£15.99
Captured live in 2015, this arresting piece of music is now available to hear for the first time in a decade.Commissioned by Musée Du Quai Branly in Paris for their 2012 âLâInvention Du Sauvageâ exhibition, trance-metal pioneers Year of No Light approached the ritual practices of the Hauka movement as depicted in the film and responded with their uniquely hypnotic heaviness.Performed only twice, once at the exhibition on the 6th January, 2012 and again in Bordeaux on the 29th January, 2015; this release is a live recording of the second and final performance of âLes Maîtres Fousâ. Whilst Year of No Light have a long history of collaboration with forward-thinking filmmakers and visual artists, the sensitivity of this documentaryâs problematic subject matter and the intensity of the bandâs performance made this performance both a physically and emotionally demanding experience;something that can be keenly felt upon listening.Founded in September 2001 by a collection of Bordeauxâs heavy scene stalwarts as an ongoing side project encompassing elements of sludge metal and shoegaze, Year of No Light released their debut album, Nord, in 2006 to critical acclaim. The subsequent years however saw a significant lineup change with the band replacing their vocalist with a third guitarist to become a fully instrumental sextet incorporating aspects of black metal, drone electronica and dark ambient into their already formidable sound.2010âs four track epic Ausserwelt and the 2013 follow up Tocsin saw Year of No Light distilling their punishing sound even further; stalling the tempo to a glacial crawl and tuning guitars ever downwards to new uncharted depths. Consolamentum, the bandâs first full-length release in nine years and their first with Pelagic Records, brought the outfitâs crushing double-drumming percussion to the fore as a masterclass in dynamic control saw Year of No Light embrace the highest highs and the lowest lows of the intervening years.Now approaching their 25th anniversary, âLes Maître Fousâ is a pressing reminder that, despite the bandâs long and ongoing journey, Year of No Light have never been afraid to experiment, to take risks, to square up to lifeâs ugliness and look it straight in the eye.