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ENDURA
THE work of Endura represents another experiment in industrial-organic
synthesis, and a very successful one too. I knew I was going to like Endura
as soon as I saw their newsletter, Liber Secretum, and I was not
disappointed. My first actual encounter was with their contribution to
the My Castle compilation (Onore Alle Arti)
but that was quite a focused piece, whereas, in their own CDs, tunes and
songs drift in a soundscape of industrial and ritualistic ambience.
Stephen Pennick and Christopher Walton were formerly known
as AbRAXAS but changed to Endura and reworked part of their Hexe
cassette to produce the Dreams of Dark Waters CD (1994 Nature &
Art). This has been followed by contributions to a number of compilations
and three other CD albums. Owing to circumstances beyond their control,
these albums have all ended up being released in 1996. The reviews below
are in order of creation (see the discography).
Chris provides Endura's occult inspiration and describes the central
theme of his vision as "the magickal symbiosis of Stellar Space,
Psychic Space and the Watery Space of the world's deep places," and
he is especially fascinated by "the images of the nightmare creatures
that lurk in the abysses of phenomenal and noumenal experience, the Leviathans."
Stephen provides the electronic and musical ability and his attitude to
the occult is quite prosaic. Their talents combine, however, to create
a unique sound and theme.
Stephen is also pursuing a solo project, Ontario
Blue, and the duo run their own tape label, Enlightenment
Communications.
DREAMS OF DARK WATERS
Dreams of Dark Waters was inspired by a strange and disturbing
concept which Chris explains:
"I used to live in a house in the town of Huddersfield, West
Yorkshire. My house was on the edge of the town, under the moors. These
moors form part of the Pennines, a ridge of hills that roll up the middle
of northern England, it was on these moors that Ian Bradey and Mira
Hindley buried the children the children they killed in the early 1960s.
These crimes still have a very powerful influence on the Pennine towns
of Yorkshire and Lancashire. One night I was lying in the bath when
a thunderstorm broke out. As the lightening flashed I imagined the children
still buried on the moors, and their physical and psychic residue slowly
leaking into the water supply, tainting the water and being swallowed
by the people in the houses below. These children had become part of
the Witch tradition of the Pennines, they were the gate, the intermediary
between words."
To say the music is dreamy would be an understatement. It has a very
rich soundscape masterfully combining elements of whispering, trickling
water, heartbeats, demonic laughter, a distant bell, and eastern-sounding
incantation, while a synth strikes in here and there. Coming as their
first major work it is a remarkable achievement.
THE DARK IS LIGHT ENOUGH
The Dark is Light Enough (1996 Allegoria Records) picks up themes
from their earlier CD and "expands out into a universe of cosmic
strangeness".
'The Stars Are Right' (track 1) begins and ends with very deep-voiced
mutterings and a scattering of industrial noises, but the main part is
a powerful and haunting tune with an overwhelming feeling of inevitability.
This would make good theme music for a deep, tragic drama. 'In Nevers
Gift' (2) a squeeze box sound introduces powerful synthesised orchestration
and, buried within that, acoustic guitar and a song in the style of Sol
Invictus.
'Listen Like Wolves' (3) features tribal rhythms and snarling vocals,
while 'Ubbo - Sathla' (4) and 'He Knows The Gate' (5) are more formless
and to my mind less interesting. 'Nu Silence Rite' (6) is a sustained
shamanistic ritual with rattling bones and reminiscent of the songs performed
by Brendan Perry of Dead Can Dance.
'In The Sea My Lord Lieth' (7) is devoted to Leviathan, an Endura leitmotif
as indicated above. Leviathan was a draconian sea-god or monster in Mesopotamian
mythology and was later borrowed into the Hebrew religion where it occupied
a somewhat ambivalent position.
'When I Was Dead' (8) is a song, while the concluding track, 'The Dark
is Light Enough' (9), is a heavy industrial finale with vocals. If rock-drills
could march this is what they'd sound like.
LIBER LEVIATHAN
Liber Leviathan (1996 Aesthetic Death) is all ritual-ambient and dark
mutterings. It's very atmospheric but it uses a musically minimalist approach,
without the more focused songs or tunes which feature on the other CDs.
It's difficult to write very much about it, suffice to say that this is
music for solo contemplation - not the sort of thing I'd play to friends
at a social gathering.
BLACK EDEN
Black Eden (1996 Red Stream) is "necromantic" and represents
a musical attempt to raise the coiled one from the deep.
'Satanas Ex Machina' (1) is one of those infernal factory soundtracks
with busy industrial noises but it also features a good synth orchestral
background. 'The Left Hand Of The Dead' (2) has more deep voices but I'm
not so keen on too much of this.
'The Devils Stars Burn Cold' (3) is an epic orchestral piece with
the echoed/phased title-line repeated continuously, so it's easy to remember
the words. It has that urgent and compulsive character which never fails
to excite.
In a change from the deep-throated vocals, 'When God Was A Snake'
(4) features hissy voices, obviously the 'Word of God' in its original
form. 'The Sun No Longer Sets Me Free' (5) has the sound of pumping air
on the left stereo channel, which, when listening on headphones, gives
the impression of someone or something breathing into your left ear!
'A Golden Heresy' (6) has a deep-throated voice drone and a strident
electronic march. This is the music to accompany the imperial battlefleet
as it plunges into deep space for the final confrontation, although the
authors may have had a more aquatic image in mind.
Rik - 24 August 1996. Amended: 27 May 1997.
CONTACT ADDRESSES
Endura: Stephen Pennick, 4 Verdun Terrace, West Cornforth, County
Durham, DL17 9LN; Christopher Walton, 48 Wood Lane, Ferryhill, County
Durham, DL17 8QG. E-mail stephen@bridewell.demon.co.uk.
FAX ++44 01740 654356.
Aesthetic Death: Silwood, Pershore Road, Eckington, Worcs. WR10 3AP
Allegoria: 81 Wankdorffeldstr, CH-3014 Bern, Switzerland
Nature & Art: PF 10108002, Zwickau, Germany
Red Stream: redstream@aol.com
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