Album Review: Scott Walker - Bish Bosch

19 December 2012 | 10:12 am | Bob Baker Fish

Music this complex and this immersive is rare. Pray you survive.

If you're listening to this you must have survived,” moans Scott Walker towards the end of Bish Bosch, his first vocal album since 2006's The Drift. It's something of a tongue in cheek acknowledgement that the album has covered some pretty difficult terrain, and the danger of listening to a Scott Walker album is that once you're in you might not make it out.

Walker, the former pop icon from 1960s group The Walker Brothers, has increasingly moved into darker, more avant-garde territory as the decades have progressed. He is one of the most distinctive and unusual artists around. Each record feels like an event, the concert hall colliding with the gutter, sonic experiments in a quasi-operatic netherworld.

His voice is remarkable, an emotionally wounded baritone. It quivers, overwrought with emotion, yet he's singing, “If shit were music, la la la la la la, you'd be a brass band,” on Zercon, A Flagpole Sitter. Somehow the glib one-liners fall flat, only adding to the feeling of alienation.

The music in the main is sparse, a kind of deconstructed version of rock music. It rises and falls in behind his poetic vocals, often into blank nothingness. He uses machetes on the track, Tar, fart sounds on Corps De Blah, revelling in the musical slapstick. Yet the way he uses conventional instrumentation is even more terrifying. Sparse, austere and almost clinical, the influences come from new classical and the avant-garde. Yet there are also moments of doomy guitar riffage here, even percussion, sleigh bells and piercing keys.

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Brimming with obscure references and a dark abstract absurdism, this is music for the foreground. It asks a lot of questions but answers few. Music this complex and this immersive is rare. Pray you survive.