Nurse With Wound: Insect and Individual Silenced (United Dairies)
Okay, Another NWW listen before moving on to other things.
This wasn't the first NWW record I bought, perhaps the second. It does make me wonder where my head was at when I was listening to it initially, and playing some of it in my early WRCT days.
This is a noisy record, abrasive, even unpleasant at times.
Listening to the first side, what is clear compared to the first three NWW LPs is how important tape editing is to this statement. The changes are very abrupt, often happening quickly in succession. A female voice is is in the mix, singing sweetly in the background. Knowing what NWW would be like in the future, this seems to point to the future.
There's no instrumental virtuosity, as in the previous three LPs. Bashing on something metal, some basic drums. Feedback. Speaking.
I think in a future posting I'll address Pierre Schaeffer vs Pierre Henry as composers. Let's just say, just because you're the first doesn't mean you're best.
Is this just Steven Stapleton at the helm, unlikes LPs 1-2-3? That's my understanding. There are no credits (at least in my copy) and both John Fothergill and definitely Heman Pathak are gone by this time.
Steven was dissatisfied with this record and didn't make it available for many years after its initial UD release. I don't find it any more or less interesting than the previous three. The majority of side two, "Absent Old Queen Underfoot" is an absolutely bizarre conversation between jazz-brushes drumming and noisy feedback guitar or bass. Less edited than side one, but not unprocessed either.
On discogs, there's a credit for Jim Thirwell (Foetus) being involved. I couldn't tell you who did what, but he'll be an important element within a record or two.
I'm not saying I hate it, but I think I used to be more excited by someone releasing a record that sounded like this than I am now. It is super-abrasive. If you see the name Nurse With Wound listed with "Industrial" bands, this could be one reason why. Listening to the early compilation tracks might make for an interesting comparison, such as "Dueling Banjos" on Hoisting the Back Flag (mentioned in an earlier blog post here).
Side two ends with "Mutilés de Guerre", a far more compact work. It's looped yelling voices, processed, instruments run through a high-frequency filter, also not particularly pleasant. But it also gets to the point quickly.
Should I be seeing a therapist if this was where my head was at one time?
In my defense: in my college radio days, I'd play just about anything regardless of content, unless it was considered NSFW by the FCC. The one piece I couldn't tolerate was Robert Ashley's "Purposeful Lady Slow Afternoon", which includes a description of a rape. No wonder I couldn't take it. "Mutilés de Guerre" ends with a banjo and voice rendition of "Ode to Joy" while screeching strings underpin it. It's not about rape thankfully, but not easy to listen to either.
I think I need a palette-cleanser after this one.
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