Dystopian Future Movies - Time (2017)
Artist: Dystopian Future Movies
Title: Time
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: dystopianfuturemovies.com
Genre: Post-Rock, Psychedelic, Garage
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 36:28
Total Size: 83 / 205 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Time
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: dystopianfuturemovies.com
Genre: Post-Rock, Psychedelic, Garage
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 36:28
Total Size: 83 / 205 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Wasteland (1:29)
2. Dulled Gilt (5:30)
3. Pieces (6:35)
4. Inertia (5:11)
5. Dissonant Aggressors (7:45)
6. Fortunate Ones (5:31)
7. Fugitive Mind (4:27)
The long awaited debut album by Nottingham nu-gaze outfit Dystopian Future Movies is the perfect soundtrack to 2017, writes Louder Than War’s Peter Darrington.
Let’s face it, this year, although it’s only five months in as I write this, can simply ‘jog on’ as the modern turn of phrase goes. It has been nothing but a series of jarring, fractured and at times, downright distressing events. Just when you think it can’t get any more bizarre it simply proves us wrong.
If you stitched together all the major news events of the year to date in a fast-forward montage, travelled back in time just one year and showed it to an audience, you could forgive them for thinking they’d just watched a pre-title sequence for an actual dystopian future movie. The last shot would show the doomsday clock ticking inexorably towards midnight before fading out, to be replaced by a title card: “2018”.
Fade up from black to a barren landscape of twisted, melted cars, burnt out buildings and shattered streets, scarred with the shadows of the people who bore witness to mankind’s final moments. Cue the bitter sweet guitar chimes of the opening track to this album – Wasteland. Like the magnum opus namesake poem by T.S. Eliot, the opening movement of this record seems to hang heavy with a genuine sentiment of despair, disillusionment and overwhelming sadness. “Every time the door slams, this could be your last chance,” singer /songwriter Caroline Cawley implores over dissonant, but hauntingly delicate guitars that complete the picture of a relationship that is falling apart while the rest of society is going to hell in a hand basket.
But then boom – Bill Fisher’s ear trashing drum fill opening to Dulled Gilt takes you firmly by the shoulders and gives you a stern shake, while Caroline’s Melvins-esque guitar riffs slap you about the face. Wake up people! Look at us. Literally WTF is going on right now?
And that’s how the journey Dystopian Future Movies and this record takes you on begins. Yes it has a pervading undertow of dark introspection but trust me, it’s just not miserable. It’s truly cathartic – a tonic almost. In fact, it’s Zen like – the space that hangs between each chord strike is as important as the notes used themselves, but honestly, it is actually healing to listen to. It finds beauty in sadness – Caroline’s vocals somehow soar with an honest uplifting heart-on-sleeve emotional purity that can only leave you thinking ‘you know what, we are where we are and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with being fucked off about that right now, so let’s get it out on the table’.
Let’s face it, this year, although it’s only five months in as I write this, can simply ‘jog on’ as the modern turn of phrase goes. It has been nothing but a series of jarring, fractured and at times, downright distressing events. Just when you think it can’t get any more bizarre it simply proves us wrong.
If you stitched together all the major news events of the year to date in a fast-forward montage, travelled back in time just one year and showed it to an audience, you could forgive them for thinking they’d just watched a pre-title sequence for an actual dystopian future movie. The last shot would show the doomsday clock ticking inexorably towards midnight before fading out, to be replaced by a title card: “2018”.
Fade up from black to a barren landscape of twisted, melted cars, burnt out buildings and shattered streets, scarred with the shadows of the people who bore witness to mankind’s final moments. Cue the bitter sweet guitar chimes of the opening track to this album – Wasteland. Like the magnum opus namesake poem by T.S. Eliot, the opening movement of this record seems to hang heavy with a genuine sentiment of despair, disillusionment and overwhelming sadness. “Every time the door slams, this could be your last chance,” singer /songwriter Caroline Cawley implores over dissonant, but hauntingly delicate guitars that complete the picture of a relationship that is falling apart while the rest of society is going to hell in a hand basket.
But then boom – Bill Fisher’s ear trashing drum fill opening to Dulled Gilt takes you firmly by the shoulders and gives you a stern shake, while Caroline’s Melvins-esque guitar riffs slap you about the face. Wake up people! Look at us. Literally WTF is going on right now?
And that’s how the journey Dystopian Future Movies and this record takes you on begins. Yes it has a pervading undertow of dark introspection but trust me, it’s just not miserable. It’s truly cathartic – a tonic almost. In fact, it’s Zen like – the space that hangs between each chord strike is as important as the notes used themselves, but honestly, it is actually healing to listen to. It finds beauty in sadness – Caroline’s vocals somehow soar with an honest uplifting heart-on-sleeve emotional purity that can only leave you thinking ‘you know what, we are where we are and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with being fucked off about that right now, so let’s get it out on the table’.