Music / rock

Dragnet


Reviews (3)


Pitchfork

d. 17. June 2016

By

By

Jason Heller

d. 17. June 2016

"Witch Trials came out in the spring of 1979, Dragnet in the autumn of 1979. Accordingly, these albums (newly reissued) are very much spring and autumn records, inasmuch as such acutely urban records can have ties to nature ... Dragnet can be overwhelmingly dense, folding in viola-like guitar like John Cale's queasiest recursion ("Muzorewi's Daughter") and then Krautrock-leaning funk spiked with garbled demands and harsh glossolalia ("Put Away"). But the heavy hand lightens by "Choc-Stock," a singsong slice of feral nonsense akin to Syd Barrett with a head cold and a hangover. There's an answer to Witch Trials' "Music Scene" in the form of "Spectre vs. Rector," but it's nothing like its predecessor; its sludge and subliminal menace practically invented post-rock as an afterthought. The track is visceral, reeking of spilled pints and machine oil, evoking the industrial scum-scape that incubated it".


Record collector

493 (2019 June)

By

By

Oregano Rathbone

493 (2019 June)


Q

2004 april

By

2004 april