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10 000 Russos - Kompromat

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10 000 Russos - Kompromat

Ā 

The repress is limited to 500 copies and comes on 180g coloured vinyl and standard sleeve. Repress, CD and tape ships at the end of October/November.

ā€˜Kompromat’ is the third album from Portuguese trio 10 000 Russos and arrives following their second album ā€˜Distress Distress’ (2017) and a collab LP with Dutch industrialists and Fuzz Club label-mates Radar Men From The Moon (2018). Though tapping into the same transcendental minimalism of bands like Neu!, Suicide and Faust, 10 000 Russos have a sound that is solely their own: JoĆ£o Pimenta's machine-like percussion and brooding vocal drawls sound like a cyborg Mark E. Smith drearily narrating the end-of-times atop the abrasive guitar manipulations and experimental loops of Pedro Pestana and driving, motorik basslines that are seemingly summoned from the most depraved corners of AndrĆ© Couto’s psyche.Ā 

That’s been 10 000 Russos ever-evolving template for many years and on new album ā€˜Kompromat’, it’s amped up tenfold and delivered with a new-found urgency. Taking its name from the Soviet-era Russian term for ā€˜compromising material’ (the words earliest use traces back to KGB slang) that was gathered on politicians and business owners as leverage to blackmail and coerce, the monolithic drones heard on ā€˜Kompromat’ hint at a two-fold revolution – a subconscious upheaval, as well as a socio-political one. They say of the record: ā€œLike all of our work, the songs started from jams and were worked from there but this record feels fatter and has this kind of dance-y vibe to it. Unlike ā€˜Distress Distress’ it feels like there is a sense of release there, despite the oppressive feeling that runs through a lot of the album.ā€Ā 

Ā 

This is something that’s brought to the fore just as much sonically as it is thematically: the heaving propulsions of album-opener ā€˜It Grows Under’ explore ā€œa general unrest slowly growing inside, a kind-of pre-revolution tensionā€ and ā€˜Runnin’ Escapin’ is about ā€œrandom unpredictable situationsā€ and the volatility inherent in them, something that’s borne out as the song unfolds throughout its running time. Then there’s the aptly-named ā€˜The People’, a throbbing call-to-arms that tackles the album’s revolutionary spirit head-on and ā€˜The Wheel’, which they say is about ā€œthe eternal motion of things and the repetition of history.ā€

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Description

Ā 

The repress is limited to 500 copies and comes on 180g coloured vinyl and standard sleeve. Repress, CD and tape ships at the end of October/November.

ā€˜Kompromat’ is the third album from Portuguese trio 10 000 Russos and arrives following their second album ā€˜Distress Distress’ (2017) and a collab LP with Dutch industrialists and Fuzz Club label-mates Radar Men From The Moon (2018). Though tapping into the same transcendental minimalism of bands like Neu!, Suicide and Faust, 10 000 Russos have a sound that is solely their own: JoĆ£o Pimenta's machine-like percussion and brooding vocal drawls sound like a cyborg Mark E. Smith drearily narrating the end-of-times atop the abrasive guitar manipulations and experimental loops of Pedro Pestana and driving, motorik basslines that are seemingly summoned from the most depraved corners of AndrĆ© Couto’s psyche.Ā 

That’s been 10 000 Russos ever-evolving template for many years and on new album ā€˜Kompromat’, it’s amped up tenfold and delivered with a new-found urgency. Taking its name from the Soviet-era Russian term for ā€˜compromising material’ (the words earliest use traces back to KGB slang) that was gathered on politicians and business owners as leverage to blackmail and coerce, the monolithic drones heard on ā€˜Kompromat’ hint at a two-fold revolution – a subconscious upheaval, as well as a socio-political one. They say of the record: ā€œLike all of our work, the songs started from jams and were worked from there but this record feels fatter and has this kind of dance-y vibe to it. Unlike ā€˜Distress Distress’ it feels like there is a sense of release there, despite the oppressive feeling that runs through a lot of the album.ā€Ā 

Ā 

This is something that’s brought to the fore just as much sonically as it is thematically: the heaving propulsions of album-opener ā€˜It Grows Under’ explore ā€œa general unrest slowly growing inside, a kind-of pre-revolution tensionā€ and ā€˜Runnin’ Escapin’ is about ā€œrandom unpredictable situationsā€ and the volatility inherent in them, something that’s borne out as the song unfolds throughout its running time. Then there’s the aptly-named ā€˜The People’, a throbbing call-to-arms that tackles the album’s revolutionary spirit head-on and ā€˜The Wheel’, which they say is about ā€œthe eternal motion of things and the repetition of history.ā€

10 000 Russos - Kompromat | Fuzz Club