Neferiu Records

Mantrakid: Neutralmonism

Sep 26, 2004

 

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NEF101: with clicks, groans & squelchy mumbles spewing from his mouth, mantra forms a surreal techno-hiphop experiment that defies tradition. special hook-ups with baltimore mc ‘king rhythm’ and calgary’s ‘planit’ provide tightly delivered vox that oozes over the album bringing it to a truly unique light.

74 minutes of aural electronic hip hopnotizational robotno-insanity. packaged intricately in a hand-silkscreened aluminum tin & 8page booklet insert. this release is sold out.

  1. the rewt
  2. mentalibatory gong show
  3. coller roaster
  4. my mind’s peak ( feat. planit )
  5. tilted view ( feat. king rhythm )
  6. taking control
  7. eggoes
  8. felt tipped dignity
  9. dreams with the fishes
  10. after 11 with vids
  11. passage through an rca cable
  12. lost within corn
  13. ediced ( feat. king rhythm )
  14. the voices lament
  15. feverdream
  16. hello cowboy rocker
  17. intermission space rodent
  18. i should call my dad
  19. banana
  20. crazy days

ALBUM REVIEWS

http://www.igloomag.com/reviews::554::Mantra_Neutralmonism_Neferiu_Demo_CDr_

Neutralmonism began as a project in which Nate Schmold would develop a style specific to his Mantra alias. It was an attempt to take what he’s learned in the years of producing techno, drum and bass, idm, hip-hop, and basically applying all of these principles to his new experimental approach.

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Enter King Rhythm (Baltimore MC extraordinaire): He sends Neferiu a demo CD and Mantra instantly falls in love with his style. Mantra sends a couple tracks off to King Rhythm and the two have a very productive collaboration and essentially walk away with two stellar tracks together.

King Rhythm’s unique style on the mic not only flavors a couple tracks on the album, it inspires Mantra to start writing the hip-hop vox himself. Reaching deep into his brains, pulling out the most twisted of word-play nonsense, imagining words that defy meaning all for the purpose of building an incredibly experimental flow of timing and rhythm delivery. But the nonsense lyrics combined with twisted beats formed an odd sound development, so much that Mantra felt the essential theme of the album was something that hadn’t really been fully expressed yet. And possibly even with its completion is still not 100% solid. Basically put, Neutralmonism was meant to encapsulate the meaning of insanity; a twisted sense of perception serving as a sole representation of reality. The album represents Mantra’s own quirky way of thinking… saying it through an overdose of insanity-related themes.

About 1.5 years in the making, with his last physical release being the After 10 EP on Neferiu in Winter of 2000, Mantra has shown a completely different side with Neutralmonism. As an alternative to the bizarre, Mantra’s new sound redevelopment yields a mysteriously unique style that just aches to be heard by a larger audience.


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