The versatile quartet's first release found its own voice already firmly
established almost totally out of sync with prevailing trends in
1992, now Ecim seems prophetic in its embrace of styles and influences
that would come to much greater prominence throughout the decade. The
obvious Krautrock fetish alone clear from the first few seconds
of the album thanks to the motorik drive of "Death Kit Train,"
as fine a Can/Neu! tribute as any ever recorded found the band
inadvertently on the cutting edge in later years. Similarly styled numbers
crop up throughout, generally tending more toward Can's dark experiments
and jams. Unlike many bands that never moved beyond tribute, however,
Cul de Sac do not limit themselves to one particular approach, but rather
embrace a wide range of possibilities. The choice of cover songs is telling
while "Song to the Siren" acknowledged both Tim Buckley's
striking original and This Mortal Coil's later, evocative version, arguably
more impressive was a take on future collaborator John Fahey's "The
Portland Cement Factory at Monolith, California." It's a full-band
version, Glenn Jones' playing to the fore but the rest of the band able
to add a gentle rock swing and, two minutes in, sudden bursts of white
noise. Certainly Jones' abilities on guitar elsewhere show a clear debt
to Fahey's genre-busting work, and titles like "Stranger at Coney
Island" and "The Moon Scolds the Morning Star" have a certain
hint of Fahey as well. Again, though, it's not just that, but a collage
of styles, including soft chimes, musical saw, chopped-up vocals from
a Nico recitation, and sounds from the Contraption, Jones' other instrument
besides guitar. Dredd Foole's guest vocals don't sound too out of place
in the end his work on the Buckley cover is just right, though
certainly his wordless opening yells on "Homunculus" make for
an attention-getter.
(by Ned Raggett , All
Music Guide)
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