Red Mecca cover

Red Mecca

Released

Few groups captured incipient dread quite as well as Cabaret Voltaire. While their industrial peers like Throbbing Gristle and SPK went for shock factor, a jolt to the nervous system to shake the listener out of complacency, Cabaret Voltaire’s music simmered with angst and paranoia; later, beyond the mid-1980s when they moved closer to the dancefloor and pop, that tendency would be leavened by a relative clarity in the production, but on Red Mecca, it’s the murk that makes the music so powerful, and I’ve heard few albums that sound quite so much like they’re oozing from the speakers. It’s partly due to the ectoplasmic leakages from the instruments like guitar, clarinet, horns, organ, that smear across the stereo spectrum; it’s also in Stephen Mallinder’s stentorian delivery on songs like the epic “A Thousand Ways”, a song that seems to spiral in on itself continually, an ouroboros of a track. With a title inspired by contemporaneous geopolitical events in the Middle East, Red Mecca has Cabaret Voltaire channeling conflict and crisis into nine songs full of unresolved tension.

Jon Dale

Suggestions
Modern cover

Modern

Hijokaidan
Hypocrisy Is The Greatest Luxury cover

Hypocrisy Is The Greatest Luxury

The Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy
Full on Night cover

Full on Night

Matmos, Rachel's
Sometime Today cover

Sometime Today

Darren Tate, Paul Bradley
EVOL cover

EVOL

Sonic Youth
Ledge cover

Ledge

Laughing Hands
Flies Inside the Sun cover

Flies Inside the Sun

Flies Inside the Sun
Senshu cover

Senshu

Andrew Chalk, Naoko Suzuki, Daisuke Suzuki
Todd cover

Todd

Todd Rundgren