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Liquido Di Morte - |||| CD (album) cover

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Liquido Di Morte

 

Psychedelic/Space Rock

2.49 | 3 ratings

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TCat
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
2 stars Liquido di Morte is a psychedelic/space rock band from Milan, Italy that has been around since 2014. Their third album entitled "||||" was released in October of 2019. The band line up is made up of individuals who only identify by letters from the alphabet; FC (synthesizers), F (guitar), C (guitar), Z (bass) and S (drums). The album is available on digital download, CD and LP which apparently has 300 different covers. There are a total of 5 tracks with a total run-time of just over 40 minutes.

Starting with a keyboard drone, "Uomo Fa Cibo" (6:46) soon gets moving along when the bass and drums kick in and then the guitars start to establish a chiming and strumming group of layers. The synths also start to create some improvisation, and then the track sails along with it's moderate beat and nicely layered sound. As it moves along, not much changes except for a slowly, increasing intensity to the end. "Strateron 2323" (4:49) starts with a robot voice and then the full band comes in with a faster beat and the synth leading the way following a motif, and a wall of guitars behind it. The guitars get heavier and darker and pretty much drown out the synth as they play a repetitive riff and the drums pound their way to the end. Not a whole lot of substance in this track.

"Tramonto Nucleare" (8:57) starts with a buzzing low drone while chiming guitars announce the drums and bass coming in and the music starts chugging its way forward, like a train picking up speed. The synth weaves its way around the foundation as it picks up tempo. Just before 4 minutes, all of the layers and foundation stops leaving us suspended. Then a slow moving beat begins and dark guitars strum their way along. The synth comes in later and creates another layer to the music that now chugs along slow. Guitars get a lot heavier after 6 minutes, but the overall sound remains the same.

"Rebus (6, 5)" (13:40) starts off slowly with echoing guitar chords and a low growling bass or synth sound like a dinosaur moaning. The synth drones along with harsh guitar sounds giving everything a metallic sound. Intensity builds slowly as a fuzzy drone threatens to take everything over. All the while, there are no drums or percussion, just slow moving layers. All of this gets swept away at 7 minutes, and the music quiets to a more interesting guitar line, but things remain ominous and slow. Finally, you start hearing signs of percussion developing, pushing the music forward and a surprisingly bright synth comes in. The tempo picks up a bit, and repetitive motifs build upon each other, but the percussion still remains a bit subdued through it all and it all intensifies very slowly. Through all of this time, nothing much interesting happens as this post rock sound continues. There isn't even that much to bliss out to as it is all more reminiscent of formulaic post rock than it is real space rock.

"The Fattening" (6:14) ends the album. It starts off with tapping drums and cymbals, then a low and dark bass comes in followed by strummed guitar chords and low synth. The sound seems to go for a native American feel with the repetitive modal bass and drum line, the music again moves along slowly with sustained notes from the synth lying on top of everything. Not much else happens on this track.

So, what you have here is an album that lies somewhere between post-rock and droning, trance rock that really doesn't develop or change much through each individual track. There really isn't anything very interesting about it all as each song churns along and it is all based around simply intensifying basic motifs made by guitars and synths. There just isn't a lot here to hold your interest, and it even isn't appealing for meditation or blessing out as the music is dark and really offers nothing there that you can "slip" into. If you like your post rock predictable and uneventful, then you might be interested, but its hard to see where this would be very appealing to many people.

TCat | 2/5 |

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