The name Kontravoid belongs on a limited run cassette circa 1980-something, the type of tape buried in lost upstate dustbins of pre-MIDI analog electronics, wedged between Cabaret Voltaire and Das Ding. The dark industrial and new wave influences are strong on ex-Crystal Castles drummer Cam Findlay’s new project—his voice is scary, like an echoing underwater growl—but the underlying pop melodies always afford a degree of breathing room. The artist Felix Kalmenson has already produced two great Kontravoid music videos: “Native State,†the album’s most instantly rewarding song (owing to interestingly doubled male-female vocals) and its most aggressive, “Killed in Action.†Kontravoid is on sale now from Bandcamp and iTunes, courtesy of Tarantula X.
- Duncan Cooper, The Fader
www.kontravoid.com
www.facebook.com/kontravoid Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
The name Kontravoid belongs on a limited run cassette circa 1980-something, the type of tape buried in lost upstate dustbins of pre-MIDI analog electronics, wedged between Cabaret Voltaire and Das Ding. The dark industrial and new wave influences are strong on ex-Crystal Castles drummer Cam Findlay’s new project—his voice is scary, like an echoing underwater growl—but the underlying pop melodies always afford a degree of breathing room. The artist Felix Kalmenson has already produced two great Kontravoid music videos: “Native State,†the album’s most instantly rewarding song (owing to interestingly doubled male-female vocals) and its most aggressive, “Killed in Action.†Kontravoid is on sale now from Bandcamp and iTunes, courtesy of Tarantula X.
- Duncan Cooper, The Fader
www.kontravoid.com
www.facebook.com/kontravoid Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.