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WHITE NOISE

An Electrical Storm

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"A cult favourite from 1969 where electronic music pioneers  Delia Derbyshire, David Vorhaus, and Brian Hodgson (from the BBC’s legendary Radiophonic Workshop) waited till everyone had gone home and created this psychedelic collage of pop, electronic music and plenty of white noise." - Matthew

A collaboration between David Vorhaus, Brian Hodgson and Delia Derbyshire, White Noise: An Electric Storm is the very epitome of a cult album. Its capitalized rear sleeve message told prospective listeners all they needed to know: Many sounds have never been heard by humans: some sound waves you don't hear – but they reach you. 'storm techniques' combine singers, instrumentalists and complex electronic sound. The emotional intensity is at a maximum. . Derbyshire and Hodgson worked for the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. Vorhaus, a student at North London Poly, attended a lecture by them and wanted to fuse his ideas with their pioneering sound capabilities.

By blending electronics, tape loops and vocals with live percussion, future sounds of the strange are embedded here – Hawkwind, Tangerine Dream and avant garde noise collagists Throbbing Gristle all owe a debt. The vocals, delivered by three unknowns (Annie Bird, John Whitman, Val Shaw) are like untutored folk singers offering lullabies to the unknown, against beds of cries – of ecstasy and pain – distant thunder, car crashes and more.

While the first side offers moments of Beach Boy-harmony and lightish relief (Here Comes The Fleas for example), Phase II of the album – The Visitation and The Black Mass: An Electric Storm In Hell is a bleak, chilling and exhilarating listen. White Noise: An Electric Storm was the sound of the underground, a soundtrack to an unmade turn-of-the-70s horror film; a secret collection for insiders that continues to unnerve well into the 21st century.

Track List:

Phase-In
A1. Love Without Sound
A2. My Game Of Loving
A3. Here Come The Fleas
A4. Firebird
A5. Your Hidden Dreams

Phase-Out
B1. The Visitation
B2. The Black Mass: An Electric Storm In Hell

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