» » Scorn - Deliverance
Scorn - Deliverance FLAC album

Tracklist

1 Deliverance 8:28
2 Deliverance Through Dub 11:47
3 Delivered 8:03
4 To High Heaven 4:03
5 Black Sun Rising 7:37

Companies, etc.

  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – Earache Records
  • Copyright (c) – Earache Records
  • Recorded At – Jasmine Cafe, The Studio
  • Mixed At – Jasmine Cafe, The Studio
  • Pressed By – MPO

Credits

  • Bass Guitar, Lead Guitar, Percussion, Drum Machine, Sampler [Samples], Voice – Michael John Harris*, Nicholas James Bullen*
  • Engineer [Engineered By] – Jon Wakelin
  • Management [European Agency Representation By] – Tom Van Hemert
  • Management [Management Representation By], Other [Respect Due To] – Andy Baker
  • Other [Respect Due To] – Steve Tisdale
  • Producer [Produced By], Sleeve [Sleeve Constructed By] – Scorn

Notes

Recorded and mixed at "Jasmine Cafe The Studio" Birmingham, July-August 1992.

© Earache Records ℗ Earache Records.

Durations taken from the media player.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 5018615107828
  • Matrix / Runout: MOSHCD 78 MPO 01 @@@ 9

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
MOSH 78T Scorn Deliverance ‎(12") Earache MOSH 78T UK 1992
MOSH 176 CD Scorn Deliverance ‎(CD, Single, RE) Earache MOSH 176 CD US 1997
MOSH 176 CD, IRS 996.176 Scorn Deliverance ‎(CD, Single, RE) Earache, Intercord Record Service MOSH 176 CD, IRS 996.176 Europe 1997
MASS 0430 Scorn Deliverance ‎(Cass, Single) Metal Mind Records MASS 0430 Poland 1997


Scorn - Deliverance FLAC album

Musician performer: Scorn

Title: Deliverance

Country: UK

Date of release: 1992

Style: Abstract, Industrial

Genre: Electronic

Size FLAC: 1931 mb

Rating: 4.4 / 5

Votes: 449

Other Formats: ASF AIFF ADX AA MMF MP2 FLAC

Related to Scorn - Deliverance FLAC Albums

Mightsinger
Although this passes itself off as a single, I have heard shorter albums (running time is 39'59"). The promo sheet compares their Dub leanings to CAN & early PIL, with the more Rocky comparisons to SWANS & YOUNG GODS. This is so, especially with the previous "Lick Forever Dog" single which, after the title track which was a bright, colourful GODFLESH-sounding thing with GIRA-like voice, tended towards dark, meandering but always adventurous Dub sounds with the JAH WOBBLE-like bass being the only steady motif. A friend of mine compared them to a slightly evil ORB, darker, more sombre, maybe even deadlier, but along similar tracks - steady bass-end rhythms held tight while the environment & atmosphere forever shape shift in changing shapes & hues. The single is quite a different kettle of fish. I had expected the same sound, perhaps advanced a little, but along the same lines. Judging by the titles, I also expected it - rather foolishly in hindsight - to consist of several remixes. Wrong! Instead this might easily pass for a short, dark & grisly concept album, using a single set of feelings as the leaping-off point. Play opens with the acoustically-weird drumming of the title track "Deliverance", seemingly recorded in a cardboard box, then 'excited' by hall reverb. This acts as cursor for the dark, brooding bass, the strange, other-dimension synthetics & fleecy guitar which move in gluey slowness - not so much dream-state as CLIVE BARKER nightmare-state. The music inspires images in the same colour as the cover - a midnight, metallic blue. Vocals are delivered through thick FX, it's humanity drained off & the remains vacuum sealed into a cybernetic shell. It doesn't try & create a tune so much as a disturbing 'feel'. "Deliverance Through Dub" takes the same track & uses creative echoes, 'dead' gates & interesting stereophonic panning to give the mood an even stranger feel. If the title track was darkly dehumanised, this takes a step or two further into arctic strangeness. It takes more or less every element from the title track & mutates to an extreme point, always interesting despite it's linear structure. "Delivered" opens on a clattering cascade of sharp drums, before collapsing into a drifting, amorphous non-beat piece which washes out of the speakers, susurrating like waves washing moon-lit rocks on a cold, potentially stormy night. This might make good incidental music to a film along the lines of "Tough Guys Don't Dance" or "Blood Simple" - chillingly gravid with potential danger. "To High Heaven" resurrects the "Deliverance" theme, pushing needles into the red with an exploding, up-front instrumental version existing in a state of frozen explosion. A noisier, larger, more dense & possibly shorter mix. And the single closes with "Black Sun Rising" - the title already used in the second track - which again is a shapeless, non-beat thing, a disturbing cacophony of voices repeating the title in never-ending downward helices, all combining to create twisted coils of Industrial noise. This shows just what can be done with voice and a few effects! And for those who are interested in the LULL project - see under SENTRAX PRODUCTIONS - "Delivered" & "Black Sun Rising" should give you a little taste of what lies on that album.Originally reviewed for Soft Watch.
Mightsinger
Although this passes itself off as a single, I have heard shorter albums (running time is 39'59"). The promo sheet compares their Dub leanings to CAN & early PIL, with the more Rocky comparisons to SWANS & YOUNG GODS. This is so, especially with the previous "Lick Forever Dog" single which, after the title track which was a bright, colourful GODFLESH-sounding thing with GIRA-like voice, tended towards dark, meandering but always adventurous Dub sounds with the JAH WOBBLE-like bass being the only steady motif. A friend of mine compared them to a slightly evil ORB, darker, more sombre, maybe even deadlier, but along similar tracks - steady bass-end rhythms held tight while the environment & atmosphere forever shape shift in changing shapes & hues. The single is quite a different kettle of fish. I had expected the same sound, perhaps advanced a little, but along the same lines. Judging by the titles, I also expected it - rather foolishly in hindsight - to consist of several remixes. Wrong! Instead this might easily pass for a short, dark & grisly concept album, using a single set of feelings as the leaping-off point. Play opens with the acoustically-weird drumming of the title track "Deliverance", seemingly recorded in a cardboard box, then 'excited' by hall reverb. This acts as cursor for the dark, brooding bass, the strange, other-dimension synthetics & fleecy guitar which move in gluey slowness - not so much dream-state as CLIVE BARKER nightmare-state. The music inspires images in the same colour as the cover - a midnight, metallic blue. Vocals are delivered through thick FX, it's humanity drained off & the remains vacuum sealed into a cybernetic shell. It doesn't try & create a tune so much as a disturbing 'feel'. "Deliverance Through Dub" takes the same track & uses creative echoes, 'dead' gates & interesting stereophonic panning to give the mood an even stranger feel. If the title track was darkly dehumanised, this takes a step or two further into arctic strangeness. It takes more or less every element from the title track & mutates to an extreme point, always interesting despite it's linear structure. "Delivered" opens on a clattering cascade of sharp drums, before collapsing into a drifting, amorphous non-beat piece which washes out of the speakers, susurrating like waves washing moon-lit rocks on a cold, potentially stormy night. This might make good incidental music to a film along the lines of "Tough Guys Don't Dance" or "Blood Simple" - chillingly gravid with potential danger. "To High Heaven" resurrects the "Deliverance" theme, pushing needles into the red with an exploding, up-front instrumental version existing in a state of frozen explosion. A noisier, larger, more dense & possibly shorter mix. And the single closes with "Black Sun Rising" - the title already used in the second track - which again is a shapeless, non-beat thing, a disturbing cacophony of voices repeating the title in never-ending downward helices, all combining to create twisted coils of Industrial noise. This shows just what can be done with voice and a few effects! And for those who are interested in the LULL project - see under SENTRAX PRODUCTIONS - "Delivered" & "Black Sun Rising" should give you a little taste of what lies on that album.Originally reviewed for Soft Watch.