Release 94 of the 17 Sons Records netlabel.
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The tracks of this album are published under a Creative Commons licence, check the licence associated to each track.
Reviews for "Revelation of a psychotic nature EP"
3 reviews
belle tessiture ritmiche e armoniche
ciao
Nice tone at the start, quite mellow for a Sudden Attack in my experience. Then, I suppose it would depend exactly what that attack entailed. Could be a thug, could be a heart, could just be a coughing fit. Cool reverberations under the melody and then it diversifies with snatches of the nature of the attack. Seems like a partial lack of consciousness, which would fit in with the album title and my own experiences of psychosis.
As I was Falling in the Street, sums up in my mind that awful scenario when you are at your worst, beyond your control and in full public view, and there's nothing you can do about it. That fall that lasts an eternity of seconds is potentially and excrutiatingly traumatic. It is a soundtrack to such a pitiful situation and not necessarily for the fallen, but also potentially for those around at the time. Various people concern themselves to the nth degree, fearing contagion perhaps in days of old, perhaps instinctive fear, like a child looking at a snake.
The next track, And There Were No Stars could just be obfuscation due to inclement weather, i.e. cloud cover, or it could be that parallel world were celebrities don't exist. That's were I want to live. Don't know about stars in their eyes, they can shove them up their proverbial passages for all I care. Talent is like respect, it's earnt not demanded. Look what good it did for Hitler.
Beautiful Stamp is a tribal stomp that reaches out to the elements when they had more respect than a celebrity, when stars were wonders to behold, not holders to wonder at.
A pretty interesting track and compared to other artists in this stable, Cola Idol present us with a cool diversity within their chosen genre. Nice work.
Ashamed and Hidden instantly appealing to the ear and soul. It has a lovely timbre to it and flows languidly into your sensory equipment, with an unassuming confidence that cuts the grade into a stone, like an epitaph paying tribute to all the victims that have survived and to those who didn't. Bless them all, with such a cool track.
A Popular Lack of Freedom apart from being a good sound construction, is the story of our civilisation. Whatever happened to our liberal democratic drive to utopia, when the victors are terrorists in their own right. Power to the people never really worked with the original Greek demos, so why should it start now. It was a bit of a Hobson's Choice in terms of our socio-economic structure here in the supposedly wonderful Westernised corner of the globe that I find myself within. Still, at least I get to vote, for what it's worth. Listening to this album beats the ballot box anyday. Nice one.