Walls / Oram - Sound Houses

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  • If you love Walls tracks like "Burnt Sienna," Sound Houses may come as a shock. Hazy, sun-dappled electronica and raw analogue grooves are in short supply here, and little wonder. The album was commissioned by the BBC, who gave the London duo access to the archive of Daphne Oram, founder, in 1958, of the BBC's Radiophonic Workshop. This journey into miles of deteriorating quarter-inch tape led to ten scowling (rather than shoegazing) tracks drawn from 1960s synth sounds. Sound Houses feels a little sketchy and conceptual—three tracks are under two minutes long—and even in its most brutal phases, it never quite achieves the monolithic power of artists like Demdike Stare, Shifted or Samuel Kerridge. Nonetheless, if the aim was to show how Oram's sinister, dystopian sound prefigured the current generation of dread-mongers, Walls make a decent fist of it. There is plenty to chew on in "Some Shriller, And Some Deeper" or "Rendering The Voice II," particularly for Radiophonic Workshop geeks. Walls are on far surer ground when deploying elegant ambient tropes or motoring along, wide-eyed and spaced-out, in Krautrock's wake. "As It Is In Gems And Prisms" is the most Walls-ian track of the set, while "Strange Lines And Distances," an off-dance floor experiment in befogged, funereal dub techno, give the album a meaty core. The shrill, outsized "A Very Large Metal Box," meanwhile, suggests this could have been a very different album had Walls taken it in a more lighthearted direction. Think of Sound Houses as a quality curio.
  • Tracklist
      01. Extremely Long Corridor 02. Orchards And Gardens 03. A Very Large Metal Box 04. Rendering The Voice I 05. Strange Lines And Distances 06. Reflexions, Refractions And Multiplications 07. Some Shriller And Some Deeper 08. Rendering The Voice II 09. Reflecting The Voice 10. As It Is In Gems And Prisms
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