Scrypt, the third full album (and first in an original stateside issue) for
Jan St. Werner's
Lithops project, is a slightly different record than its predecessors. While his first two albums under
Lithops collected delightful abstractions on the classic
Mouse on Mars sound,
Scrypt launches
St. Werner into the world of highly unorganized experimental noise -- the digitally textured, highly processed computer chaos pioneered by the Mego label and nearly perfected by
Markus Popp's
Oval concern.
St. Werner's credentials are certainly in order for such an experimental record (considering his ownership of the experimental Sonig label alone), and
Scrypt is mostly successful. "Attached" comes closest to the
Mouse on Mars template, with straining, red-lining distortion creating a surprisingly groovy rhythm for itself. Considered as noise for its own sake, it's been done before; as experimental music, the attempts aren't always effective. As the type of record, however, that rewards listeners with occasional glimpses of beauty among the ruins,
Scrypt does succeed on a level close to a masterpiece like
Oval's
Ovalprocess.