The Mercury Impulse - Records of Human Behaviour

Angry Metal Guy

Drone is an exceptionally difficult genre to analyse. By its very nature, it resists structure, memorability, and conciseness; its forms are indiscrete; monotony is a feature. Chicago duo The Mercury Impulse intensify and deepen this trait by channelling their drone through a noisy medium with a subtle undercurrent of dark ambient. Debut Records of Human Behaviour thus stands as a kind of mood music indifferent to musical norms and tangible emotions. A duo of musicians known for Wrekmeister Harmonies and BLOODYMINDED respectively, the pedigree behind The Mercury Impulse is one of harsh, uncompromisingly shrouded sound steeped in atmosphere. But here they take it to a whole new level, implementing compositional notions from ambient and post-metal worlds in a way that makes them almost unrecognisable as anything more tangible than amorphous smoke.

Records of Human Behaviour is so subtle that it’s hard to talk about, and hard even to listen to attentively. So hazy and indistinct throughout, that my partner thought I was listening to some trendy binaural white noise when he walked in on one occasion. So monotonous that it borders on the truly hypnotic (in the sense of being sleep-inducing). Relatively long track lengths, and a predisposition to recurring, simplistic patterns give the impression of infinity, only further enhanced by the extreme levels of ebbing, flowing feedback. An ideal backdrop for focusing at work perhaps; a nightmare to deliver your full attention to. Noise and drone aren’t typically known for being exciting, so I won’t use the “b”-word. Yet the album delivers so little in the way of anything that even my notes are sparse after many drawn-out, toneless listens.

Records Of Human Behavior by The Mercury Impulse

This is not to say that there are zero things to praise here. Sometimes the quiescence provides a stage for beauty, as agonisingly soft chords of synth play a delicate, muffled refrain over a trembling, bassy ground (“Remanded to the Back of a Mirror,” “Infinite Repetition”). Sometimes also, the burr of omnipresent noise allows the spectres of dissonant notes to jab and ring to genuinely unsettling effect (“Keeping My Second Self Invisible,” “I Heard the Earth Falling”). And close listening at several points will be rewarded by a powerful sense of dread, (“Keeping…,” “Remanded…”) closer in its gut-clenching grip to dissonant death metal than anything in the realm of electronica. In this vein, one can see how cuts like “Primitive Instincts” with its clipped, inaudible voice samples, and aggressively cold and buzzing “Miles of Smouldering Trash” cleave closer to an extreme metal template in many respects. Inherently dense and suffocating, the music is brought to new depth by a relatively spacious master which deepens the already abyssal lows, and brightens albeit without sharpening into clarity the jarring, uncomfortable highs.

But despite its dark, painfully cool aesthetic, Records of Human Behaviour as a whole is a mass that swallows its distinctive passages and ultimately leaves an inappropriately light impact. “Keeping my Second Self Invisible” and “Primitive Instincts” are both unsettling, but while the former has just enough edge to be interesting, the latter is almost instantly grating. Other cuts prove themselves to be quite aptly titled as their immobility (even relative to their peers) is suffocatingly tedious (“Behind Dull Glass,” “Lessons Of Apathy”). It’s easier to view the album favourably if one imagines it to be the soundtrack to a modern psychological horror. Then at least the crescendoing waves of dissonant synth (“Remanded…” “Lessons of Apathy”) and flickering hums of feedback (“Keeping…,” “I Heard…”) could associate themselves with brutal revelations and creeping tension. As a drone album, this might even be a fairer way to assess it. But ultimately, the music does not come with an accompanying film.

Tolerance for drone varies widely, and appreciation for Records of Human Behaviour will extend about as far as one’s patience for its stubborn understatedness. When even the most interesting tracks (“Remanded to the Back of a Mirror” and “Infinite Repetition”) grow a little stale before their time, there’s little to motivate repeated listens. If you’re a massive fan of drone, or want something to help you sleep, give it a spin, but this probably won’t be creating any converts for the genre, eerie though it can be.


Rating: Mixed
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320kbps
Label: Self-Release
Website: Bandcamp
Releases Worldwide: August 23rd, 2024

The post The Mercury Impulse – Records of Human Behaviour Review appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.

Wed Aug 21 11:31:18 GMT 2024