Sunday, 20th November 2016. 4:16:59am ET

Artist: Chiildren

 

Album: The Other People

 

Label: Bit Riot Records

 

Genre: synthetic metal

 

Release Date: May 7th 2013

 

chiildren thumb

 

 

Chiildren, a duo from Los Angeles, call themselves a synthetic metal band, and explain this by saying that they fuse the automation of modern electronica with post-industrial drone, while taking inspiration from grim black metal, splatter-punk fiction, and minimal film scores. Or in other words: think electro rock in which the guitars sound a tad bit heavier and the vocals are sometimes a little harsher.

 

Chiildren want to paint an image of themselves as a band that is not afraid of controversy. While their music does not sound that extreme, the imagery they use in the videoclip “Apocalypse Prologue” is quite macabre and the gore seems to drip off the screen. In the words of the band: "The Chiildren 'Apocalypse Prologue' video is a transitional piece. We've had a lot of time to digest The Other People EP and see it evolve into something else with the new remixes. But it is also our beginning. To keep us interested in this project, it has to become about something.

 

The visual side of Chiildren is very important to us. Chad has a line in the video: “Our bodies were once young. We looked inside ourselves. Tore out pictures and sounds.” I want to suggest that our early music videos were developed through introspection. To move forward, we have to come up with a new context. We're looking at the history of black metal, which is very confrontational towards traditional, Judeo-Christian religious culture. Chiildren is a post-modern metal band that draws influence from black metal. But we have to put that in the context of our lives now. The major world religions have been critiqued beyond measure. It feels redundant to add anything to the conversation.

 

However, we can look at post-secular spirituality, or things that have developed in response to 'the old.' Take contemporary Satanic belief or much of new age spirituality, for example. There's a certain narcissism about it. It suggests that we should view ourselves as gods. We can then look at this in relationship to Ayn Randian capitalist philosophy and come up with up with a metaphor to depict the economic horror that seems to have permeated the past decade: “They (the economic 1%) stole their energy through the use of black magick.”At the same time, we recognize a counter-response to political, ecological, and economic horror. In the past, this has taken on the form of eco-terrorism, protest, activism, and so on. We feel the continuation of this paradigm appears necessary, but is ultimately of little consequence. The writer and philosopher, Eugene Thacker, talks about the idea of 'black' in black metal as a form of cosmic pessimism. He asks that we envision a 'world without us,' one that is 'indifferent to us as human beings, despite all we do to change, shape, to improve and even to save the world... It's limit-thought is the idea of absolute nothingness, unconsciously represented in the many popular images of nuclear war, natural disasters, global pandemics, and the cataclysmic effects of climate change.' Chiildren embraces a form of cosmic pessimism, recognizes the horrors of our time (political, social, economic, and climatological), and has only a small contribution to give in the words, “Stay human.” We've talked about this as the embrace of our frail human condition, and our only appropriate response to each other: empathy. Despite who we are, each one of us faces the crippling, unknowable state of extinction."

 

The thoughts behind The Other People EP are deep, but unfortunately that is not always reflected in the music. The tracks just sound like nothing really special, and the repetitive synths are a bit annoying.

 

Chiildren -

 

Buy Chiildren – The Other People EP

 

 


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