From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Telescopes No. 4
Studio album by
Released21 October 2022 (2022-10-21)
Genre
Length50 minutes
Label Weisskalt Records and Antenna Records

#4 is the fourth studio album by English noise rock band The Telescopes composed and recorded between 2002 and 2004. [1] It was initially released on CD by their own label Antenna Records in 2005, [2] later reissued by Weisskalt Records on vinyl in 2022 on a limited edition of 300. [3] To commemorate its 20th anniversary on the basis of when recording began, [4] the album was manufactured by longstanding Australian pressing plant Zenith on translucent red vinyl at 45rpm to draw out the subtleties and expansiveness of the sound. [5]

Background

The album is notable for Stephen Lawrie's further exploration of unconventional methods in electronic music, the result being reminiscent of "a missing David Lynch soundtrack." [5] The release has been described as "shape shifting audio druidry and stone age free drone repetition. Mindscapes of merge and misheard whispers. Death rattles pulse driven twangs and broken bones." [6]

In an interview with When The Sun Hits, Lawrie expressed the emotive drive behind the experimentation with noise, "Songs are written. Even when they seem to fall from nowhere. But I think and dream in noise." [7]

Part of the musical virtuosity and innovation demonstrated by Lawrie's composing skills included playing the guitar in a non-traditional way thereby disguising the instrument through distortion of sound. [8] As Lawrie explained in an interview with It's Psychedelic Baby! Magazine’s Klemen Breznikar, some of the guitars were table top guitars laid flat in experimental tunings, manipulated with whatever delivered inspiration. Objects such as crocodile clips, battery operated hand fans, cello bows, tin toys, gear stick knobs, remote controls on the pick ups were all used for experimentation which for Lawrie, turned the guitar into a fresh instrument, causing him to think differently and develop new pathways. [5]

The majority of the songs were written on an EDP Wasp synth which contributed to the deep throbbing sound present throughout the album. [9]

Critical reception

The album has received positive reception and is considered to be an underrated cult classic among music journalists [10] and how it is representative of The Telescopes continued exploration of noise, feedback and the soundscapes developed from such boundary pushing. [7]

NME's Nathaniel Cramp has described the record as "in another universe...creating some incredible and genuinely scary music." [11]

Dusted Magazine's Jon Dale highlighted the track All the Leaves, writing "Sometimes The Telescopes surrender to graceful beauty, as on #4’s “All the Leaves". These poised, charming melodies recall their untitled second album, where quiescent songs flickered from within a heat chamber, walls glossed with steam and fog." [12]

Track listing

All music by Stephen Lawrie. [3]

#4 track listing
No.TitleLength
1."the hypnotic pulse of the motor driven"6:12
2."link No. 1"5:05
3."on a dead man's bones by the light of the moon, skeletons dance a demon dance of the doomed"8:40
4."all the leaves"2:41
5."a measure of imbalance"0:43
6."singularity"4:26
7."fear the eye became the tone"9:22
8."the yearning"1:35
9."winter No. 4"5:03
10."it bleeds"5:52

Credits

Notes

Recorded at The Experimental Health Unit, Wired Studio, Jerry's House, & Far Heath Studio between 2002 & 2004. Mixed at The Experimental Health Unit, 2004–2005. Vinyl pressing by Zenith, 2022. [3]

References

  1. ^ Breznikar, Klemen. "The Telescopes | Interview | New Album, '#4'". It's Psychedelic, Baby! Magazine.
  2. ^ a b "The Telescopes #4 (Antenna Records)". Discogs.
  3. ^ a b c "The Telescopes #4 (Weisskalt Records)". Discogs. Retrieved 23 September 2023.
  4. ^ "The Telescopes #4". Norman Records.
  5. ^ a b c "The Telescopes #4 image (Weisskalt Records)". Discogs.
  6. ^ "The Telescopes #4". Clear Spot. Retrieved 23 September 2023.
  7. ^ a b "Interview: Stephen Lawrie of The Telescopes". When The Sun HIts.
  8. ^ Breznikar, Klemen. "The Telescopes | Interview with Stephen Lawrie". It's Psychedelic, Baby! Magazine.
  9. ^ Hammond, Andrew. "Part Two of our interview with Stephen Lawrie of The Telescopes". Isolation UK.
  10. ^ Rogatchevski, Ilia. "Meet: The Telescopes". Backseat Mafia.
  11. ^ "#4 by The Telescopes". NME.
  12. ^ Dale, Jon. "The Telescopes – #4 / Auditory Illusions". Dusted Magazine.

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Telescopes No. 4
Studio album by
Released21 October 2022 (2022-10-21)
Genre
Length50 minutes
Label Weisskalt Records and Antenna Records

#4 is the fourth studio album by English noise rock band The Telescopes composed and recorded between 2002 and 2004. [1] It was initially released on CD by their own label Antenna Records in 2005, [2] later reissued by Weisskalt Records on vinyl in 2022 on a limited edition of 300. [3] To commemorate its 20th anniversary on the basis of when recording began, [4] the album was manufactured by longstanding Australian pressing plant Zenith on translucent red vinyl at 45rpm to draw out the subtleties and expansiveness of the sound. [5]

Background

The album is notable for Stephen Lawrie's further exploration of unconventional methods in electronic music, the result being reminiscent of "a missing David Lynch soundtrack." [5] The release has been described as "shape shifting audio druidry and stone age free drone repetition. Mindscapes of merge and misheard whispers. Death rattles pulse driven twangs and broken bones." [6]

In an interview with When The Sun Hits, Lawrie expressed the emotive drive behind the experimentation with noise, "Songs are written. Even when they seem to fall from nowhere. But I think and dream in noise." [7]

Part of the musical virtuosity and innovation demonstrated by Lawrie's composing skills included playing the guitar in a non-traditional way thereby disguising the instrument through distortion of sound. [8] As Lawrie explained in an interview with It's Psychedelic Baby! Magazine’s Klemen Breznikar, some of the guitars were table top guitars laid flat in experimental tunings, manipulated with whatever delivered inspiration. Objects such as crocodile clips, battery operated hand fans, cello bows, tin toys, gear stick knobs, remote controls on the pick ups were all used for experimentation which for Lawrie, turned the guitar into a fresh instrument, causing him to think differently and develop new pathways. [5]

The majority of the songs were written on an EDP Wasp synth which contributed to the deep throbbing sound present throughout the album. [9]

Critical reception

The album has received positive reception and is considered to be an underrated cult classic among music journalists [10] and how it is representative of The Telescopes continued exploration of noise, feedback and the soundscapes developed from such boundary pushing. [7]

NME's Nathaniel Cramp has described the record as "in another universe...creating some incredible and genuinely scary music." [11]

Dusted Magazine's Jon Dale highlighted the track All the Leaves, writing "Sometimes The Telescopes surrender to graceful beauty, as on #4’s “All the Leaves". These poised, charming melodies recall their untitled second album, where quiescent songs flickered from within a heat chamber, walls glossed with steam and fog." [12]

Track listing

All music by Stephen Lawrie. [3]

#4 track listing
No.TitleLength
1."the hypnotic pulse of the motor driven"6:12
2."link No. 1"5:05
3."on a dead man's bones by the light of the moon, skeletons dance a demon dance of the doomed"8:40
4."all the leaves"2:41
5."a measure of imbalance"0:43
6."singularity"4:26
7."fear the eye became the tone"9:22
8."the yearning"1:35
9."winter No. 4"5:03
10."it bleeds"5:52

Credits

Notes

Recorded at The Experimental Health Unit, Wired Studio, Jerry's House, & Far Heath Studio between 2002 & 2004. Mixed at The Experimental Health Unit, 2004–2005. Vinyl pressing by Zenith, 2022. [3]

References

  1. ^ Breznikar, Klemen. "The Telescopes | Interview | New Album, '#4'". It's Psychedelic, Baby! Magazine.
  2. ^ a b "The Telescopes #4 (Antenna Records)". Discogs.
  3. ^ a b c "The Telescopes #4 (Weisskalt Records)". Discogs. Retrieved 23 September 2023.
  4. ^ "The Telescopes #4". Norman Records.
  5. ^ a b c "The Telescopes #4 image (Weisskalt Records)". Discogs.
  6. ^ "The Telescopes #4". Clear Spot. Retrieved 23 September 2023.
  7. ^ a b "Interview: Stephen Lawrie of The Telescopes". When The Sun HIts.
  8. ^ Breznikar, Klemen. "The Telescopes | Interview with Stephen Lawrie". It's Psychedelic, Baby! Magazine.
  9. ^ Hammond, Andrew. "Part Two of our interview with Stephen Lawrie of The Telescopes". Isolation UK.
  10. ^ Rogatchevski, Ilia. "Meet: The Telescopes". Backseat Mafia.
  11. ^ "#4 by The Telescopes". NME.
  12. ^ Dale, Jon. "The Telescopes – #4 / Auditory Illusions". Dusted Magazine.

External links


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