Sky Burial is the second project of Michael Page, who has found limited
fame with the underground harsh electronics project “Fire In the
Head”. Now, I have heard nothing by the aforementioned project,
so this release will be a new insight for me.
Sky Burial is also a beautiful (albeit grotesque) ritual practice among
ancient Tibetan Buddhists, aborigines, and Zoroastrians. First impressions
indicate a more blissful undertone, the intro “Spectrehorse”
is a nice ambient piece, with a few nice hooks of harsh power electronics.
The title is a beautiful image too. Ghostly Mules are a good thing. In
fact, the packaging and cover of this album is one of my all time favourites.
Smoke Sky Horizon is another track to mention, where as the previous
number relied on power electronics to perform it’s ritual teachings,
this is a much sturdier ambient piece, and there is a very deep and very
noticeable Buddhist air to this track, and I suspect most of the album
will carry it. Now, You don’t need to have been involved in the
ambient scene for long to draw this equation, but I shall use it anyway.
Buddhism = beautiful. Buddhist Chants = a good album. The concept of a
Sky Burial is to allow the soul to escape (after a nice bit of massacre
to the body). I think the violent and beautiful contrasts of this practice
also reflect onto the music itself, with as many harsh and chaotic noise
blasts as there are hypnotic and overwhelming droning ambient tracks.
Particular attention is to be paid to the clever use of word play in
the song titles, and occasional bewilderment. (who the fuck is Saquasohuh?)
This is a beautiful tie to Indian mythology and religion, as Saquasohuh
is actually a Blue Star, the appearance of which is supposed to indicate
the
arrival of a new world. Anyone who pours this amount of research into
a release deserves recognition, and in all fairness, a release by a Western
man, cultivating and documenting the beliefs of ancient Indian tradition
and practice cannot be ignored, especially when done with such accuracy.
If you like Dark Ambience, Power Electronics, and religious references,
you can do a lot worse.
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