The Dark Sound of Attrition
Back during the early-80s, MTV ruled pop culture, “new wave” was the musical flavor du jour, and American audiences were wondering exactly what a “Kajagoogoo” was. In the Attrition’s first gigs were performed in and around the band’s
Although The Attrition Of Reason is the band’s first proper album, they had already released several cassette compilation tracks, a tape of “early experiments with electronics and hallucinogens” (emphasis by Attrition), and even a musical collaboration created by mail with the American band Audio Leter. Nothing could prepare British music fans, however, for the far-reaching and ambitious electronic compositions of The Attrition Of Reason. Forgoing any sort of post-punk sound or structure in favor of an experimental hash of somber rhythms, dark melodies, sparse vocals and cascades of electronic funk-and-flash, Attrition wrote the handbook for much of what would follow in the darkwave movement.
In truth, to call The Attrition Of Reason a “Goth” album may be a misnomer, insofar as the band’s morose, melancholy lyrics owe as much to poets such as Artaud, Rimbaud or Baudelaire as they do to Bauhaus or Joy Division. Musically, this ain’t the Cure, or even Siouxsie and the Banshees, Attrition skewing closer to the ambient soundscapes of Eno and Cluster or the synth-sculptures created by Klaus Schulze. Any guitar work is downplayed in the mix, which is dominated by discordant rhythms, random cacophonic percussion and, of course, the omnipresent battering of Korg synthesizers and Roland sequencers. Bowes’ rough, otherworldly vocals often hit the ears like a blast of ice-cold water, while Waller’s siren-like howls and ethereal purring are simply mesmerizing, luring the listener towards an ever-shifting shoreline created by the crashing waves of electronic white noise.
As such, The Attrition Of Reason is a musical adventure, a difficult and, at times, harsh collection of remarkable majesty. Songs like the nightmarish “Prayer For The Head,” the spry synthpop rhythms of “Take A Walk,” or the cold, psychedelic-drenched “The Day I Was Born” showcase a talented trio of musicians attempting to re-write what they saw as an outdated musical vocabulary and exploring the possibilities created by the ever-broadening reach of technology. This CD reissue of The Attrition Of Reason by Voiceprint Records/MVD Audio includes the band’s four-song The Voice Of God EP, also from 1984, which features more of the same, including the vaguely exotic “The Outer Edge” and the up-tempo, almost danceable “Across The Divide.”
Cleverly combining shadows and light in a manner unlike any artist before or since, Attrition’s The Attrition Of Reason is a heady album, and one that may not translate easily for fans of the band’s later, classically-oriented ambient Goth-pop. Still going strong after 25 years, Bowes and crew continue to challenge convention and create vital, interesting music. Attrition may not be a libation to satisfy just any music lover’s taste, but if you’re a fan of like-minded artists like
(Click on the CD cover to buy The Attrition Of Reason from Amazon.com)





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