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Succour

 
Album Review: Succour

  • Artist: Seefeel
  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Release Date: March 20, 1995
  • Genre: Electronica

Review

There are those typically Seefeel-ish moments in Succour -- the looping of heavily treated sounds, vocals, keyboards, and guitar feedback that either transcend the clichés of electronica or wish it had a little more of it. Admittedly, Mark Clifford, Darren Seymour, Sarah Peacock, and Justin Fletcher do not want to be Moby or Underworld or anyone like that -- their guitar roots pointed them toward moody ambience and experimentation rather than the dance clubs. To this end they have become a respectable oddity -- prog-rock disguised as ambient psuedo-trance. By the time we reach them at this album, there are a couple rough spots, as they were supposedly having band problems at the time. Tracks like "Extract" repeat its key phrase tiredly for up to seven minutes, and frequently Clifford and Fletcher run to their signature tin-can drum samples and ambient clang of pipes in an attempt to keep other tracks afloat (like the somewhat unsurprising "Rupt" and "Cut"). Even more percussively obnoxious is "Vex" (a perfect title, under the circumstances), but it's the first time that listeners might recognize Seymour's bass amongst all the heavy treatments (and that's near the end of the album). What redeems Succour is a half-dozen other tracks, like the edgy polyrhythms and watery ambience of "When Face Was Face," replete with steady clangs and layered vocal lilts, making the whole production like a Javanese gamelan in space. "Fracture" follows next, a stark anthem with almost atypical and crunchy drums like a duet of rusted gasoline barrels, surrounded by guitar feedback and echoing vocals. "Ruby-Ha," though about as repetitive as "Extract," manages a little variation with the tattered ribbons of Peacock's voice (without whom neither the track nor the album would fare as well), sort of like a nursery-school lullaby long forgotten, played back on a pocket TV. "Gatha" comes off like a track from MAIN, with its needling guitar ripples, industrial static, and cavernous growls, though a bit heavy-handed on the bass drum (Indian tribes come to mind). Without the drum, perhaps there would be a taste of something rather refreshing in its minimalism. "Cut" has all the trappings of the weaker songs, but fares better because of the "dubby" bassline and somewhat more soulful rhythm track. "Utreat" closes out the disc beautifully, with a minimal call-and-response loop between electric piano and bass, peppered with next-door vocals and keyboard vapors. This track alone makes up for a third of the albums shortcomings. Overall, this is perhaps the bleakest album from Seefeel (their final for Warp records), but few do it as well. ~ Glenn Swan, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Meol Clifford, Daren Seymour Seefeel
Extract Clifford, Daren Seymour Seefeel
When Face Was Face Clifford, Sarah Peacock, Fletcher Seefeel
Fracture Mark Clifford, Sarah Peacock, Daren Seymour, Fletcher Seefeel
Gatha Clifford Seefeel
Ruby-Ha Clifford, Sarah Peacock Seefeel
Rupt Clifford Seefeel
Vex Clifford Seefeel
Cut Clifford, Sarah Peacock Seefeel
Utreat Clifford, Daren Seymour Seefeel

Credits

Mark Clifford (Mixing), Mark Clifford (Arranger), Seefeel (Producer), Frank Arkwright (Digital Editing), Geoff Pesche (Mastering)
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Wikipedia: Succour (album)
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Succour
Studio album by Seefeel
Released 20 March 1995
Recorded 1994–1995
Genre Electronic music, Experimental rock, Drone music
Length 61:47
Label Warp Records
Professional reviews
Seefeel chronology
Quique
(1993)
'''Succour'''
(1995)
(CH-VOX)
(1996)

Succour is the second studio album by British experimental rock/electronic band Seefeel. Released in 1995 on Warp Records, the album is much more rooted in experimental electronic music than their previous album Quique. Succour was released on CD, cassette, and a double-vinyl LP. The final track on the album also contains a hidden track beginning at 5:08 titled "Tempean", the title of which is esoterically located on the inside of the front cover.

A video for the track "Fracture" is available on the Warp Records DVD compilation WarpVision (2004).

Track listing

  1. "Meol" (5:51)
  2. "Extract" (7:28)
  3. "When Face Was Face" (6:03)
  4. "Fracture" (5:52)
  5. "Gatha" (6:00)
  6. "Ruby-Ha" (6:08)
  7. "Rupt" (6:29)
  8. "Vex" (4:25)
  9. "Cut" (5:40)
  10. "Utreat"/"Tempean" (7:52)

External links



 
 
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