PSI CORPS – Tekeli-li

(CD, r.a.i.g.)

The Russian Association for independent genres, short R.A.I.G. has released many a strange and weird records, and even though some are musically a lot further out on the fringe, more progressive or even more extreme in all respects than “Tekeli-li” by Psi Corps, the idea this is record is based on is a very strange and startling one indeed. And that is mostly due to the early master of the horror story, Edgar Allen Poe, who’s narrative “The Adventures of Arthur Gordon Pym” has initiated this album, which turned out a soundtrack to that story.

Next to HP Lovecraft there is no one so masterful at bringing about a spine-chilling atmosphere in words as it was Edgar Allan Poe (and don’t even mention Stephen King, you dumb nut). And Psi Corps, being Michael Blackman on various kinds of guitars and Alisa Coral on everything else that you need to make up a real band, also manage to bring about an atmosphere fitting to the story of Pym getting lost in the antarctic and the strange things that happen there.

Musically they ramble through fields that are somewhere between what was left of progressive rock in the Eighties and electronic jazz of the early Nineties, which sounds terrible if you read it like this, but is not so at all. It mostly comes from the whirring and whooshing sounds that Coral seems to like her keyboard to make and the fact that Blackman prefers a lot of echo on the sound of his guitars. Of course that fits the endless, white nothing that is the antarctis. Fortunately, I think, they haven’t tried to emulate late nineteenth century sounds or bigbands to get the feeling, because in my opinion the ingredients and issues of the story – I don’t want to mention too much not to spoil anything in case somebody hasn’t found an opportunity to read it yet – are timeless. As is the eternal ice.

Oh yeah, let’s wait what global warming will do to the polar caps. Maybe in a few decades these stories about ships and people lost in the ice can be treated as revealing a sense of place of long gone time.

Anyway, the music works, because once while I was listening to it, somebody entered the living room and asked: what is that spooky music? The last time that happened was about twenty years ago and I was listening to Fields of the Nephilim, can you imagine that? “Tekili-li” – the title refers to the sound birds featured prominently in the story make, also a symbol for the more and more lost connection to reality in the narrative – is a chiller in many ways. It has a brooding, dark quality that ebbs and flows forth during the course of the album and makes for an intense listening pleasure. Moreover it fits nicely into the retro-hype that Tangerine Dream seem to have lately. There should be more tales of Edgar Allen Poe made into movies, stageplays and records. But not musicals, please, I loathe musicals. Musicals scare me for completely different reasons.

Finally, I’d like to add, that I like to read stories about travels to the polar regions, be they accounts of real travels or fiction, in summer when it is sweating hot outside. There are quite a few of them and they always seem to cool me down. (Smilla, the eternal ice and darkness, etc. actually a departing from my usual reading, which is more than a hundred years old if it is fiction – very much different to my music listening habits) You have to be a mighty fast reader to make this soundtrack work to go along with the story while reading it. Even though the six pieces on here are quite longish, reading will take you longer than that. And you might miss out on some of the cool spooky nooding of Blackman and Coral. I can’t wait to test this CD in summer and see if it has the same effect as those stories.

www.raig.ru

11/2009