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CD/LP Review | Published: November 29, 2009

Of The Body Prone
Ahleuchatistas | Tzadik (2009)


By Troy Collins
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Of The Body Prone is the fifth album from the six year-old Asheville, North Carolina-based power trio Ahleuchatistas. Guitarist Shane Perlowin, bassist Derek Poteat, and new drummer Ryan Oslance fuel progressive rock structures, free improvisation and avant-garde experimentation with a brash punk rock attitude on their most expansive record to date.

Invoking the lysergic Spaghetti Western drama of Ennio Morricone, the meticulous formalism of King Crimson, the spiky angularity of Captain Beefheart's Magic Band, and the aural violence of Massacre, the trio draws from an array of genres for their eclectic, episodic compositions. Their stylistic diversity reaps impressive dividends, aided in part by Perloin's decision to expand his palette, augmenting his previously clean guitar tone with distortion, reverb and various EFX. Embracing a wider spectrum of sound, his kaleidoscopic fretwork helps make this album the trio's most sonically diverse of their career.

Demonstrating their dexterous interplay, "2/3 Consensus on the Un-finite Possibilities" opens the set with an exercise in dynamic extremes. Perloin conjures ethereal shards sans plectrum, using an ebow and delay to summon psychedelic tendrils of melody while Poteat's pummeling bass salvos and Oslance's throttling drum kit assault provide menacing forward momentum. Following a similar approach, "Total Nightmare in a Deep Dive," is a cinematic meditation awash in Morricone-esque reverb-soaked guitar. Underpinned by the rhythm section's roiling undercurrent, the tune climaxes in inevitable, apocalyptic fashion.

Revealing their stylistic breadth, "Owls" finds the trio careening on a tightly syncopated punk-funk groove reminiscent of the Minutemen, while the intricate math-rock of tunes like "Racing Towards the Hard Kernel" and "Making the Most of the Apocalypse" are indicative of their oeuvre. Jump-cut styled transitions feature torrents of searing fretwork, pungent bass palpitations and kinetic trap set ruminations scuttled through labyrinthine themes, blistering tempo changes and cagey stop-start rhythms. The closer, "Map's Tattered Edges" is an epic tour-de-force of genre experimentation. The nine minute-plus journey seamlessly modulates from brusque metallic shards and ambient pointillism to an anthemic post-rock coda.

Relying on quicksilver transitions and fragmentary themes, these effusive through-composed pieces blur the line between the composed and improvised, trading long-form melodic development for impetuous virtuosity. Challenging yet rewarding, Of The Body Prone is a masterful example of contemporary instrumental prog-rock at its most adventurous.

Track listing: 2/3 Consensus on the Un-finite Possibilities; Owls; Those With Guns; Why Can't We Be In Jamaica?; Racing Towards the Hard Kernel; Eastside Uptight; Dancing With the Stars; Total Nightmare in a Deep Dive; Making the Most of the Apocalypse; Map's Tattered Edge.

Personnel: Shane Perlowin: guitar; Derek Poteat: bass; Ryan Oslance: drums.

Style: Fusion/Progressive Rock

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