Artist: The Man and the
Scientist
Album: The Invisible
Hand Is a Hoof
Release Date: 15 July
2016
Tracklisting:
01. Anubis
01. Anubis
02. Bar-D-Que
03. The Sound of a
Bumble Bee Keistering Pollen
04. 60/60 Vision: Right
Eye
05. Toad Spokes
06. God Likes America
As a Friend
07. Reverse Mechanics
08. Eavesdropping on
Your Own Funeral
09. Happy Birthday
Forever
10. 60/60 Vision: Left
Eye
11. Do You Guys Give
Up, or Are You Thirsty for More?
12. I Like to Count to
4 As Much As the Next Guy
13. It's All for You
Damien [hidden track]
The Man and the
Scientist is the collaborative project of Brad Schumacher (Night
Grinder, The
Least Comma, Street
Justice, etc.) and Josh
King (Tornado
Head/The Everest Ruin, The
Last Glacier, The
Oust, and so on). They've worked on a series of
other projects together as well, including some (full disclosure!)
that have included myself (e.g., Baal's
Beacon). Both enjoy building their own
instruments and both have deep roots in noise and experimental music.
However, Josh has a deep catalog of singer-songwriter, rock, and
jazz-oriented material, while Brad has operated in variety of
post-industrial affairs.
Their earliest
performances and albums as a duo (Pornucopia,
2007, and Duke
Brunch,
2007/2008) were primarily oriented around pure, experimental
noise. Guitars were only present as inputs into noise rigs, just like
the copious use of contact mics. Caves,
recorded in 2009, espoused a more placid, practically ambient sound,
with relatively clean guitar as a primary instrument. Their most
recent album, a collaboration with Falsetto Boy/Cup Collector/Jim Fitzpatrick (Top
Teeth, 2014, credited to Falsetto
Man & the Scientist), married drum machines and synth-like noise
with improvisational guitar and bass.
The Invisible Hand
Is a Hoof takes this wide array of sounds and styles and brings
them together. "Anubis" starts off the album with a heavy,
aggressive, almost metal sound, recalling Brad's earliest punk days
and the most intense moments of The
Last Glacier. "Bar-D-Que" is a brief
jolt of thick layers of static, noise, and radio garbage, which
abruptly leads into another short blast of energy, "The Sound of
a Bumble Bee Keistering Pollen". The percussion, consisting of a
fast-paced metallic rhythm and what sound like tuned bells or bars,
resembles Einstürzende Neubauten.
From there, the
intensity takes a step down and the band explore ideas introduced
from the members' assorted other projects. Unlike previous albums, in
which the two core personalities were welded together to form one
cohesive, overarching sound, this album reveals distinct, discernible
elements of the specific interests of both members. The album has
myriad sonic colors, although much of the album aligns roughly into
two divisions.
Both "60/60
Vision" pieces, "Eavesdropping on Your Own Funeral",
and "I Like to Count to 4 As Much As the Next Guy" are
strikingly melody-oriented and almost peaceful. This isn't ambient
music, though, as the sinister keyboard in "Left Eye", the
chiming guitars of "Eavesdropping", and the dark synth
tones of "Count to 4" make clear. Furthermore, while
"Eavesdropping" has a light, pastoral mood, the title and
theme are less comfortable. Part of the pleasure of these songs lies
in the sophisticated bass work, which serves as a reminder that both
Schumacher and King have gravitated towards the instrument in their
recent work.
The opposite side of
the spectrum is embodied by "God Likes America As a Friend",
"Happy Birthday Forever", and the Home Alone-referencing
"Do You Guys Give Up, or Are You Thirsty for More?". These
are noisier songs, deliberately ugly and unsettling in places. "God
Likes America" might go on too long after it makes its point
clear, but the ridiculous sound collage of "Happy Birthday"
is mildly hilarious after you get past the challenging listening
experience. "Do You Guys Give Up" is a brutally self-aware
statement to put near the end of a 56-minute noise album, but if you
put the sparse soundscape in the perspective of Kevin McCallister
booby-trapping his house against thieves, it too becomes more
captivating. Even Brad's suppressed laugh fits the storyline.
"Reverse
Mechanics" is the song most deliberately reminiscent of Brad's
work as Night
Grinder. The tense, hyperactive, squelchy drums
and noise rig explosions would put the song right in line with
Immediate
Content (2014). On the other hand,
"Toad Spokes" could practically be a b-side from Josh's
Super
Platformer (2014). The video
game-like keyboards, the stilted rhythm, and even the bizarre
spoken/rant section have the same sense of retro-futuristic
otherworldliness.
The lone outlier is the
final, hidden track, "It's All for You Damien". It consists
simply of a conversation between the principals about a third person,
a loud burst of noise, and then a conversation about shopping for
electronics at Goodwill. It's not a particularly musical track, but
if you've made it that far and can keep up with the humor, it feels
like a coda, or a reminder of the human context that such unusual
sounds and textures were born from.
The Invisible Hand
Is a Hoof is the work of an
experimental band that isn't done growing. It shares a few elements
and a lot of the spirit of previous albums, but it is firmly a series
of steps in a number of new directions for the duo. For fans of
either member's other projects, it's a pleasure to hear them
transform similar ideas into a different space for this project. This
may be their most compelling album yet.
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