(Catalogue no. 16203)

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Title:  One side and the other of the door
Artist:  Tzesne
Label:  Arto Artian
Format:  CDR
Price:  € 8.90

  Mp3 samples: none

other Titles by..
Tzesne
Huffduff (7")

Title Description:
Crawl yourself like an injured animal through the tunnel«s labyrinth.
Put your eyes blinded, like turned to yourself.
Feel something, someone,
they«ll never touch you
they«ll never speak you.
You«ll know that ground is upon your head.
Your thoughts are not yours
but they«ll be knocking your temples.
Lean your back on the wall
it«s cold and humid.
You«ll realize that you are naked.
Piss on your feet undermud,
you«ll get warm again.
Renew your way
you«ll have a long way to find the door
wich leads to the other side,
where madness is banned
but red traffic lights are crossed.

The music of SpainÕs Tzesne has been reviewed before (Vital Weekly 461, 470 and 492), and ÔOne Side And Other Of The DoorÕ has been released a while ago, but only now landed here. This new(er) release lies in the extension of the first two, with the 7? reviewed in Vital Weekly 492 being the oddball so far. ItÕs hard to tell what Tzesne does sound-wise, as all of his sound-sources are highly obscured by an extensive use of synths, samples and sound effects. In this one piece that lasts sixty minutes everything melts together in a highly organic way. Tzesne takes the listener on a journey through a vast empty post nuclear landscape. A desolated world in which the maggots are the only ones that survived. You can hear them creeping on the floor of empty factory. Machine hum still occurs waiting for itÕs final breath. This is not ambient for the weak of hearth, but a dark soundscape for the more adventurous science fiction lovers, those who love drive by machine parks late at night when the lights shine and the roads are empty. Certainly with a highly cinematographic character. When we do look from the objective outside to the music of Tzesne we canÕt say that heÕs walking terrible new paths of the musical evolution, as this music has been developing since the mid eighties, but Tzesne does a fine job. (FDW - Vital Weekly)


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