Stark
overview.
Untitled -2014 (re-released 2016) – Purge
Electronics- Purge Electronics/Black Psychosis – BLACK06
A
Cautionary Tale.
Rorschach.
Royal
Oak.
Charisma
Engine.
Crash
Deconstruction.
Autodidact.
Frank -2016 – Obsessive Fundamental
Realism – OFR – 006.
Monolith.
Tears
Will Kill Us.
Close
Your Eyes 83.
Lifting
the Veil.
Dangerous
Consequence.
In
Vino Veritas.
The
Morning After the Night Before (For Sutcliffe Judgend).
Hog.
Hyena – 2017 – Black Psychosis – Cassette
– BLACK10
Perfect
Poison.
Bridgewater.
My introduction to the work of
STARK was an odd one, it came about due to a cancellation. Stark was meant to
be one of five Power Electronics acts at the Hilumenoua Malediction in support
of PE pioneers Sutcliffe Judgend in February 2017, at the last minute they
cancelled and were replaced by a choppy, no-nonsense act called Dead Normal. I
thought nothing of it, I did not know the project. When writing up my review I
looked the project up, I found the Facebook and Discogs page and read up on
STARK. I found out that this was one project in the wider prolific work of
Steve Bagman who is also responsible for Bagman, (gone Dark) Bleach and
Stosstrupp. In an interview with records reverse, Bagman refers to his
struggles with OCD, Bipolar disorder and addiction. The name Stark comes from
James Dean’s character Jim Stark in Rebel Without a Cause. All Stark tapes are apparently
recorded in one live studio session with no overdubs.
Curiosity then lead to me buy the
untitled debut tape from Black Psychosis Blog-spot. In no time at all I ended
up with all three of the Stark releases. Bagman’s no-show and what I heard on
FRANK ended up with me becoming obsessed very quickly. Due to this I have chosen
to write this article about his body of work as Stark. As a reviewer, all the
new stuff I hear now is compared to that of Stark and very few truly stand up
to this body of work.
Untitled
(2014) (Purge Electronics)
Stark’s debut tape immediately
sounds like nothing else. The work has an immediate older analogue sound that
combines teasing warped electronics, oscillating synthesisers and samples. Some
of the electronics are so primitive, it makes an intense sound that darts
between spacious and compressed. Are the samples police tapes, recordings from
Bagman’s past, film samples or news samples? Bagman’s own vocal; screams,
rambles incoherently and shouts over the proceedings and at times converses and
reacts to the recorded dialogues. The personal conceptualisation and incoherent
aspects to the recording up the intensity of STARK. I am unsure if it is themed
beyond personal experience, the album to me appears to be the inside of
Bagman’s head, the artwork also seems to imply that. Sampled clattering and
Bagman’s background ranting add a haunted quality to parts of the tape.
The inside cover is a
Rorschach test, the cover’s fold over is brains which reoccur a lot in the
artwork. The front cover has head shots of lots of individual women, eyes
covered with lines across them, some women are crossed out. The artwork for STARK
is serious and intense, the sound even more so.
Frank
(2016) (Obsessive Fundamental Realism)
Frank is more timeless in
sound than the debut, it is also considerably more tortured and focussed as an
album. The simplified electronics are homed in and concise. The vocal is the
main tool for instant claustrophobia, yet the minimal nature of the music seems
to allow for more space, the two elements continually collide. The vocals are
close-up and compressed; forceful and domineering. Samples are sometimes
suffocated to the point inaudibility whilst electronics hover over the murder
scene.
Frank is like bad memories
that surround a bleak past. When it plays, I am somewhere I don’t want to be, mournful
drones on Tears Will Kill Us reinforce that. Whereas the debut had interesting
quirks, Frank is solitude, failure, loss, threat, sorrow compressed over 8
tracks. Is Frank Bagman’s past and psyche dragged across 8 tracks?
As with all Obsessive
Fundamental Realism releases, Frank is presented in a black bag with the
artwork pinned to it. Inside this there is the tape plus a variety of inserts
linked to the album.
Hyena
(2017) (Black Psychosis).
Hyena has an immediately
contradictory sound it holds back, but is a lot louder and built up/layered
than other Stark recordings. It’s sound really delves in a lower level mournful
area of noise. Bagman rants and raves in the background of ‘Perfect Poison’, as
with other Stark releases there are no displays of rage and power, it is
something ‘other’, as if something personal, not something outside of Bagman
has been conceptualised into Hyena.
Bagman’s vocal is replaced by
a sampled interview on the reverse side ‘Bridgewater’. Atmospheric drones hover
in the background and rise to submerge the entire dialogue in parts. It ends as
if everything goes into override until it eventually dies out. Oddly the inner
cover is a map of Lawnswood in Stourbridge.
Choppy Noodles 2017.
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3 comments:
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Thanks.
Very nice review about this underated stark project . . .
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