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Label

Bataille

Colder

Goodbye


Marc Nguyen Tan is a man outside of time. He is both an avant-garde pioneer and a modern classic. Colder, the electronic project he's helmed since 2003, inhabits a sonic world that drives into the future as much as it gazes into the past. His is a unique sound of noir-drenched highways of propulsive electronic cold wave, krautrock and post-punk, touched by everything from the Chromatics' bleary-eyed romanticism to the Horrors' atmospheric groove, via the teutonic precision of NEU! and Can. Hot on the heels of Colder's third album 'Many Colours' released late last year and 'Some Lost Tapes', a Record Store Day exclusive EP, now sees the release of two new Colder albums: 'The Rain' and 'Goodbye', themselves lost in time. A combination of new and reworked unreleased material from Colder's years at Trevor Jackson's now defunct Output label, Bataille Records is proud to unleash two new parts to the Colder story: 'Goodbye', a swaggering groove-laden album of synthesised jagged guitars and dynamic electronica, and 'The Rain', a more experimental record of glacial ambience and New Wave expressionism. A testament to just how ahead of the curve Colder is, the two albums beguile and intrigue with their explorations of Gallic darkwave cool, a sound which would go on to influence everyone from LCD Soundsystem to Liars. Tan has always been a master of using his consummate understanding of music past to create music of the future. The time capsule opens, and Colder still sounds like the future. Take 'Blackhole Speedway' from 'Goodbye': a stuttering motorik beat underpins snatched guitar stabs and a pulsing bassline, all with those hushed vocals that Colder makes his own. Elsewhere, the title track (and album closer, naturally) expands on the template by employing a throbbing synth figure, and melding it to an almost-blues riff, chugging away behind Tan's half-sung vocal. Goodbye feels more immediate and driving, with 'Sugar's 21st century sensual rockabilly pitching Kraftwerk in a Detroit dive bar, whereas 'Sad Faces' struts like a long lost circus sideshow helmed by Jim Morrison in the digital era. Despite this unexpected torrent of new and upcoming releases, there remains a dark, perverse humour in Tan naming his new album 'Goodbye', leaving behind an ever characteristic shroud of ambiguity as to whether this is truly farewell, or an ending to engender many more beginnings.

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