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Carter Tutti Void review a lesson in the primal power of noise | Musique Non Stop

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Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Carter Tutti Void review a lesson in the primal power of noise

Oslo, London

At the trios sold-out improvisational show, each track is like its own mini DJ set

An almighty industrial thump chomps through air thick with sweat. The sound of robotic foxes rutting at night with an oscillating wobble board. Cars skid, horns scratch and guitars squawk along to heavy thuds. Low groans fills what little space is left. This is not, it must be said, music for those feeling fragile of mind. Rather, Carter Tutti Voids improvisational show is a lesson in the primal power of noise. Its a Tuesday night in east London, but it could just as easily be 11am at Berghain nightclub in Berlin.


Tonight is the second of two sold-out nights following the trios debut at the Roundhouse in 2011, which was turned into a live album on Mute Records called Transverse. Chris Carter and Cosey Fanni Tutti of Throbbing Gristle have long been innovators of face-blowtorching beats, but for CTV they team up with Nik Void from the avant-garde techno group Factory Floor, who carefully brushes her treated guitar with a violin bow as Carter prods a panoply of effects pedals and old drum machines and Fanni Tutti grinds a steel slider-topped finger along her MIDI guitars fretboard with the air of a secretary squinting at a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet.


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by Kate Hutchinson via Electronic music | The Guardian

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