Washington state-based multi-instrumentalist and vocalist
Arrington DeDionyso has a penchant for merging the constants of rock music with the vagaries of ethnic elements. In a gibberish-sounding vocal dialect that approaches Esperanto and Spanish, but is actually Indonesian translations, and inspired by the
Zohar,
William Blake, and
David Scherer,
DeDionyso also holds a distinct tonal allegiance to
David Byrne. Instrumentally, he might also enjoy
Albert Ayler or
Eric Dolphy, African tribal sounds, raga-type drones, and especially alternative or punk rock. Many of the tracks feature him overdubbed on a variety of drums, keyboards, and woodwinds (especially bass clarinet), but he also employs helpmate
Karl Blau on bass, drums, keyboards, and guitar, in the main. The campy and upbeat
"Kedalaman Air" sounds as if it's on acid, but has no small share of joy in the way
DeDionyso enunciates the lyrics. In exotic and kinetic phrases,
"Mahkota Kotor" might sound nonsensical, but is cohesive in the Bizarro world, while a plaintive, serene, even pleasant
"TakTerbatas" more closely reflects Pan-Asian values, accented by the viola of
Jordan Dykstra. A bonus instrumental track,
"Tenaga Halusinasi," at over 13 minutes, carries the spatial, meditative quality to an eventual and logical conclusion in a larger grouping with
Dykstra,
DeDionyso's bass clarinet,
Blau's bass, drummer
Andrew Dorsett, and the sruti box as played by
Angelo Spencer. The snarly vocal attitude and heavy tribal beat of
"Mani Maliakat," the space klang and contrasting singing on
"Mencerminkan Mani Malaikat," and minimal repeat phrases of the harder rock-edged, punkish
"Nama Bersembunyi" offer the starkest of contrasts. Then there are the devil drones surrounding the bompity bomp beat of
"Rasa Senuth," splashing drum accents tossed in the fan blades of
"Ruang Dan Viartu," or the three-beat industrial percussion workout
"Mencerminkan Mahkota Kotor," urging the bleating contralto clarinet of the leader. Raw, wicked, totally quirky yet worldly,
Arrington DeDionyso has hit upon an interesting, certainly unique new fusion sound far removed from the Bali-based gamelan or Java folkloric music it purports to stem from. ~ Michael G. Nastos