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The Blind Watchmaker

Release date: June 2004

Label: Glyptique  ‎[GLY 04.04]

Producer: Bruno De Angelis

Mastering: Martin Bowes

Contributors: Artemiy Artemiev, Deborah Roberts, Nimh, Dieter Moebius

Artwork: Giancarlo Politi

01 Bother

02 Wasps

03 The Lynx

04 Cunctis Diebus

05 Angel of Chaos

06 Target

07 Novi Mir

08 Burning Fields

09 Children of the Rubble

10  [untitled]

A SHORT SELECTION OF REVIEWS:

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Mana ERG is the brainchild of vocalist/programmer/multi-instrumentalist Bruno De Angelis. Filled out by a number of other musicians including female vocalist Deborah Roberts and an entire choir on “Burning Fields”, The Blind Watchmaker is something of a genre-defying blend of industrial, ethereal, ebm, electronica, and rock elements. Notably mastered by Martin Bowes of Attrition fame, the disc’s 9 tracks feature extremely intricate production and the interesting and often almost disorienting juxtaposition of antagonistic musical elements and genres while remaining remarkably cohesive. Clean breakbeats will unexpectedly and immediately be replaced with completely different distorted percussive loops. Processed noise and distorted industrial guitar riffing will abruptly give way to mellow ethereal passages with operatic vocals. While this would normally seem a bit contrived and gimmicky, perhaps being considered an attempt at pretentious experimentalism, it works to the album’s advantage here, creating a dizzying and ever-changing experimental yet coherent musical world…If you’re sick of boring mainstream industrial rehashes, then Mana ERG is for you.

– Joshua Heinrich – Grave Concerns (U.S.A.)

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…the music of Mana ERG is hard to describe and hard to file; it covers many grounds and finds its strength in rare qualities such as dynamism and eclecticism. “The Blind Watchmaker”‘s multifaceted production extends from electronic to dark, in a journey that encompasses so many genres and influences that it’s hard to even keep track of your own mood and state of mind as you are violently pulled through its smooth soundscapes. The overall sort of “noir” approach brings that nice ill and sinister halo to the table, and you’ll definitely recognize influences of early NIN (in particular think of Reznor doing his nasty and dirty slow pieces with piano or guitar loops, much rather than him screaming away over walls of distortion) when the atmospheres get cloudy and slow or when Bruno’s collaborators Joe Erber (piano) and Tiberio (guitar) add their touch to the ill-lighten suites…The addition of d’n’b breaks and other sophisticated rhythmical figures might remind you of Apell and definitely some late Clock DVA. Young Gods-type sonorities are ready to take off on the wings of buttered IDM loops that wouldn’t look out of place in some Boards of Canada/Autechre or other Warp artist’s album….The album was mastered by Attrition’s mastermind Martin Bowes, and this is no coincidence since Mana ERG definitely looks up to the sound of Attrition or of similar bands such as Die Form. Bastard, Legendary Pink Dots, Visions of Excess are some of the other bands that populated my mind while going through these tracks… Ultimately the electronic texturing of the record really shows great attitude and consciousness and builds intense statements and ballsy presence on minimalist structures that convey great sense of musicianship. It’s such a diverse recording you’ll have to listen to it many many times to even get a grasp of its complexity, which is great considering how basic the instrumental approach is. I have been listening to this for a few days now and if I didn’t have to move on to the next batch in the pile, I’d probably keep going to appreciate all of the shadows and shades of its wide palette and array of sonics. Great record.”   

- Marc Urselli Schaerer –  Chain DLK (U.S.A)

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“…Bruno has a great voice, being the scalding man, frequently offset by Deborah Roberts having a beautiful voice…The rhythms are robust and the textures tough. It has sinister lyrics, politely conveyed, and when it’s musically pretty it’s usually being totally deceptive and setting you up for a nasty shock…”

- Mick Mercer – Starvox (U.K.)

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…. Dark and compelling, cynical and aggressive in its messages, but deceivingly sweet and calm in their display, “The Blind Watchmaker” is an album of constant contradicting elements struggling against each other and resulting in an absolutely brilliant set of music that could more easily define a new genre than belong to one. With its truly remarkable artistic quality, it brings Mana ERG way above many of the most “touted” electronic acts, leaving space for the usual question as to where music would be nowadays if better acts got some well-deserved promotion and received more interest from major labels.  Connexion Bizarre

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