Circle
Andexelt
[tUMULt; 2001]
Rating: 8.9
Nothing brings me to crummy stripmalls swifter than crummy used CD marts. I love
their $1 bins. I love the dusty stench that manages to conquer the reek of the
fried-chicken place next door and wards off all but the most determined diggers.
But more than anything, I love these bins because I've discovered so many great
records in them. One such gem is Circle's Andexelt. Before Thursday
afternoon I knew nothing of this Finnish band, but by the typography that reminded
me of Brothomstates' Claro and the mechanized body-part photography that
occupies the lowest sixth of the cover, I knew I should punt my buck.
After a thirty-minute metro ride home and enough time to brew a pot of coffee, I
was ready to try out Andexelt. I'd lined up other discs just in case it,
in fact, turned out to be Scandinavian doom metal or a cunning front for an area
smooth jazz combo. I needn't have bothered. Andexelt is still in my CD
tray days later. The album is pure krautrock and it is the most invigorating
collection I've heard since a French Canadian called Charles-Émile sent me his
debut album, Nothing Down to Earth.
Circle, I googled, are a five-piece who since 1991 have been astounding those just
south of the Arctic Circle with their muscular explorations of space, time, and
the pan-dimensional mega-riff. Andexelt is their seventh full-length, and
you need to hear it often. The record voyages to the same places as Les MacCann's
Layers, but takes a different route. Grafting Neu!'s motorik percussion,
Berlin-era Bowie synths to Robbie Shakespeare's dubby basslines and riding a
guitar wave that recalls Black Sabbath and Michael Karoli, Andexelt
surpasses Brainticket's Adventure, and equals Can's Future Days in
loaded grace.
If this band were well-known, the Chemical Brothers would have already sampled
Janne Peltomäki's rhythm-salvo of the opening title track, and music critics at
large would already have acknowledged Circle's ferocity. The band's guitarist,
Teemu Elo, unloads a double-barreled reverb riff straight in your face, and while
you're busy searching for bits of your head, frontman Jussi Lehtisalo's analog
synth enters, intent on slicing to ribbons any sounds that cross its path.
Fortunately, it's hard labor cutting away at Peltomäki's resilient groove. Elo
and Lehtisalo form a cluster-bombing alliance against him, but the man relentlessly
motoriks on.
For "Odultept," the band jumps on the Fender Rhodes space-jazz and bolsters their
move by allowing bassist J. Laiho to showcase his fits-and-starts dub-bass abilities.
Guest T. Huunonen gives up a galactic flute solo after an explosion of ARP synths
and the band decides to take a tour round the interstellar medium. "20Milate" is
an Arkestral reworking of My Bloody Valentine's "You Made Me Realize" whereas
"Lisääpui" mines the same Stooges treasury that Julian Cope's Brain Donor project
did, except Circle got there first and stole the heavenly guitar line that
Agitation Free's liquid-harmony guitarist Lutz Ulbrich had left behind. "Humusaar"
emerges from a doomy bass ground into a receding, FX-spattered star-field. And the
brooding, numinous closer, "Kidulgos," proves that Circle have processed Tangerine
Dream's nebulous Zeit as well as the third-eye mantra of Electronic
Meditation.
Andexelt is astounding, no two ways about it. All it's taken for me to get
totally pumped up about this music has been a dollar. Yes, it may be a little more
than a 10-10-321 collect call, but in that dusty bin, I found something actually
worth talking up to twenty minutes about.
-Paul Cooper, March 4th, 2002