Old Komm - Ventspils EP

Old Komm - Ventspils EP
Author: Old Komm
Publisher: Discrepant Records
Language:
Pages:
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Weight: 400 g
Binding: -
ISBN:
Availability: In stock
Price: €19.00
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Product Description

(Vinyl)

Олд Комм (loosely translated as Old Komm) are Andrey Kolmogorov and Sergey Gorsky a musical duo hailing from the city of Samara, Russia. Since meeting in the mid 90's the duo started translating their musical ideas by making industrial music using a mixture of field recordings, broken synths, found sound and, what became a constant motif on their output, church pipe organs - Sergey's father was a church organist of 40 years giving the duo plenty of material to tamper with.

Isolated from any western influence and attention, the duo released a handful of extremely limited cassettes on a now defunct Russian label. The results were unique slabs of industrial music with strong nods to primitive techno, sound design and noise music. For lack of an audience as well as poor distribution the tapes were mostly handed out to friends and family until one reached the 'discrepant' radar a couple of years back.
Today, Discrepant presents an exclusive EP of their first work in years, constructed around the sounds recorded on the ex-USSR Baltic port city of Ventspils, Latvia. During a recent visit in 2010 the duo were inspired by the decaying post-industrial charm of the city and decided to re-activate their 'musical' activities.

Pressed on 250 vinyl only editions packed in luscious printed outer & inners with photography by Sergey Gorsky.

Press says:
''What a scintillating ride Олд Комм’s Ventspils is. Just what your typical Mego/Spools enthusiast is looking for, taken down a notch and mixed into a warm bucket of fuzz.'' Tiny Mixtapes

''Not only can one hear the influence of Ventspils but also one can actually hear Ventspils itself.'' ATTN: Mag

''What’s interesting here is that Old Komm have an undoubted talent for production; for example, there are some cheap-sounding general midi-type sounds here but they are buried so low in the mix that their very nature is changed from the banal to the exotic. '' The Sound Projector