Body/Head - The Switch

Bandcamp Daily

On their latest LP, Kim Gordon and Bill Nace write songs that stretch out fearlessly.

Mon Jul 16 13:22:11 GMT 2018

The Quietus

If Body/Head's Coming Apart reduced avant-rock to a volatile, spewing magma, then The Switch is freer still, both wraith-like and earthbound. They're a collaboration between two musical juggernauts, Kim Gordon and Bill Nace.

Gordon is one of those vital, widely known figures that sheds light on the peculiar growths that emerge outside of public gaze. With Sonic Youth and beyond Gordon invited the listener to venture down the underground rabbit hole, discovering all manner of freakish anomalies as they went - from free jazz to Harry Pussy. Nace has also skirted away from the restrictions of wholesome taste, taking part in fierce collaborations with the likes of Samara Lubelski and Aaron Dilloway.

Together, they have stumbled upon some magickal, alchemal brew; a hardened, modern psychedelia. This is psychedelia stretched the fuck out, guitar-tone-trickery alone as the source of transcendence. The Switch makes composition out of rock's reverberation, all echo, shade, and light. It's a kind of fuzz-box sorcery.

Aside from Gordon's monotone delivery, that is all that comprises this long form piece, split up into five tracks that bleed seamlessly into one another. ‘Last Time’ is defined by battered twang, a surrealist Americana. ‘You Don't Need’, meanwhile, applies Aaron Dilloway-esque tape abstraction to rock-guitar foundations. This is a smeared record, one that finds influence in what lies beyond the macho thrust of rock and roll.

Its last two tracks are conscience obliterators - one aptly titled ‘Change My Brain’. The band have discussed how integral an influence Twin Peaks: The Return was on the new record, and with this dual finale, Body/Head surrender wholly to Twin Peaks dream logic. They are tracks that jam the receptors, push further and further outwards.

The Switch confirms Body/Head as the best post-Sonic Youth project by a country mile, but to merely classify them as an afterthought of that group does them a great disservice. They are their own, living, breathing, organism, and on the The Switch, the telepathy blurs distinction between Gordon and Nace, equally as it does between body and head.

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Sun Jul 22 16:51:29 GMT 2018

Pitchfork 80

On their most purposeful record to date, Kim Gordon and Bill Nace conjure a complete sonic ecosystem where they control the weather.

Fri Jul 13 05:00:00 GMT 2018

Tiny Mix Tapes 70

Body/Head
The Switch

[Matador; 2018]

Rating: 3.5/5

Boredoming. It’s such a wandering imperial sneeze, whatever presentation one might be witnessing. That bemused snort when there isn’t the threat of violence or epiphany. The way it can ripple through a crowd is not unlike the sunset leaking in around your periphery before you’ve had a chance to break focus and regard it. With this in mind, one remembers the saving grace of the lateral move. One must come again to the simple pleasure of strapping in and going as nowhere as you possibly can.

Not just with bludgeoning or bellowing, but with a patient sort of fussing at loose threads. Some entanglements are ripped, some extracted with care, but there is never resolution, because disentangling is putting a seal on something you wish to excavate. Such is the way of Kim Gordon and Bill Nace with their output as Body/Head. It is minimal, studious mucking that resists the easy out of pop confection or groove. That tendency is arguably, at times, more dull and more self-indulgent in its audience-approval-chasing than two sodden progressions engaging placidly with their miredness could ever be. It is pure freedom in stagnancy. Both musicians possess an attentive, slow roving ear, attuned to lovely fleeting seams in dense patches of obfuscated texture and stunted rhythm.

As gorgeous and enthralling as 2013’s Coming Apart was/is, the sprawling nature of it lends itself more to a sense of process or stab-taking. While those are still applicable to this and many other fine noise releases, in Coming Apart’s case, it’s a slight detriment. The album’s minimalism seems to brush more against the hunt for signification by way of Kim Gordon’s inimitable dry vocal style and pointed yet abstract lyricism. It’s much more Sonic Youth-like in this way, thereby coming dangerously close to resembling a sleepwalked detour from her work there. The live shows Body/Head have done in the interim, where much of the material comprising The Switch sprang from, seems to’ve helped them nail down a more cohesive approach. It’s still wide open, drifting music, but with a relative brevity that helps it lodge more with the listener as an album.

The Switch by Body/Head

Having suggested that this record is “a stoner record for non-stoners,” it occurs just how much Gordon continues to thrive on contradiction. There is definitely some of the sludgy tone of stoner metal, but with none of the drug culture trappings of that idiom. Their approach is trusting of the transportive wash of pure drone over its potential psychotropic compatibility. It is bluesy, but in the Charalambides sense. Which is to say that, while roots-centric, there is such a steady commitment to thick malfunction and simmering reduction that it never falls into pothead-friendly avant-pop sugar (not to necessarily cast aspersions on that sort of thing when there’s wonderful weirdo confectioners like Tim Presley, Jenny Hval, or Ariel Pink out there).

Blessedly, The Switch feels feral, like some slow-burn raging, wheezing beast that teeteringly stalks to the edge of your perception. It’s a lopsided listen, the channels often competing with each other like overlapping Altman dialogue. In this fever, The Switch exudes the feel of scratchy, sharp, rash-red sensations in damp, stagnant air. It not only suggests melted popsicle flies refrozen and grated into a coil of dandelion greens in a half-darkened kitchen, but also makes it seem appetizing. This disorientingly blurty, blown-out dustcloud regatta has been dubbed hypnotic, but it comes off (especially at the proper volume of 70% or higher) more like a staggering sort of headfuck.

Highlight “Change My Brain” is so stereo-unfriendly (low on one side, high on the other) as to recommend one play this album via bluetooth, but it’s an interesting effect (especially on headphones) and gives an oddly voyeuristic dimension to the smothered lament. A big part of the reason this imbalance works here and elsewhere on the album is the combined shrewd and devil-may-care expressiveness of both guitarists. It also bears mentioning that Gordon’s vocals sound a lot more confident and of a musical piece here than the sort of smoke-clearing, message-from-the-depths effect they took on with Coming Apart. Her and Nace (whose album last year with Paul Flaherty and Chris Corsano is a fantastic, fathomlessly cathartic dive) sound completely knitted in terms of both overblown extremes and hairpin turns to melodic edging.

It’s the music’s imperfect, frayed charm that makes The Switch stick out beyond the obvious pedigree of its personnel. It is a rousing success, both as a compelling artifact of the noise/drone continuum and as a dossier on where Body/Head has been and are now. It’s less a provocation and more a taste that’s keen, whether swathes acquire it or not.

Tue Jul 17 04:00:00 GMT 2018

Tiny Mix Tapes 70

Body/Head
The Switch

[Matador; 2018]

Rating: 3.5/5

Boredoming. It’s such a wandering imperial sneeze, whatever presentation one might be witnessing. That bemused snort when there isn’t the threat of violence or epiphany. The way it can ripple through a crowd is not unlike the sunset leaking in around your periphery before you’ve had a chance to break focus and regard it. With this in mind, one remembers the saving grace of the lateral move. One must come again to the simple pleasure of strapping in and going as nowhere as you possibly can.

Not just with bludgeoning or bellowing, but with a patient sort of fussing at loose threads. Some entanglements are ripped, some extracted with care, but there is never resolution, because disentangling is putting a seal on something you wish to excavate. Such is the way of Kim Gordon and Bill Nace with their output as Body/Head. It is minimal, studious mucking that resists the easy out of pop confection or groove. That tendency is arguably, at times, more dull and more self-indulgent in its audience-approval-chasing than two sodden progressions engaging placidly with their miredness could ever be. It is pure freedom in stagnancy. Both musicians possess an attentive, slow roving ear, attuned to lovely fleeting seams in dense patches of obfuscated texture and stunted rhythm.

As gorgeous and enthralling as 2013’s Coming Apart was/is, the sprawling nature of it lends itself more to a sense of process or stab-taking. While those are still applicable to this and many other fine noise releases, in Coming Apart’s case, it’s a slight detriment. The album’s minimalism seems to brush more against the hunt for signification by way of Kim Gordon’s inimitable dry vocal style and pointed yet abstract lyricism. It’s much more Sonic Youth-like in this way, thereby coming dangerously close to resembling a sleepwalked detour from her work there. The live shows that Body/Head have done in the interim, where much of the material comprising The Switch sprang from, seems to’ve helped them nail down a more cohesive approach. It’s still wide open, drifting music, but with a relative brevity that helps it lodge more with the listener as an album.

The Switch by Body/Head

Having suggested that this record is “a stoner record for non-stoners,” it occurs just how much Gordon continues to thrive on contradiction. There is definitely some of the sludgy tone of stoner metal, but with none of the drug culture trappings of that idiom. Their approach is trusting of the transportive wash of pure drone over its potential psychotropic compatibility. It is bluesy, but in the Charalambides sense. Which is to say that, while roots-centric, there is such a steady commitment to thick malfunction and simmering reduction that it never falls into pothead-friendly avant-pop sugar (not to necessarily cast aspersions on that sort of thing when there’s wonderful weirdo confectioners like Tim Presley, Jenny Hval, or Ariel Pink out there).

Blessedly, The Switch feels feral, like some slow-burn raging, wheezing beast that teeteringly stalks to the edge of your perception. It’s a lopsided listen, the channels often competing with each other like overlapping Altman dialogue. In this fever, The Switch exudes the feel of scratchy, sharp, rash-red sensations in damp, stagnant air. It not only suggests melted popsicle flies refrozen and grated into a coil of dandelion greens in a half-darkened kitchen, but also makes it seem appetizing. This disorientingly blurty, blown-out dustcloud regatta has been dubbed hypnotic, but it comes off (especially at the proper volume of 70% or higher) more like a staggering sort of headfuck.

Highlight “Change My Brain” is so stereo-unfriendly (low on one side, high on the other) as to recommend one play this album via bluetooth, but it’s an interesting effect (especially on headphones) and gives an oddly voyeuristic dimension to the smothered lament. A big part of the reason this imbalance works here and elsewhere on the album is the combined shrewd and devil-may-care expressiveness of both guitarists. It also bears mentioning that Gordon’s vocals sound a lot more confident and of a musical piece here than the sort of smoke-clearing, message-from-the-depths effect they took on with Coming Apart. Her and Nace (whose album last year with Paul Flaherty and Chris Corsano is a fantastic, fathomlessly cathartic dive) sound completely knitted in terms of both overblown extremes and hairpin turns to melodic edging.

It’s the music’s imperfect, frayed charm that makes The Switch stick out beyond the obvious pedigree of its personnel. It is a rousing success, both as a compelling artifact of the noise/drone continuum and as a dossier on where Body/Head has been and are now. It’s less a provocation and more a taste that’s keen, whether swathes acquire it or not.

Tue Jul 17 04:00:00 GMT 2018

The Guardian 60

Matador

Even for Kim Gordon, who has made a career from minimalist cool, The Switch – her second record with Bill Nace as Body/Head – is strikingly stripped back. The duo’s 2013 album Coming Apart pitched her iconic vocal desolation against her and Nace’s improvised guitar, the tumultuous effect cracked and operatic. They’ve ripped that overt drama – the instruments’ rich tone and her declamatory expression – out of this five-track collection, which broods around staticky textures that ooze like a weather report from a nuclear winter (a grim glimpse into life in 2021, then).

Some of it falls into predictable drone tropes: the end of Change My Brain has the grand throb of Mogwai or Tim Hecker at their most icily gothic. And there are moments of antagonism that don’t work away from the genuine sense of confrontation of their live performances, like the intensely shrill, bagpipe-like note that pierces the end of Last Time. But fans of this kind of thing will recognise Gordon and Nace’s masterful grasp of texture: In the Dark Room is densely layered but immaculately precise, like a cross section of toxic ozone. One sounds like a rotting carcass being dragged over gravel; another features a corrosive loop that races and collapses.

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Fri Jul 13 09:00:07 GMT 2018

The Guardian 60

(Matador)

After 30 years and 15 albums of groundbreaking alt-rock, Sonic Youth split in 2011, in large part because of the acrimonious divorce of bassist Kim Gordon and guitarist Thurston Moore. Since then, while the solo careers of Moore and fellow guitarist Lee Ranaldo have largely followed in the style of late-era Youth, Gordon has written a well-received autobiography, switched to guitar and taken the band’s more experimental mid-1980s Evol and Bad Moon Rising albums as her jumping-off point for her new project with Bill Nace, Body/Head.

Their debut, 2013’s Coming Apart, echoed some of those records’ avant garde tendencies, but it at least nodded to rock orthodoxy. The Switch, however, is far more expansive. Again, there are no beats, just washes of guitar noise; the difference this time is that Gordon’s vocals are now buried so deep within the mix that they are largely unintelligible, and strangely unobtrusive. It works best on the powerful and hypnotic Change My Brain, where the layers of repeating riffs and drones feel as if they are being looped, recalling the otherworldliness of some of William Basinski’s work. Elsewhere, aside from the Sturm und Drang of In the Dark Room, the compositions can sound a little too abstract and free-form, although they do (eventually) reward repeated listening.

Continue reading...

Sun Jul 22 07:00:10 GMT 2018