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BLOGCRITICS Reviews KARL SANDERS - 'Saurian Exorcisms'

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"With cavernous, swelling feeling and spine-chilling sonicscapes, Karl Sanders' Saurian Exorcisms is a stunning piece of work."

DATE: 04/24/2009
RATING: NA
URL: http://blogcritics.org/music/article/music-review-karl-sanders-saurian-exorcisms/

With cavernous, swelling feeling and spine-chilling sonicscapes, Karl SandersSaurian Exorcisms is a stunning piece of work.

Many might know Sanders best as the founding member of Nile, a death metal band accented by Egyptian overtones. His rapid, skillful guitar work is the stuff of legends in the death metal world, with Sanders ranked fourth in Decibel Magazine's 20 Best Death Metal Guitar Players of All Time.

With his solo work, Sanders concentrates on his passion for Egyptian themes. In 2004 Saurian Meditation introduced listeners to compelling moods and featured a significant shift in tone from what many fans were used to. The Nile interludes blossomed into full songs, branching out through Sanders’ command of Eastern Mediterranean instruments like the ba?lama saz.

The follow-up to Saurian Meditation, Saurian Exorcisms, draws the listener even deeper into Sanders’ headspace. This time, he’s doing it all himself.

Sanders delivers a sonic tour de force, playing ba?lama saz, Glissentar, keyboards, drums, acoustic guitars, guitar synth, and additional percussion. He also provides some vocals, while Mike Breazeale contributes the odd chant.

Saurian Exorcisms really is a cataclysmic piece. Sanders has created works of reverberation, character, and atmosphere. Some may characterize this as the ideal soundtrack for a haunted house or perhaps a little light weekend devil-worshipping, as the subterranean mood resonates with ominous quality.

The ability of these sounds to summon visuals is astonishing, as pieces like “Dying Embers of the Aga Mass SSSratu” swarm with tortuous pitch, disturbing chanting, and evil air.

With the lights off and a few candles lit, Saurian Exorcisms is enough to scare the bejeezus out of the listener. As voices and instruments rise and fall off in the distance, the shadowy claw of the music takes hold. Sounds are bewildering, entrancing, and grave. Sanders has created an ornamentation of bottomless, imperative sound and has layered some truly beautiful music throughout.

The instrumentation and ethereal chanting of “Slavery unto Nitokris” is another example of the broad inventive adventure Sanders is taking his listeners on. It’s hard not to imagine a marching pack of orcs or goblins, perhaps from Middle Earth, as he conjures his wicked magic.

While Saurian Exorcisms can be a very fear-provoking piece of work, there is also a philosophical foundation of harmony and calm in these pieces. Sanders has created an intensely intricate work, transferring his love and fascination of Egyptian culture into the shadows. The final results are enthralling.


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Last modified on Tuesday, 20 July 2010 17:01
Karl Sanders

Karl Sanders

Death metal aficionados know Karl Sanders as the driving force behind South Carolina’s Egyptian-themed death metal titans Nile. But there’s more to Sanders than ripping electric guitar solos, death growls and blast beats.

The multi-instrumentalist released his first solo album, Saurian Meditation, through Relapse Records in 2004, which was perhaps best described by Lambgoat’s Kirby Unrest: “Sanders throws off any extreme music constraints and transports listeners to a world of dark, mystic soundscapes filled with ancient spirits, mind altering visions, and catacombs complex, all of which make for one hell of a debut.”

Sanders, who has been playing guitar for the better part of four decades, certainly knows his way around the instrument. But for his solo work, Sanders opts for more diverse instrumentation. “I love the baglama saz, for example,” he admits. “It’s a really cool instrument because there are half step frets. If you put the quarter tone in the right place you can add a lot of dark mystery to a melody,” he explains.

“While I do have a natural ease of technique with just about any stringed instrument, which could easily lend itself to miles and miles of would-be saz spaghetti shredfest, I use the instrument in a more compositional and thematic way—playing evocative melodies and song-oriented riffs.

“I have immense respect for the Eastern musicians who are accomplished in playing the instrument in its traditional style. Most of my musical training, however, is Western-oriented, so no matter what I do I’m not going to sound completely authentic with the saz. So rather than get caught up in merely attempting to emulate the great Turkish players like Orhan Gencebay, which would never be realistically achievable anyway, I get more enjoyment out of approaching the saz in a non-traditional, uniquely musical, and personal way.”

The baglama saz, a traditional Turkish lute, is just one of many instruments Sanders employs to create lush imagery and stirring emotion in his solo work. Glissentar (a sort of east/west hybrid instrument), acoustic guitars, guitar synth, keyboards, and various drums and percussion instruments are employed as well on Sanders’ forthcoming followup to Saurian Meditation. The new album, entitled Saurian Exorcisms, is Sanders’ magnum opus and every instrument present, including percussion, was performed by Sanders himself.

“I’m a big fan of Arabic rhythms and middle eastern percussion instruments,” Sanders explains. “But since I’m not a drummer by trade, It takes a bit longer to do all the drums myself. The upside is that I don’t have to wait on anybody else, and I don’t have to spend my energy needlessly debating drum arrangements or endlessly trying to explain unusual song concepts.”

“Since percussion is not my forte,” he continues, “the drum parts end up being a little less cluttered and more custom tailored to the song. The drums aren’t necessarily the prime thrust of the record, but they’re thematically appropriate and they’re interesting as they function to help set the right mood and keep a nice compositional focus.”

Besides Sanders, the only other musician appearing on Saurian Exorcisms is Mike Breazeale, who contributes chants and some vocals. “Between the two of us we did everything on the album, even the stuff that sounds like female vocals,” Sanders chuckles. Sanders’ influences are more varied and far-reaching than Nile fans may suspect. “What I’ve been trying to do is move away from strict Egyptian kind of influences and incorporate a broader range of inspiration. The music I’m making is not strictly traditional Egyptian music. I borrow and steal from the traditional music of many different cultures. There’s some Tibetan stuff, some Indian stuff, some Arabic stuff, and so forth.”

Saurian Exorcisms will see a 2009 release through eclectic Brooklyn-based indie label The End Records. “I hope that people find Saurian Exorcisms relaxing and imaginative,” Sanders says. “A lot of times when I’m listening to this music it makes my mind wander adrift and my imagination go places. And I like music like that. Like cinematic music, you listen to it and see little movies in your head. It takes you to a different place.”

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