Rotersand
Capitalism TM
Trisol Records
Rotersand have carved out a unique musical niche: popular in Europe from where they hail, but still in a cultish underground in North America. There is no single genre that describes this musical project; rather it weaves together a tapestry of Dark wave, techno, industrial, and future pop all at once. With this sound, they deliver the antithesis of todayβs empty club music, while simultaneously promulgating a socially conscious message. Yet, against this promising backdrop, Rotersandβs new album Capitalism TM delivers only in terms of beat production, not lyrical depth.
Hackneyed slave-to-the-man messages pervade the album and trivialize an otherwise interesting musical space for spreading politically minded messages to a wider audience. This is primarily seen on the album cover, which includes cryptic messages like: βyou dwell in our matrixβ, βlike monkeys in a treeβ, and βbelieving that you are freeβ. While this does open up questions of modern human existence, the hyperbolic delivery may lose the interest of the more intellectually mature listener.
The album opens with βNot Aloneβ, an uplifting trance-infused beat accompanied with the lead singer’s monotone but addicting vocals. This, and the next track –Β βIts about usβ, are a call to arms for a βshift in paradigmβ, a major theme throughout the album. In the title track, βCapitalism TMβ, Rotersand producer/DJ Krischan Wesenberg shows off his skills with a metal intro that transitions into an EBM beat with psychedelic background sounds. Unfortunately the vocals are diluted with static. The single βTorn Realitiesβ is a favourite that includes not only stellar production, but also meaningful and philosophically-minded lyrics, a combination not found in other tracks. It is a powerful yet solemn call to open our eyes and look beyond our daily satisfactions to find greater meaning.
In the sixth track, βWelcome Homeβ, the beat moves to minimal techno, overlaid with gloomy vocals. The track welcomes the listener βhomeβ and indirectly explores different meanings this can take. Towards the end, fast drum rolls and a synth kick in, electrifying an otherwise calm production. βYouβre Nothingβ is a stand-out track with an exceptionally dark production and mangled vocals. This one truly evokes images of goth clad techno-heads dancing in a grungy basement club somewhere in Germany.
Overall, Rotersand prove wrong those who say a political message cannot be entertaining. Capitalism TM will catch any listenersβ attention, but mostly for its catchy anthems and techno-inducing comas, not necessarily the message.
ArtistΒ Links
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: ROTERSAND – CAPITALISM TM
Raahil Madhok