REFLECTOR - pass

(CD/LP, Noise Appeal / Rock Is Hell)

There’s a kind of heavy, all over the world, tonight. After a dozen years of honing its craft and skills Reflector, the duo from Styria, should be ready now with “pass” to embrace the honors and fame coming at them from the worldwide underground circles of fans of heavy and extreme music. In other words, there are way too many trite and boring guitar/drum duos out there playing slow and grinding doom, forever lost in the repetition of the same old riff Kyuss reused way too often back then already. What the world really needs is an original approach, skilled and focused, that will fill the void between Sunn0))) and Om, and strike towards the mass appeal of the Melvins at the same time. This, by way of chance or forfeiture, is where fate has lead Reflector to come to. It should have been there already with “Flugangst”, latest with the re-release of “Flugangst” in 2007, but it is also a method of the duo to take their time, obviously. If we can’t change, then we’ll have to wait until the world has changed towards us.

Reduced to the max, they avoid all kinds of stale waters and surprise the listener with the highest amount of changes in riffage, tempo, pitch and approach since “Hooch”. But these changes are not only stuck to each other in some kind of random fashion (remember John Zorn’s mathematical approach to composition in Cobra and Naked City, whoooo…) but they are more like tectonic shifts, that change the landscape but always seem to have an organic basis to stand on. Then they suddenly erupt or change completely. The first time everybody sees the Grand Canyon they are surprised to remark that it is actually nothing but a gigantic channel in an otherwise plain landscape. Easy to fall into, actually. A sort of “whoops, there it is, wow” experience. The same here. A riff changes and changes organically for some time, the listener gets used to this, and then suddenly, the whole song breaks lose or changes tone or stops.

There is nothing safe with Reflector, no security zones. If there is a message to this (mostly) instrumental slow speed avalanche of heavy music, then it is this. If you get into the event horizon of your stereo, then you are done in. The long and unbroken history of musical partnership of the two minds behind Reflector of course helps in finding their common target. They are now in a position where they can go back to songs written in 1996 and make them sound fresh and new in 2009. This one, “Booby Hatch” is also the first song with real vocals, verses and lyrics for Reflector. (1996 is also the year The Melvins went to a major label. Does that mean anything significant? Or is this kind of Melvinism just an analogy to Dylanism in folk music?) But if “Booby Hatch” is the obvious “hitsingle” (hah! To me it is “life set” because of the hi-speed noise rock riff…) on this album, then it is back to destruction of expectations with the next song and then onwards.

After all, Reflector are also able to tone down the impact and find some smarter and more subtle ways to approach the listener. I know that some people will only understand if you kick them in the teeth, believe me, I had the idea often enough, but then violence is now answer (to what question, anyway?). Or so they say. Sludge on the other hand, I believe, probably is. But the main effect of Reflector’s new album seems to be that after repeated listens you start to lose all your traditional points of reference, disortientation sets in, you are left on a big, black ocean with heavy waves crushing in on you. Better get used to it.

www.noiseappeal.com

11/2009