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Theory of Machines

Ben Frost

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Album Review

It's funny how Theory of Machines seems to be all over the place, yet the music itself remains very homogeneous and the artistic direction is as precise as can be. On this album, it sounds like Ben Frost is drawing from tons of influences, which means that each listener will hear in it different things related to their own musical experience. The title track opens in post-rock style, down to the impending climax six minutes in. Yet, Theory of Machines is not a post-rock album. You might also hear death metal threads laced throughout the five cuts, and ambient stylings, Sonic Youth-esque guitar textures, a Björk-like fragility in the arrangements, an occasional surge of rhythm akin to late-vintage King Crimson, a level of intensity reminiscent of Swans, and so on. Frost does make an explicit reference to Swans' Michael Gira in the track title "We Love You Michael Gira," but the tribute is more subtle than what you might expect. The music in this track (as everywhere else on the album) is not that close to Swans' output, but it does share a common spirit, a certain understanding of the power of music. This entirely instrumental album seems to balance itself over two extremes: the assured thickness of noise guitars vs. the fragility of a string quartet (particularly in the shyly beautiful "Forgetting You Is Like Breathing Water"), and the warmth of both guitars and strings vs. the clinical, mood-killing feel of electronic sounds, especially life-support equipment (the unmistakable "beep" of the latter surfaces in two tracks, imposing a drastic change of atmosphere). An easy album this is not, as it willfully (and playfully) antagonizes the listener, but it contains unsuspected moments of beauty. ~ François Couture, Rovi

Customer Reviews

Headphone Commute Review

I can only describe Theory of Machines as ambient hardcore. Australian born Ben Frost builds walls of noise that rise steadily and slowly, and come crashing down on command. Now residing in Reykjavik, Frost exploits all of the extreme properties of sound. Psychologically raw, punishing, and overdriven guitars, with reverberated pads and rhythms mutate into the white noise and back, sending chills that originate deep from within the ear canal and slide down to the toenails. Frost often made me scratch my ear canal and occasionally get up to check the monitors that sounded blown out, emitting graceful static. Coming from a rock background, and being a member of a band called School of Emotional Engineering, Frost is not particularly interested in electronic music, and rather relies heavily on dark minimalism and industrial noise to compose truly one of the most interesting and irreversible memory imprints of the year.

a rainy day

...it's cliche, but it really is a rainy day and I'm listening to this Ben Frost record for the 1st time. Perfect setting. It's a slow builder, ambient tunes with a mix of live instrumentation and electronics. Stand out tracks are "Theory of Machines" with its droning chord progression that distorts and builds with an electronic beat climax, and "Forgetting You Is Like Breathing Water" with its bell tones, strings, minimalist beat..... hands down the best track on the album. For fans of Sigur Ros' B-Sides, City Centre Offices and such.....

Great Purchase

This is one of the best electronic albums I own. The mixture of electronics and live instrumentation is fantastic. I rank this album up there with Autechre's Chiastic Slide.

Theory of Machines, Ben Frost
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Customer Ratings

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