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The Dynamics of Vanity

by Sebastian Melmoth

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Icarus 14:13

about

Our copies are now sold out, but you can still buy one from the Artificial Dance Bandcamp: artificialdance.bandcamp.com/album/sebastian-melmoth-the-dynamics-of-vanity-ad008

Since forming in 2006 post-punk experimentalists Sebastian Melmoth have been on a thoughtful and adventurous musical journey. In a constant state of aural evolution, the London-based four-piece has a delivered a string of albums and EPs that variously touch on everything from garage-rock, grunge and lo-fi pop, to electro, new wave, dark ambient and music concrete, all the while drawing on a myriad of literary and artistic influences.

The band’s first release for Artificial Dance digs deep into their admirable and eye-opening catalogue and draws together some of the Amsterdam-based label’s favourites from the more electronic end of the band’s output. Entitled “The Dynamics of Vanity” – a comment on Western culture’s obsession with rehashing the past and the band’s own in-built distrust of artistic naval-gazing – the set is not a ‘best of’ retrospective but rather a ‘sort of’ selection of stylistically interconnected cuts that gives a very specific snapshot of the band’s work.

Check for example “Icarus”, a drowsy, hypnotic and sample-laden soundscape that effortlessly joins the dots between post-rock, pitched-down electronica and early morning ambient, or the slowly unfurling throb of thought-provoking opener “The Engineering of Consent”, a swelling, melancholic post-jazz meditation on propaganda and governmental mind control featuring spoken word samples from William S Burroughs in conversation with Brion Gysin, Timothy Leary, Les Levine and Robert Anton Wilson.

The showcased songs are typically hard-to-pin-down, too, with the re-imagined gothic horror break-up cut “Prosopagnosia’ and slow-burn audio addition of “Waiting For Godot” being joined by the wide-eyed morning dream-pop hallucinations of “Seeds (Descent Into Decadence)”. It all adds up to a collection that expertly showcases one engaging thread – of many – running through Sebastian Melmoth’s esoteric body of work.

credits

released November 18, 2019

All songs written and performed by Sebastian Melmoth.
Lyrics by Ilia Rogatchevski.
Mixed and produced by Sebastian Melmoth.

'The Engineering of Consent' features a sample of William S. Burroughs in conversation with Brion Gysin, Timothy Leary, Les Levine, and Robert Anton Wilson at the Nova Convention (1978). Saxophone solo by Gardyloo Spew.
Miranda Collett plays guitar and provides backing vocals on 'Seeds (Descent Into Decadence)' and 'Waiting for Godot'.
Violin on 'Icarus' by Boris Rogatchevski.

Sebastian Melmoth are:
Peter Jordan (bass, guitars, electronics, vocals)
Laura Michelle Smith (drums, percussion, vocals)
Tomoko Matsumoto (electronics, synths, vocals)
Ilia Rogatchevski (guitars, keyboards, vocals)

The cover shows a detail of Laocoön and His Sons, photographed by Marie-Lan Nguyen. The image was adapted under a Creative Commons license (CC BY 3.0). Layout and design by Steele Bonus.

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Sebastian Melmoth London, UK

Experimental post-punk band from London (2006-2020).

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