Why did this album come out on November 7, 2006? It should have been in the bins a month earlier, because it makes a great Halloween soundtrack. Under the alter ego Svarte Greiner,
Deaf Center's Erik K. Skodvin has taken the less-lit path.
Knive is a dark, disquieting, suspense-filled affair. No thundering drums, no hair-rising screams, no cheap effects; only two handfuls of simple sound sources, used with a fantastic flair for theatrical moods. In "Easy on the Bones" we are treated to a cemetery scene, with a disembodied female voice singing a wordless lament, accompanied by handsaw sounds -- and little more except vinyl surface noise for good measure. In "Ocean Out of Wood," a double bass line leads a sorrowful way through creaking sounds (bow on wood) and foghorns (sinister cellos), all vividly evoking a ghost ship. Those are only two of the most obvious, pictorial pieces.
Knive also contains more abstract compositions, like the ten-minute "The Black Dress," but even in those the atmosphere remains similar, if not as bluntly evocative. Ghostly wails, trembling organ, and the grainy and antiquated surface noise of vinyl are almost everywhere, but the double bass and cello are the instruments that tie the whole album together. They are used melodically, rhythmically (great percussive use in "The Dining Table") and texturally throughout. The record label has tried to push
Knive as an acoustic version of
Sunn 0))) or a different take on
Bohren & der Club of Gore, but it does not have that "doomy" feel. It is better approached as a mood-setting stroll-through-the-cemetery-under-a-full-moon album. ~ François Couture