschin!!"
© Steve Paraskos; for permission to reproduce apply to [email protected]