The psy trance duo release their most aggro, messy album yet
The Israeli psy-trance duo’s two-years-in-the making eight studio album, Army of Mushrooms, is big, loud and noisy. For starters, the album doesn’t sound like a live band anymore, as they did with 2009 album Legend of the Black Shawarma. Army of Mushrooms is pure electronica: heavy on drum ”˜n’ bass, old-school synths and Eighties-styled industrial noise, with a few jangly guitar riffs thrown in.
The opening track, “Never Mind” takes the techno lead and moves into Goa-trance midway with the amplified treble and the bass cut off, making it one noisy start. While techno and shrieky psy-trance are the mainstays here, Infected have jumped onto the dubstep bandwagon. Three tracks “U R So Fucked,” “Wanted To” and “Drum n Bassa” contain dark, downtempo, dubstep womp sounds. There isn’t lack of psychedelia with the finally crafted “The Rat,” which
But what really throws us off balance, is Infected Mushroom’s cover of Foo Fighters’ “The Pretender.” Infused with drumstep beats and a metal-ish synth solo, it’s a six-minute plus electronic/rock hybrid, recalling Pendulum’s Propane Nightmares.
The 12-track anthology makes a clear departure from their clean psy-trance sound heard right through their career, since their debut album The Gathering in 1999. If this is evolution, then Infected Mushroom has just taken its first step.Â
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