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Timeshift review
Timeshift review








timeshift review

This is exactly how a voice should be thrown to be projected as another instrument among all the others. Upon first listen, I didn't find much special about them there was no real, dynamic rhythm to them, nor could I compare him to that of the most handsome voices I heard on other albums, but that's exactly what makes his voice work so well. He's able to let the music speak for itself while putting out a sort of spoken word, slightly sung flow of lyrical content without ever getting in the way of the music. It almost makes you wish that you were walking in that same plane of existence the moment you listen to this album. Anyway, with Gorski in charge of vocal duties, his talent is recognized from the get go on "Glitch In Time". The sounds that emerge on the album easily reflect the quasi-desolate space atmosphere that's constructed.

timeshift review

As I went from the start of the album beginning with "Glitch In Time" all the way to "Beyond The Door", a clean and crisp sound formed that avoided the standard heavy electronic riffs and dubstep influenced sounds that a lot of electro-industrial bands have adopted today. The cover art of the album sort of reveals, in a sense, what's contained. However, these two are looking to carve their own path with their latest album, "Timeshift", forging their own legacy and emitting sounds that can be unique and of their own. As described by Gorski in an interview that I just recently conducted with him (which can be viewed here) he has stated that, "The album carries a bit of a nostalgic style, but with modern technique and presentation." And those words do carry weight. Timeshift Electro-Industrial Volt 9000 Steven Gullotta Electro-industrialists Volt 9000, otherwise known as Cory Gorski and Andrew Dobbels, whose influences can be as odd as toy commercials from the 80s and 90s, and whose music has been affiliated with the like of Ohgr in the past.










Timeshift review