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Human Trophy: Corpse Dream 12"
Reuben Sawyer is nothing if not prolific. Heās also a man of many talents - his various projects have included the coldwave sounds of The Column, Hollow Sunshineās blown-out psych-noise, Anytime Cowboyās take on countrified weirdo-pop, and even ambient house courtesy of Rose. Oh, and heās a visual artist too, of course. Pfft, who needs an attention span anyway?
One thing heās also dabbled in, however, is post-punk. Human Trophy is firmly in line with that tradition, but pulling from multiple directions at once - one minute this album rattles along like Big Black with the tempo down and the textures dialled up, the next weāre firmly in Christian Death territory. The twisting guitar lines and pummelling bass of āForming Horrorsā even call to mind his blackened punk project Dry Insides, but with less velocity and a helluva lot more menace.
Is āCorpse Dreamā a goth record? Possibly. Whether goth is a lifestyle choice for Sawyer or not, heās certainly adept at immersing himself in sounds and making them feel like a comfortable fit. As with all his projects, it feels like another effortless facet of Reuben Sawyer - and in keeping with the rest of his output, itās absolutely packed with songs youāll wanna play again and again. Penultimate track āThe Roadsā is built on a none-more gloomy pile-up of darkly portentous rhythms and a firm sense of disquiet, but once youāre locked into its circular riffage youāll feel an urge to keep the loop going endlessly. Then thereās the closer āBlood Apexā, a dual-vocal nightmare set to music which draws you back in even as it attempts to push you away. Yeah, itās pretty great.
Who knows where Sawyerās restless muse will take him next - heās spoken before of wanting longevity from The Column, before unveiling another ludicrous number of projects. Maybe thereāll be more from Human Trophy, maybe heāll decide itās high time for a sludge project or start delving into glitched-out techno. All seem possible (and likely). But if this is the only record we get under this name, at least itās 100% solid gold.
Will Fitzpatrick.
One thing heās also dabbled in, however, is post-punk. Human Trophy is firmly in line with that tradition, but pulling from multiple directions at once - one minute this album rattles along like Big Black with the tempo down and the textures dialled up, the next weāre firmly in Christian Death territory. The twisting guitar lines and pummelling bass of āForming Horrorsā even call to mind his blackened punk project Dry Insides, but with less velocity and a helluva lot more menace.
Is āCorpse Dreamā a goth record? Possibly. Whether goth is a lifestyle choice for Sawyer or not, heās certainly adept at immersing himself in sounds and making them feel like a comfortable fit. As with all his projects, it feels like another effortless facet of Reuben Sawyer - and in keeping with the rest of his output, itās absolutely packed with songs youāll wanna play again and again. Penultimate track āThe Roadsā is built on a none-more gloomy pile-up of darkly portentous rhythms and a firm sense of disquiet, but once youāre locked into its circular riffage youāll feel an urge to keep the loop going endlessly. Then thereās the closer āBlood Apexā, a dual-vocal nightmare set to music which draws you back in even as it attempts to push you away. Yeah, itās pretty great.
Who knows where Sawyerās restless muse will take him next - heās spoken before of wanting longevity from The Column, before unveiling another ludicrous number of projects. Maybe thereāll be more from Human Trophy, maybe heāll decide itās high time for a sludge project or start delving into glitched-out techno. All seem possible (and likely). But if this is the only record we get under this name, at least itās 100% solid gold.
Will Fitzpatrick.
Reuben Sawyer is nothing if not prolific. Heās also a man of many talents - his various projects have included the coldwave sounds of The Column, Hollow Sunshineās blown-out psych-noise, Anytime Cowboyās take on countrified weirdo-pop, and even ambient house courtesy of Rose. Oh, and heās a visual artist too, of course. Pfft, who needs an attention span anyway?
One thing heās also dabbled in, however, is post-punk. Human Trophy is firmly in line with that tradition, but pulling from multiple directions at once - one minute this album rattles along like Big Black with the tempo down and the textures dialled up, the next weāre firmly in Christian Death territory. The twisting guitar lines and pummelling bass of āForming Horrorsā even call to mind his blackened punk project Dry Insides, but with less velocity and a helluva lot more menace.
Is āCorpse Dreamā a goth record? Possibly. Whether goth is a lifestyle choice for Sawyer or not, heās certainly adept at immersing himself in sounds and making them feel like a comfortable fit. As with all his projects, it feels like another effortless facet of Reuben Sawyer - and in keeping with the rest of his output, itās absolutely packed with songs youāll wanna play again and again. Penultimate track āThe Roadsā is built on a none-more gloomy pile-up of darkly portentous rhythms and a firm sense of disquiet, but once youāre locked into its circular riffage youāll feel an urge to keep the loop going endlessly. Then thereās the closer āBlood Apexā, a dual-vocal nightmare set to music which draws you back in even as it attempts to push you away. Yeah, itās pretty great.
Who knows where Sawyerās restless muse will take him next - heās spoken before of wanting longevity from The Column, before unveiling another ludicrous number of projects. Maybe thereāll be more from Human Trophy, maybe heāll decide itās high time for a sludge project or start delving into glitched-out techno. All seem possible (and likely). But if this is the only record we get under this name, at least itās 100% solid gold.
Will Fitzpatrick.
One thing heās also dabbled in, however, is post-punk. Human Trophy is firmly in line with that tradition, but pulling from multiple directions at once - one minute this album rattles along like Big Black with the tempo down and the textures dialled up, the next weāre firmly in Christian Death territory. The twisting guitar lines and pummelling bass of āForming Horrorsā even call to mind his blackened punk project Dry Insides, but with less velocity and a helluva lot more menace.
Is āCorpse Dreamā a goth record? Possibly. Whether goth is a lifestyle choice for Sawyer or not, heās certainly adept at immersing himself in sounds and making them feel like a comfortable fit. As with all his projects, it feels like another effortless facet of Reuben Sawyer - and in keeping with the rest of his output, itās absolutely packed with songs youāll wanna play again and again. Penultimate track āThe Roadsā is built on a none-more gloomy pile-up of darkly portentous rhythms and a firm sense of disquiet, but once youāre locked into its circular riffage youāll feel an urge to keep the loop going endlessly. Then thereās the closer āBlood Apexā, a dual-vocal nightmare set to music which draws you back in even as it attempts to push you away. Yeah, itās pretty great.
Who knows where Sawyerās restless muse will take him next - heās spoken before of wanting longevity from The Column, before unveiling another ludicrous number of projects. Maybe thereāll be more from Human Trophy, maybe heāll decide itās high time for a sludge project or start delving into glitched-out techno. All seem possible (and likely). But if this is the only record we get under this name, at least itās 100% solid gold.
Will Fitzpatrick.
$900.00
Original: $3,000.00
-70%Human Trophy: Corpse Dream 12"ā
$3,000.00
$900.00Description
Reuben Sawyer is nothing if not prolific. Heās also a man of many talents - his various projects have included the coldwave sounds of The Column, Hollow Sunshineās blown-out psych-noise, Anytime Cowboyās take on countrified weirdo-pop, and even ambient house courtesy of Rose. Oh, and heās a visual artist too, of course. Pfft, who needs an attention span anyway?
One thing heās also dabbled in, however, is post-punk. Human Trophy is firmly in line with that tradition, but pulling from multiple directions at once - one minute this album rattles along like Big Black with the tempo down and the textures dialled up, the next weāre firmly in Christian Death territory. The twisting guitar lines and pummelling bass of āForming Horrorsā even call to mind his blackened punk project Dry Insides, but with less velocity and a helluva lot more menace.
Is āCorpse Dreamā a goth record? Possibly. Whether goth is a lifestyle choice for Sawyer or not, heās certainly adept at immersing himself in sounds and making them feel like a comfortable fit. As with all his projects, it feels like another effortless facet of Reuben Sawyer - and in keeping with the rest of his output, itās absolutely packed with songs youāll wanna play again and again. Penultimate track āThe Roadsā is built on a none-more gloomy pile-up of darkly portentous rhythms and a firm sense of disquiet, but once youāre locked into its circular riffage youāll feel an urge to keep the loop going endlessly. Then thereās the closer āBlood Apexā, a dual-vocal nightmare set to music which draws you back in even as it attempts to push you away. Yeah, itās pretty great.
Who knows where Sawyerās restless muse will take him next - heās spoken before of wanting longevity from The Column, before unveiling another ludicrous number of projects. Maybe thereāll be more from Human Trophy, maybe heāll decide itās high time for a sludge project or start delving into glitched-out techno. All seem possible (and likely). But if this is the only record we get under this name, at least itās 100% solid gold.
Will Fitzpatrick.
One thing heās also dabbled in, however, is post-punk. Human Trophy is firmly in line with that tradition, but pulling from multiple directions at once - one minute this album rattles along like Big Black with the tempo down and the textures dialled up, the next weāre firmly in Christian Death territory. The twisting guitar lines and pummelling bass of āForming Horrorsā even call to mind his blackened punk project Dry Insides, but with less velocity and a helluva lot more menace.
Is āCorpse Dreamā a goth record? Possibly. Whether goth is a lifestyle choice for Sawyer or not, heās certainly adept at immersing himself in sounds and making them feel like a comfortable fit. As with all his projects, it feels like another effortless facet of Reuben Sawyer - and in keeping with the rest of his output, itās absolutely packed with songs youāll wanna play again and again. Penultimate track āThe Roadsā is built on a none-more gloomy pile-up of darkly portentous rhythms and a firm sense of disquiet, but once youāre locked into its circular riffage youāll feel an urge to keep the loop going endlessly. Then thereās the closer āBlood Apexā, a dual-vocal nightmare set to music which draws you back in even as it attempts to push you away. Yeah, itās pretty great.
Who knows where Sawyerās restless muse will take him next - heās spoken before of wanting longevity from The Column, before unveiling another ludicrous number of projects. Maybe thereāll be more from Human Trophy, maybe heāll decide itās high time for a sludge project or start delving into glitched-out techno. All seem possible (and likely). But if this is the only record we get under this name, at least itās 100% solid gold.
Will Fitzpatrick.












