This is the tenth album by the always evolving
Flying Luttenbachers, and the first by the "brutal prog" lineup, which consists of electric bassists Alex Perkolup and Jonathan Hischke along with drummer/leader/mainstay
Weasel Walter. This is a big change from
the Luttenbachers' two previous efforts, the acoustic free jazz throw-downs
Alptraum and Trauma, which were mainly improvised. In contrast,
Infection and Decline is entirely composed, and the material is incredibly dense and detailed. It is clear that the band is pushing themselves here, as they work to sustain peaks of intensity, complexity, and tension from the first notes to the last. The CD is also clearly meant to challenge the listener, and it does take a few listens to get one's bearings, but the material does add up -- these are well-written songs that just sound chaotic the first go around because there is so much happening with them. Highlights include the discordant, robotic title track (the longest of the four
Walter originals at ten minutes) and Perkolup's "Elfmeros," a jaw-dropping approximation of the meeting point between extreme death metal and
Magma/
Ruins-esque prog darkness. The album closes with a 16-minute run through
Magma's epic "De Futura," which in this version is noisier and more stressed out (as well as less funky) than the original. It's a fitting end to another exhausting
Flying Luttenbachers album and, from a compositional standpoint at least, possibly their strongest.