Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

Dalek|Gutter Tactics

Gutter Tactics

Dälek

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

Coming off of the blistering beats and symphonic doom of Abandoned Language, New Jersey duo Dälek (pronounced dialect) continue swaggering down the same path that made their last album a success, and in a sense, Gutter Tactics could be considered Abandoned Language, Pt. 2. When you've found your sound, why make a departure? Previous tour dates with Ipecac labelmates -- Isis in particular -- prove to be hugely influential once again, as metallic fuzz and white-noise layers propel the agitated rhymes of dälek (the MC) in a thick swampy steam. Aptly titled, the album has a dark, disorienting, and toxic vibe. Instrumentally, Gutter Tactics shares much in common with the droning shoegaze of My Bloody Valentine and the distorted orchestration of Mono, due to live overdubs provided by various musicians ushered from dälek's Deadverse record label into his newly built studio. The funky jazz of Motiv is washed into a haze behind Destructo Swarmbots' myriad of guitar effects, resulting in a blurry ultra-compressed dreamscape wedged between the brick-breaking snaps of Oktopus' beats. It's actually quite difficult to specify what instrumentation makes up the wall of sound -- synths, strings, horns, guitar effects, or something else entirely. It all simply sounds like a sludgy cyclic hum that shifts between two moods: threatening and beautiful. On one side of the coin, there's the ominous "No Question," with factory crunch drum sequencing accented by intense Jeru the Damaja-type rhymes. On the other, there's the flashback to the sweeter days of hip-hop in the sedate and droning "We Lost Sight," a song that marks the MC and producer at the top of their game as chamber organs swell hypnotically underneath a gritty boom-bap, while dälek reminisces in a echoing vocal, "We lost sight on how to use these mikes/What scripts we write/How to choose our fights." Disenchantment with the state of rap, and society as a whole, is a major underlying theme, but the statements never feel too preachy or in your face. Instead, the vocal freestyles hover just slightly above the music, delivered in an amorphous mumble that matches the sonic abyss of the background perfectly. Headphones are highly recommended for this one.

© Jason Lymangrover /TiVo

More info

Gutter Tactics

Dalek

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From 12,49€/month

1
Blessed Are They Who Bash Your Children's Heads Against a Rock
00:01:24

Copyright Controlled, MusicPublisher - Dälek, Artist, MainArtist

2009 Ipecac Recordings 2009 Ipecac Recordings

2
No Question
00:04:40

Copyright Controlled, MusicPublisher - Dälek, Artist, MainArtist

2009 Ipecac Recordings 2009 Ipecac Recordings

3
Armed with Krylon
00:05:11

Copyright Controlled, MusicPublisher - Dälek, Artist, MainArtist

2009 Ipecac Recordings 2009 Ipecac Recordings

4
Who Medgar Evers Was...
00:08:04

Copyright Controlled, MusicPublisher - Dälek, Artist, MainArtist

2009 Ipecac Recordings 2009 Ipecac Recordings

5
Street Diction
00:05:29

Copyright Controlled, MusicPublisher - Dälek, Artist, MainArtist

2009 Ipecac Recordings 2009 Ipecac Recordings

6
A Collection of Miserable Thoughts Laced with Wit
00:03:22

Copyright Controlled, MusicPublisher - Dälek, Artist, MainArtist

2009 Ipecac Recordings 2009 Ipecac Recordings

7
Los Macheteros / Spear of a Nation
00:03:15

Copyright Controlled, MusicPublisher - Dälek, Artist, MainArtist

2009 Ipecac Recordings 2009 Ipecac Recordings

8
We Lost Sight
00:04:32

Copyright Controlled, MusicPublisher - Dälek, Artist, MainArtist

2009 Ipecac Recordings 2009 Ipecac Recordings

9
Gutter Tactics
00:04:39

Copyright Controlled, MusicPublisher - Dälek, Artist, MainArtist

2009 Ipecac Recordings 2009 Ipecac Recordings

10
2012 (The Pillage)
00:03:30

Copyright Controlled, MusicPublisher - Dälek, Artist, MainArtist

2009 Ipecac Recordings 2009 Ipecac Recordings

11
Atypical Stereotype
00:06:23

Copyright Controlled, MusicPublisher - Dälek, Artist, MainArtist

2009 Ipecac Recordings 2009 Ipecac Recordings

Albumbeschreibung

Coming off of the blistering beats and symphonic doom of Abandoned Language, New Jersey duo Dälek (pronounced dialect) continue swaggering down the same path that made their last album a success, and in a sense, Gutter Tactics could be considered Abandoned Language, Pt. 2. When you've found your sound, why make a departure? Previous tour dates with Ipecac labelmates -- Isis in particular -- prove to be hugely influential once again, as metallic fuzz and white-noise layers propel the agitated rhymes of dälek (the MC) in a thick swampy steam. Aptly titled, the album has a dark, disorienting, and toxic vibe. Instrumentally, Gutter Tactics shares much in common with the droning shoegaze of My Bloody Valentine and the distorted orchestration of Mono, due to live overdubs provided by various musicians ushered from dälek's Deadverse record label into his newly built studio. The funky jazz of Motiv is washed into a haze behind Destructo Swarmbots' myriad of guitar effects, resulting in a blurry ultra-compressed dreamscape wedged between the brick-breaking snaps of Oktopus' beats. It's actually quite difficult to specify what instrumentation makes up the wall of sound -- synths, strings, horns, guitar effects, or something else entirely. It all simply sounds like a sludgy cyclic hum that shifts between two moods: threatening and beautiful. On one side of the coin, there's the ominous "No Question," with factory crunch drum sequencing accented by intense Jeru the Damaja-type rhymes. On the other, there's the flashback to the sweeter days of hip-hop in the sedate and droning "We Lost Sight," a song that marks the MC and producer at the top of their game as chamber organs swell hypnotically underneath a gritty boom-bap, while dälek reminisces in a echoing vocal, "We lost sight on how to use these mikes/What scripts we write/How to choose our fights." Disenchantment with the state of rap, and society as a whole, is a major underlying theme, but the statements never feel too preachy or in your face. Instead, the vocal freestyles hover just slightly above the music, delivered in an amorphous mumble that matches the sonic abyss of the background perfectly. Headphones are highly recommended for this one.

© Jason Lymangrover /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

Getz/Gilberto

Stan Getz

Getz/Gilberto Stan Getz

Moanin'

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Moanin' Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Blue Train

John Coltrane

Blue Train John Coltrane

Speak No Evil

Wayne Shorter

Speak No Evil Wayne Shorter
More on Qobuz
By Dalek

From Filthy Tongue of Gods and Griots

Dalek

Negro Necro Nekros

Dalek

Precipice

Dalek

Precipice Dalek

Absence

Dalek

Absence Dalek

Endangered Philosophies

Dalek

Playlists

You may also like...

UTOPIA

Travis Scott

UTOPIA Travis Scott

Paint The Town Red

Doja Cat

HISS

Megan Thee Stallion

HISS Megan Thee Stallion

HISS

Megan Thee Stallion

HISS Megan Thee Stallion

Not Like Us

Kendrick Lamar

Not Like Us Kendrick Lamar