'M. Geddes Gengras. Jeremy Kelly. When one catches either of those names on a release, it’s a guaranteed feast for the ears. However, with the collaborative efforts of these two Stunned-alumni as Voder Deth Squad something like a royal banquet is set before the listener. Twin flames of synthesizer shoot through the solar system and back on this VDS debut, every savory minute securely in the hands of these premier moog & modular synth adepts. At times thrillingly full-throttle, and at other times incredibly nuanced and sensitive, this is one that simply has to be heard to be believed. Limited edition of 111 pro-dubbed & imprinted c53 tapes w/ double-sided jcard and insert.' -STUNNED
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'Voder Deth Squad is the result of years of casual and serious cross-country collaboration between L.A. based M. Geddes Gengras and Hudson's Jeremy Kelly. Deep explorations of timbre and serious synthesizer worship create a continuity between Gengras' hurriedly lush moogscapes and Kelly's grittier, classically minded sound art, settling into a valley of infinite astral expansion.' - WGXC
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'Amorphous psych compositions recorded in a single take by a legendary combination of M. Geddes Gengras and Jeremy Kelly. A large, expansive work that evokes images of bleak futures with lots of rainfall, Ridley Scott movies, and cutting your eyelashes off so that you won't fall
asleep.
Side A: Slowly undulating washes of drone with gentle drumbeats. Four minutes in the mood intensifies—dark and industrial, with a rusted metallic sheen. The liftoff is nine minutes in—staticy roaring jets, blood pounding in your ears, bass rumbles that you can feel in your chest. Molten tendrils of synthesizer close out the piece.
Side B: A lush odyssey into the unknown punctuated by sharp stabs of light, milky drone, and Phillip Glass debauchery. A tribute to forgotten satellites and lost probes.' KZSU
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'Crate-Digging: Voder Deth Squad – 1
BY RYAN "CRITICAL" MASTELLER – JANUARY 26, 2012
When listening to and reviewing lengthy cassette-side-long movements in synth-drone soundscapes, it pays to allow your mind to wander along with the tone and mood of the pieces, letting them wash over you as they immerse you in their construction and reveal subtleties in their depths. I’ve done this with 1, Voder Deth Squad’s excellent 2011 release on the sadly-now-shuttered Stunned Records. VDS had made it easy on me too, 1 is as transcendent an entry into this style as you’re likely to hear, and I was whisked away to the far reaches of space while entrenched in its reels.
Voder Deth Squad is a collaborative project between two heavyweight experimental artists: M. Geddas Gengras, vet of several psychedelic heavy hitters like Robedoor, Pocahaunted, and Thousands, and experimental drone master Jeremy Kelly. The improvisational recordings were put together through cross-country collaboration, but you’d never know it. Stunned released the two resulting compositions as a “limited edition of 111 pro-dubbed & imprinted c53 tapes w/ double-sided jcard and insert.” So, you know a lot of love went into it.
But that is all terrestrial. So unfortunately terrestrial.
See, the last thing I thought of while experiencing 1 was anything related to this mortal coil – it was all space stuff, baby! So here’s the question, in light of my mystical encounter with this cassette: How am I going to get away with not devolving into mush-mouthed science-fiction gobbledigook? The answer: I’m not. Sorry.
Side A opens on some top-notch space vessel drone, as if the listener is experiencing the vastness of space from deep within the bowels of an enormous intergalactic freighter, periodically glimpsing the star-speckled blackness through infrequently placed portholes in the hull. Each glimpse is a sensory treat. But you’re not always conscious – sometimes you’re in stasis, suspended animation, and you’re simply dreaming of the creaks and groans. But when you are fully awake, forget the portholes – the best place to go is the bridge, where you can see firsthand the wonders of the universe as your craft covers imperceptible but enormous distances at speeds only reachable through intense mathematical calculation. Here you pass a cloud of newborn star matter, there you pass an enormous, ancient terminus of some long-dead civilization. It’s eye candy for the philosophical. Or ear candy, actually, since it’s all in your head, as Geddes’s and Kelly’s synthesizers drone, swirl, and burst in glorious arrays of subtle technique.
Of course it all fails in the end, as the ship’s reactors collapse upon themselves and – like the time B. Bending Rodriguez hyper-modded himself to godlike status beneath Niagara Falls – in the process birth new and unfathomable heavy elements. These elements immediately become sentient, birth new galaxies, reverse gravity, and snuff themselves and their creations out within the tiniest fraction of a second. It’s a relativist’s mad, psychotic fantasy.
And that’s just Side A. You thought I went off the deep end there? Well, Side B’s some straight-up 2001 / Arthur C. Clarke shit.
Imagine, then, a consciousness drifting through space, unadorned by corporeal matter, pure sentient energy observing stars, nebulas, galaxies as it passes through the great expanse. Synth tones blink in and out, reverbed and chasing each other throughout the cosmos. Pass and take in the Eagle Nebula and its famous Pillars of Creation, first photographed by the Hubble Telescope in 1995. (Yes, this links to a science article, but it’s pretty bitchin’.)
The Pillars of Creation - this is where Voder Deth Squad's taking us.
Consider the grandness of scale, the unimaginable hugeness of proximity to something so basic yet so unbelievably alien, pure matter and reaction and force. Side B is split into two movements, the first more melodic, a planetarium soundtrack or Carl Sagan’s constant brainwave patterns. But the second is more ethereal, more inward, like the music of the stars but without the need to be filtered through a transceiver – it’s a pure part of consciousness.
Yow.
(And hey, look at the album cover! I’d say the artwork conjures comparisons to the spectral shape of the Pillars of Creation, at least in suggestion. Don’t you think?)
What results, then, is Voder Deth Squad’s vision of a philosophical and physical freedom where petty Earth matters pale in comparison to the wonders of the universe. And isn’t that what it’s all going to boil down to anyway?
RIYL: M. Geddes Gengras, Jeremy Kelly, AGES, Metamorfrozen, Vangelis'-CRITICAL MASSES
credits
released June 9, 2011
recorded live 9/15/10 at green machines
VDS is
MGG - Moog MG-1
&
Jeremy Kelly - Modular Synth
I want to call this ambient, but it’s actually pretty maximalist in places, with clouds of complex overlapping chords with slow attack and long release that seem to hang forever and endlessly mutate. Proper galaxy music speedkermit
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I can't describe how amazing this is. Feelings of hopelessness paired with some kind of spiritual liberation. Feelings of being admirably abandoned in the spirit world, feelings of being left alone in the universe. Long live R Beny, long live artists like him, like Celer, Silent Vigils, Anthène and so on. You give us incomprehensible beauty :) Terrence Falconer