Wednesday, 30 December 2015

Dark Poetry - Strangled

Strangled Poem by Casey Douglass
(Click for larger readable image)

When I open my mouth
dust comes out,
the machinery of expression clogged
with vintage dreams.

When I open my mouth
my heart dies,
a lonely imp in a rusty cage
swinging from a barbed wire noose.

When I open my mouth
smoke flows forth,
the burning cremation
laying waste to old forms.

When I open my mouth
flames burst out.

I blast the world to ruin.


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Wednesday, 23 December 2015

Dark Book Review – When The Devil Climbs


Dark Book Review – When The Devil Climbs

Review Written By Casey Douglass


When The Devil Climbs Cover

After a decade lost to addiction and criminality, Russ Grote is given an opportunity by his jilted ex-wife to reconnect with his son. But the day before the scheduled reunion, he and his coworkers are attacked by a horde of savage pigs infected with a mysterious virus. While taking refuge atop a billboard, the brutish crew of ex-convicts grow increasingly desperate and willing to do anything to survive. For any chance to reunite with his son, the most gruesome menace Russ must confront might be the one lurking inside of him.

My first thoughts after reading the above book blurb were something along the lines of “Excellent!”. I have long been a fan of dark and horror tales that take place with the victims holding up somewhere seemingly secure, but still trying to work a way out of things. It might come as no surprise to you that I really enjoy the first Tremors film for this very reason. I am also happy to say that 95% of Drake Vaughn’s When The Devil Climbs transpires with the hapless ex-cons stuck up in the guts of Big Bertha, the billboard they are tasked with working on when the snorting pigs eventually appear.

The location is an excellent choice for staging the kind of peril that the men face, with much dangling, shouting and swearing floating up into the soaring, searing sky. The pigs aren’t the only things they face, but dehydration, hunger, bad tempers and, as time progresses, a bit of madness. This is the other aspect of the tale, the slow drip feeding of knowledge about the characters, often in the reconciliatory phase after an argument or failed attempt at something. I think this is key to the tale holding the reader’s interest, as without these conflicts, man vs. pig would almost certainly have been far less interesting. Drake Vaughn does a great job at this back-story drip-feeding, the biggest revelations coming near the culmination of the tale.

If you are a gore fan, there are certainly some grim scenes, both in the moment and via flashbacks and introspection. The pigs certainly don’t mess around when they do get their teeth on something, be it human or another pig. The green snot that they expel is also nicely unnerving, adding a dash of colour to the tale beyond the occasional spilling of blood. At no point did the gore feel unduly extravagant or unwarranted however, which is another thing I was thankful for. I am all for grim stuff but only when it's not done just for the sake of being grim.

The book is structured into mostly small chapters, each beginning with the time of day and a small picture of something from the story. Starting each chapter with the time is a great device to foreshadow events in the tale, the reader seeing a night-time period and easily able to picture the darkness and the difficulties that it might bring, before even reading the first word of the new chapter. The time thing also helps give the narrative an anchor in the real world, rather than everything happening in some wishy washy other place.

When The Devil Climbs is a really fantastic read, and I don’t hesitate in giving it 5/5. If you like this kind of horror, it should tick all the boxes for you, it's well written and is something that will stay with you awhile after reading it, especially when you next might eat a sausage or some bacon.

Visit Drake's site for more info at this link.

I was given a free copy of this book to review.

Book Title: When The Devil Climbs
Book Author: Drake Vaughn
Publisher: Kal-Ba Publishing
Released: November 12, 2015

Monday, 21 December 2015

Dark Music Review – Self Destruction Themes

Dark Music Review – Self Destruction Themes

Review Written By Casey Douglass


Self Destruction Themes Cover


Pedro Pimentel returns to Cryo Chamber with his second album on the label, Self Destruction Themes. This time with help from Amund Ulvestads beautiful cello performances, Simon Heaths textural piano work and Apocryphos atmospheric distortion layers.

This is a massive album of cold but inviting atmospheres, filtered noise, acoustic layering and sweeping textural layers. The sad theme throughout the album paints images of a world depopulated and of overgrown and dilapidated cityscapes.

Listening to Worldclock’s Self Destruction Themes, my mind went a slightly different way to the above album blurb. The cold, inviting atmospheres part I certainly got, along with the sadness. As sometimes happens though, I went my own way with my own mental impressions, so along with the track descriptions are my own mental images, which may not really fit with the depopulated and dilapidated cityscapes aspect of the description. I’m a maverick that way. On to the tracks.

The Tracks

Here We'll Be Gone – A sustained high note is joined by a low rumble as other notes scissor their way in. Strings and snatches of wind create a sombre mood. Footsteps in the snow gave me the impression of someone walking through snow into the wilderness as the soundscape deepens. A strengthening of the string notes is joined by dripping water as things take another turn, darkness settling in as night approaches.

The Fever Of Our Waiting – Creaking and dripping sounds are joined by a light drone. This is over-layed with teased strings and is later joined by a large wall of sound. Maybe the snow-walker is forced to shelter in an old stone floored hut as a storm brews outside. Repeating string notes really create a great feeling of atmospheric energy. The occasional screech of an unexpected string note is great to hold the listener’s interest. The track ends in a bit of a maelstrom as the storm hits.

It May Come – Static rain and echoing piano sound as the dawn breaks. Dripping water and a light atmosphere seem to the forefront now, water droplets glowing on twigs as the strings play once more. The calm after the storm, and a calm mind finding a sense of acceptance.

When Indecision Strikes – Piano, strings and drone all in tone with each other. A staticy backdrop is punctuated by metallic creaks and rattles. The decision of whether to leave the hut or not? Distant voices of a crowd add a surreal aspect, maybe the ghosts of possibility. Outside pressing in. Agoraphobic. The world carrying on without you.

Something More – A swelling voice-filled clattering grows in volume. Odd clangs and a variety of string sounds create a muzzy feeling, maybe the pressures of two possible paths or realities butting up against one another. Leaving the cabin or not?

More Often Than Not – This track starts with the sound of traffic driving along wet roads. A sombre melody begins after a few moments, strings and piano working together to create a feeling of dull mundanity, kind of like walking home as the night draws in, the street lights only now showing their first sickly shade of colour before the bulbs fully warm up. The title, and the sound of this track make me think of the coming down after the transcendental, taking the boring route rather than using the realisations you've experienced to lead a more exciting life. Maybe any peace felt by the traveller in the snow has fast evaporated as they enter civilization again.
Every Shade – This track begins in a lighter fashion, a lighter drone and prominent string notes giving some sense of joy and optimism to things. If the previous track was a mundane and rainy walk home, this track is spying the last rays of the sun piercing through cracks in the almost black clouds, their rays dazzling just before they vanish for the night.

Something Else – A hissy start with distant string notes piercing the soundscape. A drone looms in the background, slowly taking a more prominent role. The string notes fall repeatedly, sounding more and more like a wail. Sounds of dripping water creeps in as the strings take on a more melodious aspect, other lighter notes swelling above. This track could be a return to the same dingy house, the same crumpled bed-sheets, the same, the same, the same.

32 Walls – What sounds like plastic flapping is joined by see-sawing strings and a gentle dark drone, a feeling of a dark space opening around the listener, snatches of whispered words insinuating themselves slickly into the ear as a thumping beat reverberates through everything. This track could hint at the dark night of the soul, or even the old hag visitations of myth and folklore. Stifling and cloying, like being shut in a room for too long without any fresh air. Maybe a prison of thoughts, of desperation and desires unfulfilled. The thumping beat is joined by what sounds like dripping water hitting the ground at the same interval, the high and low qualities of each sound creating a great metronomic effect. Ghostly piano and the ever present strings finish the effect, making a solid soundscape that is a joy to listen to.

Lack of Language – A slowly rising vocal effect meets a floating resonance that splits the air, leaving an “ahhhh” sound in the mind. A thumping beat similar to the previous track begins, although faster, a little more like a heart that isn't quite at rest. This sets up the track’s momentum nicely. Another percussive beat joins the first, flittering brush strokes, almost military in fashion. Piano joins and the music swells creating a soundscape that feels like the end credits to a particularly sad film, one in which the hero tried but couldn't quite cut it. I guess in the images created by the previous tracks, this could be the music after the protagonist’s suicide, their way of escaping the 32 walls possibly.


Thoughts

Well what can I say, Self Destruction Themes was certainly a sad and melancholic trip for me, but one that was enjoyable even so. The prominence of the string and piano notes aided this effect as I always feel them to be quite melancholy notes at the best of times. Add in a little dripping water and audio grain and I am well on the way to imagining grey worlds filled with corroded metal.

I think When Indecision Strikes and More Often Than Not are probably my favourite tracks, the static, creaking and crowd noise of the first was very pleasing to me, the rainy misery of the latter also appealing in a gloomy kind of way. Lack of Language also gets a shout out for being a great culmination to the album.

I give Self Destruction Themes 4/5, a fascinating journey into bleakness with the knack of creating soundscapes that all feel different, yet share the same sad theme. Good stuff!

Visit the Self Destruction Themes page on Bandcamp at this link for more information.

I was given a free copy of the album to review.

Album Title: Self Destruction Themes
Album Artist: Worldclock
Label: Cryo Chamber
Release Date : December 15, 2015

Saturday, 19 December 2015

Dark Book Review – The Phantom Cabinet

Dark Book Review – The Phantom Cabinet

Review Written By Casey Douglass


The Phantom Cabinet Cover

WHEN HEAVEN AND HELL DON’T EXIST…WHAT DOES? Space Shuttle Conundrum collides with empty atmosphere, passing from known reality into the realm beyond life. At the same time, a dead newborn is resurrected amidst a hospital-wide poltergeist infestation. What connects these ghastly occurrences and how can the fate of humanity rest on a single boy’s shoulders? As the haunted Douglas Stanton spends his adolescence an outcast—his only friend the ghost of a long lost astronaut—a porcelain-masked entity lurks in the shadows, planning Douglas’ demise. Because Douglas is the key… the key to the door… the door between what we know and what we fear. And when the key is turned…realities will come crashing together. Step into The Phantom Cabinet…

The first few chapters of The Phantom Cabinet set the scene for what the reader might expect from author Jeremy Thompson. It kicks off with a full-blown self-mutilation scenario on board a space shuttle that put me in mind of one of my fave sci-fi films Event Horizon. Gore and viscera fly, suicide and numb acceptance prevail. The next chapter depicts the poltergeist infestation mentioned in the blurb. Let’s just say that this doesn’t go much better for the poor victims of fear, and also, is one hell (pun intended) of a way for baby Douglas to come into our world.

The story proper starts after this, the confusion and character hopping of the earlier sections giving way to a calmer narrative pace that lets the reader focus on Douglas and his own peculiar troubles: that of being a magnet for departed spirits, not all of them friendly. As you might imagine, this is quite an impediment for a growing child, who frequently finds himself around the disaster area of spirit manifestations and atrocities.

I thought that this aspect of the book was very well realised. The reader ends up feeling truly sorry for Douglas as, for the most part, the other characters, both flesh and spirit, are out to get him. It’s almost a relief when he makes friends with Emmett and Benjy, two other kids not much further up the social scale than himself. The Phantom Cabinet shows how hard growing up can be, without being paranormally afflicted too. Jeremy Thompson also does a great job with letting the characters grow and change. Friends become enemies, bullies evolve and nothing stays stagnant, which is a very pleasing thing to see.

For all the ghosts Douglas sees, there are some recurring ones that are either out to aid or hinder him. His nemesis is a strange creation, but very effective in her weirdness and design. If you like Transformers, imagine a ghost version, where lesser ghosts build up to become one super strong one, and you are a fraction of the way there. I thought she was really well realised and her continual presence lurking throughout the book added a great sense of oppression to the narrative.

Structurally, the book is made up of quite small sections, which, while early on felt a little confusing, as I've already covered, but once well into the meat of the tale, provide a great momentum for the reader, not giving any one scene or happening too much wordage and so avoiding the risk of things becoming a bit dull or over familiar. I really liked this. The Phantom Cabinet is also a very easy read, a book that I seemed to get through more quickly than my average for a horror tale. The structure also lets you see how various fringe characters meet their end. Some of the deaths and the visions that lead to them are particularly inventive, one of my favourites featuring a hag-like woman taking some babies out for a walk. That doesn’t sound too bad until you read the nuances in the actual situation. It kind of stays with you. It did me anyway.

The Phantom Cabinet is a well-paced and interesting read, the gore and supernatural sitting easily with the isolated life of Douglas, and creates a great feeling of sympathy for him. The ending was satisfying, although I felt it seemed a little too compressed, like the end events were over a bit too quickly.
I give The Phantom Cabinet 4.5/5. It was an easy read with inventiveness and style and I would happily recommend it to any fan of horror fiction.

Visit Jeremy Thompson’s Goodreads page here for more information about him and to browse his other books.

I was given a free copy of the book to review.

Book Title: The Phantom Cabinet
Book Author: Jeremy Thompson

Friday, 18 December 2015

Dark Music Review – Artificial

Dark Music Review – Artificial

Review Written By Casey Douglass

 Artificial Album Art

Artificial, the latest offering from Drifting in Silence, is a return to form, DiS owing its beginnings to the wave of musical innovation that was just becoming known at the time as ambient music. Derrick Stembridge, the beating heart behind Drifting in Silence, affirms, "This album is going back to the roots of the project for me. Pure ambient." A glimpse back is no denial, however, of new influences and the project's continuing musical growth. Artificial pays homage, of course, as does the entire genre, to Brian Eno. But, Stembridge says, "this album is heavily influenced by William Basinski."

Artificial, Drifting in Silence’s new ambient album, is an album that resides at the lighter end of the ambient spectrum, in my opinion at least. I usually dwell at the darker end of the ambient scale, so I felt a little like a fish out of water when it came to reviewing it. That being said, I had a pleasant time making my way through the tracks, each flowing easily into the next in a smooth and pleasing way. Speaking of the tracks...

The Tracks

Empty – This smooth track features flowing light notes and a simple melody with pleasant variations. It brought to my mind feelings of an empty bright space and purity.

Takeaway – High notes hang as a lower drone joins, layers build and fade with an electronic hum. After the midpoint some distorted vocalization and echoing notes join in. This felt like a warm track to me.

Descent – A dark and brooding start with the faint sounds of waves and a low soft drone. Distorted notes emerge from the drone, fast paced and getting louder. Sounds crystallize in the second third of the track, a pleasing rhythm carrying the listener to the end.

Surface – Gentle piano/keyboard notes set a subdued tone before things lift a little and then fluctuate between light and dark. This track created the feeling of what it might be like emerging from underground to find things have changed above ground in your absence.

Oceans – A quiet beginning with a low melody as a drone rises. The second half has some vocalization and a ‘clippy’ rhythm, some notes sounding like laser blasters from a sci-fi film.

Artificial – A dark and resonance filled start, string notes swelling and fading. This track becomes a bit more varied and harsher sounding towards the end.

Falling – Low notes undulate as they are held. There is a lot of note-bending going on but the track has a gentle feeling. This track also sounds a little harsher as it progresses.

Origin – A very low melody starts things off, as if coming from somewhere low down. The melodic notes feature a metallic tang that puts me in mind of the Machinarium video-game soundtrack. A fun and quirky feeling track.

Across – Bubbling quick notes give the impression of tiny things happening, maybe a boiling impression of the primordial soup or universal foam. Relaxing and a little strange to listen to.

Emotion – A dark rumbling featuring a variety of notes and sounds. This track has a slow pace, but the tone or impression given is a soundscape thick with energy.

Stay – Low notes rising into a dark starry sky. That seems like the best way to describe this track, a brooding but expansive atmosphere.

Intheend – Echoing high notes feel plucked out of the air. A light distorted vocal joins about a third of the way in with the rest of the notes and melody creating a gentle background.

Soulless – A high note meets a low drone. This track is another that feels gentle and also features soft distorted vocals. The overall tone felt sad to me.

Thoughts

I enjoyed listening to Artificial, but I will admit that I’m not sure it would have been an album I would have bought for myself. Not that there is any lack of quality or novelty to it, just on a very personal level, I like my ambient very dark. What I heard in Artificial, with a few exceptions, was more a light ambient album, many of the soundscapes giving me mental impressions of light airy spaces filled with white light or shining reflections.

There are certainly some tracks that did appeal to my darker listening habits, such as the dark feelings of Emotion. There were also some standout tracks for me, in that their sound had something that appealed to me in a novel way, such as the catchy rhythm of Descent and the bubbling notes of Across.

If you like lighter ambient themes, Artificial will probably be a 4/5 album for you. For my own dark tastes, it’s a 3/5 for me. Enjoyable, intricate, but ultimately not to my own personal taste.

Check out the Artificial website here for more information and prices.

I was given a free copy of this album to review.

Album Title: Artificial
Artist: Drifting In Silence
Releases: January 1, 2016

Thursday, 17 December 2015

Dark Article - Mindful Binge-watching For Intelligent Geeks

Do you binge-watch TV shows? Are you intelligent? You are reading this so you must be...in my opinion anyway. Check out Geek Syndicate for the article I wrote on Mindful Binge-watching For Intelligent Geeks. You can read the full thing at this link.

Clockwork Orange Image © Copyright Warner Bros.

Dark Film Review - Victor Frankenstein

Yes, we have another Frankenstein film on our hands in the guise of Victor Frankenstein, a gothic horror featuring James McAvoy and Daniel Radcliffe. Is it any good though? Visit Geek Syndicate to read my full review at this link.

Victor Frankenstein film poster © Copyright 20th Century Fox.