White Wine
Killer Brilliance
Altin Village & Mine
/
2017
Includes Instant Download
CD
6.99/13.99
AVM 064 CD
2LP
10.99/22.99
AVM 064 LP / Includes Download Code
incl. printed inner sleeves, etching on side D
Incl. VAT plus shipping / Orders from outside the EU are exempt from VAT
Tracklist
1Vignette Corrina 1:11
2Broken Letter Hour 3:24
3Hurry Home 3:47
4Killer Brilliance 4:34
5Abundance 3:48
6Vignette Junko 1:20
7I'd Run 6:12
8Falling From The Same Place 4:24
9Vignette Friederike 1:31
107 Letters 5:03
11Vignette Amelie 1:10
12Art Of Not Knowing 4:29
13Bird In Hand 4:47
14Vignette Katya 5:12

“There's so much complexity in life and human emotion that I have a hard time feeling convinced a song is always either happy, sad, melancholic, angry or scared. I look at these emotions like elements that are constantly colliding with each other, so it's my duty as a songwriter to reflect that. I want to fall in and out of the cracks of genres, finding the nerves not yet hit. It's usually in the disturbing part of the spectrum…”

So says Joe Haege, who’s earned a reputation for unsettling sounds with 31 Knots and Tu Fawning, and also performed as a member of Menomena and The Dodos. Haege formed WHITE WINE (also known early on as Vin Blanc) as a solo project, but it developed into an informal duo following the release of second album, 2013’s In Every Way But One, after Haege invited Menomena / Tu Fawning soundman Fritz Brückner to join him on a European tour. When an apartment fell vacant next to Brückner’s home in Leipzig, Haege deserted Los Angeles, and, newly settled in Eastern Germany, added Chistian "Kirmes" Kuhr (of local heroes Zentral Heizung Des Todes) to the coven while helping to build what would become WHITE WINE’s default home, Haunted Haus. “Having our own fully functioning studio,” he points out, “is just an incredible tool to have at our disposal.”

This new line-up finds Haege delivering the most realised, intense and, at times, horrifying music of his career. The product of 18 months spent touring together, Killer Brilliance emerged, he says, from the trio’s need “to get something dark and sinister out of our systems”, and this is reflected, too, in the album’s title. “We're all killers in some way or another,” he continues. “Some kill hope. Some kill honesty. Some kill fear. Some kill greed. Some kill out of greed. All kill, in some ways, for our sheer survival. However, the underlying fact is that so many ways of killing are simply amazing in their complexity. When you really dig into the details, one can see how there is no escaping a little bit of blood on everybody's hands.”

This sordid realisation is mirrored in Killer Brilliance’s disturbing, sometimes even distressing songs. Brückner’s effects-heavy bassoon gives the record a macabre depth, while Kühr’s aggressive drumming and percussion, firmly upfront in the mix, drive songs relentlessly to their ultimate demise. Haege, moreover, displays the urgent, menacing air of a preacher man delivering sermons about an imminent apocalypse. Punctuated by contrastingly feminine, spoken word vignettes that add to the uneasy cinematic mood – one that draws upon dystopic visions to '60's style Film Noir – Killer Brilliance piles in with the rabid ‘Broken Letter Hour’ and the desperately tense ‘Hurry Home’ (which opens notably with the line “Feeding on the flesh of the young and indifferent”) before the extraordinary title track, with its sinister chorus, pops eardrums and eyeballs. There’s also the Birthday Party malevolence of ‘Falling From The Same Place’, the growing threat of ‘Abundance’ – which addresses notions of prosperity and its price – the baroque, carnivalesque ‘I’d Run’ (“Release the devil!”) and the deceptive calm of ‘Bird In Hand’, which begins with Haege’s description of how “The streets were just crawling with people just dying to breathe…” and concludes with the ugly truth that “When one of us wins, some of us must lose”.

Musically, WHITE WINE feed upon an extraordinarily diverse range of ingredients, including PJ Harvey, Liars, Beak, Suicide, Minute Men, David Bowie, Chuck D and Diamonda Galas. “I like to make music that is played when a cafe is closed,” Haege cackles, “and not when it's open.” Lyrically, meanwhile, Killer Brilliance exhibits Haege’s self-confessed “weird affinity for double entendres. It fits my thinking when attempting to cover the ground of a subject. In a world of art and media overload, and the unyielding barrage of advertising, it’s not easy to find any territory not already well-trodden. Many musicians seek to create music of a fantastic escapism, poetically reframing the harsh reality we’re all forced to swallow every day. It's an unbelievable skill that I wish I had. However, I'm not one of these. For some weird reason, I have this need to hold onto the sheer madness of existence, all of the suffering and celebrating happening at the same time.”

Timely and unflinching, this is, by name and by nature, Killer Brilliance. Here’s to your health. You’ll need WHITE WINE.