Recording via long distance might not always be the easiest way to work, but
Hissanol come up with enjoyable results with the duo's debut effort,
4th & Back The abbreviated spaz-punk-pop of
NoMeansno gets a perfectly understandable parallel here, especially considering that the album consists of nearly 20 songs in just over 40 minutes. Scott Henderson's sometimes declamatory, sometimes flat but strong voice makes for a nice twist on the scream-and-shout approach, to be sure, not so much finding the melody (when there is one) but sliding around it. Clipped funk is as much a reference here as anything, maybe more from
Gang of Four sources rather than
James Brown, say, but Andy Kerr makes it work when he wants to. "Exterminal" is one of the best, Henderson's aggrieved semi-whine combining Mark E. Smith and
John Lydon at their aggressive, wired best over a driving, relentless chug and grind which itself owes more than a little to
the Fall. Where
Hissanol shows some real smarts is in its occasional moments of calm. Consider the chorus break on "Swell Song," with overdubbed vocals creating a soothing bed amid the harder-hitting punch of the song, or "Say It Isn't So," which somehow sounds like early
OMD in slow mode with a bit of country steel guitar and gets away with it. "Beauty" itself is just that, random samples from interviews and documentaries or what have you over an almost too sickly sweet layering of single tone feedback and keyboards, plus some static spiking the mix. A fair amount of tracks are engaging instrumentals, like the stop-start "Shortcut," with notable parts for vocal grunts and car alarm, and "Once Machines Ruled the World," a goony little number that would sound just fine soundtracking a modern Warner Bros. cartoon. ~ Ned Raggett