Helena Espvall (of Espers) and David Maranha of Osso Exótico‘s first joint album finds the duo pushing and prodding at the boundaries of what their amplification of cello, violin and electric organ can achieve in the field of drone music. It hardly needs to be emphasised that as much volume as the reproducing equipment can offer clearly — and the listener(s) can stand — will give the best results for this LP, as Sombras Incendiadas is all about density, and even surrender.
But like those Zen paradoxes whose comprehension is so often encouraged with a swift slap upside the head, or koans which make the brain ache with seemingly ungraspable meanings, the four tracks on Sombras Incendiadas never quite let the listener relax. This is not in any sense ambient music, and its drones are not the kind which lull and soothe, but which perk up and stimulate the senses by pricking relentlessly at the skin and nagging ever more scabrously at the recipient’s tolerance for prolonged dissonance.
When the mood does drag, it’s with an anticipatory sense of pregnant expectancy often verging on the apprehensive: how many horripilations are there to come next; when will the (hated, unwanted) silence save the world from this all-pervading noise? But what shall, or even can, ultimately take its place and replace that awful, joyous cacophony? Another track of ecstatic life-affirming agony (how many exactly have already played through?) – or perhaps worse, the ghastly, deathly silence of termination?-Linus Tossio-