Reviews Search

The Grey Wolves, "Blood And Sand"

Cold Spring
This is a reworked reissue of an early 90's tape which came out of acollaboration between The Grey Wolves and Shockcity as a comment on theGulf War. In these times, where a second one seems not very far away(depending on the daily news), it sounds astonishingly fresh andtimely. There is a certain bleakness in these two lengthy pieces.("Desert Storm" is slightly over 30 minutes long while "Gulf Breeze" isover 26 minutes.) There's a certain Rough Trade-era Cabaret Voltairequality about the songs, not particularly in the music itself, but inthe emotional landscape explored. The theme of war is clear, as is thebreakdown of communication. The Grey Wolves do this with delays,electronic distortion, distant ramblings, hypnotic loops, and echoes.Samples are clearly identifiable as vocals but only fragments areunderstandable.Absent are overused "aesthetic/artistic" shock tactics but the GreyWolves clearly point out with this atmospheric work that we are nothingmore than passive watchers from an armchair in (assumably) a safedistance. It's a subtly packaged critique which is an enjoyable listenat it's own terms. It both leaves me in thoughts and creates the spacefor it.

samples: