REDEEM DOWNLOAD CODE

Enter the download code you received with your purchase to claim your downloads. Keep in mind many mobile devices don't have built in support for opening ZIP files; you may want to download on a computer.


LOGIN

Login with your existing account.

CREATE ACCOUNT

Create an account to purchase items.

Passwords must be at least 6 characters

Drainolith's Montreal

Drainolith

Drainolith's Montreal

Celluloid Lunch
LP $22.25

TBD  

CLR 22  


***On The Electric Hearse (2020) Drainolith time-travelled through various phases of gentrification in the Saint-Henri neighbourhood of Montreal to pay homage to a bygone era, distilling it’s essence out of time. With Drainolith’s Montreal both spatial & historic scope have broadened for a stranger & sparser psychic cartography. Opening with a rendition of les objets mutantes a 2010 poem by the mysterious Cassie Cornette, Moskos sets the scene of this record as exploration of the titular city’s terrain vague. I write from a public standing desk beneath a hardwood awning where the bike path ends & metaverse offices stand. When Electric Hearse was recorded this location was still an ambiguous dirt and gravel pit where free impromptu dance classes took place on a makeshift wood floor. A well manicured and overpopulated nursery now grows where weeds once wrought their chaotic & resilient networks. The piano that bridges these two incarnations of “guerilla park” now sits with a lock and chain over its keyboard cover. This is the best I can describe the state of Montreal’s terrain vague at the time of this release.Following the plaintive notebook synth wailing which closes side 1 we’re introduced to the no music crew “they can’t hear music, they only hear words” in Alex’s own. Chilling stuff. The sounds of spray paint cans & interstellar radio tones crinkle in the background.Separating the sci-fi sprawl of the album’s first part and the b-boy bouillabaisse of it’s second are Bourbs the street and Bourbs the guy “two legends. The sad tale of Jean Bourbonais – scenester who beat a guy to death and Bourbonniere, great street in Hochelaga, broad, lit and with a bike path.” This may be the first Drainolith campfire song.Before the shock of this change of pace has worn off a crisp 808 kicks in with a subdued and spacious groove over which Moskos intones “I keep my neck warm” evoking those long mid-winter walks home in the dead of night. Enter a slurring nasal Québecois tenor cracking jokes about Trudeau (senior) and inflation followed by a smooth Queb disco break.This collage of Queb curios (featuring a St. Henri name check) that makes up part 1 of the title piece reminds us of some of the many Montreals that have come and gone before. What sounds like a fog horn kicks off part 2 and the riff is continued lyrically with references to Jesuits, the fur trade, beloved metal band Voivod, LaSalle … is Draino’s Montreal real? Is anyone’s Montreal more real than another’s? The techies have descended from the metaverse upon guerilla park for lunch now and I know it’s time to go. Questionable fashions, French from France accents and sideways glances remind me this is not my spot. I head towards the Personal Records headquarters in Durocher and notice for the first time the sign demarcating Outremont at Hutchison and Beaubien. Arbitrary borders, mixed use cul-de-sacs, nth generation artist lofts – this is the stuff my Montreal is made of. Is it real? It’s ours.

Related Items

Submissives, The

Live At Value Sound Studios
Celluloid Lunch

Timmy Vulgar / Jimbo Easter

Jimbo Easter / Timmy Vulgar - Split
Celluloid Lunch

Surveillance

More Than One, Less Than Zero
Celluloid Lunch

Stonemen, The

Faded Colors / In The Evening
Celluloid Lunch

Laughing

Because It's True
Celluloid Lunch

American Devices

The Game We Never Win / Interlarding
Celluloid Lunch