Ilia Belorukov’s “NRD DRM TWO 2022-2024” reviewed by Vital Weekly

Crónica is a Portuguese label with loads of highly experimental or conceptual releases. This one, “NRD DRM TWO 2022-2024” by Russian Ilia Belorukov, is highly conceptual. Because of that, I listened to this one several times because I didn’t feel anything, but I did think a lot. And with the whole thinking versus feeling, I sometimes have a bit of a problem. But did I have that problem this time is what you’re wondering … Well, to make a long story short: It was a matter of volume to get the real beauty of this album out. And I suspect that it is precisely what Ilia tried with this.
The Nord Drum Two is a drum machine from Clavia, and as with all of Clavia’s machines, it’s red. And it has a synthetic way of generating sounds, so no samples form the basics of what you hear. On this album, where NRD DRM TWO refers to this exact machine, Ilia made single-step sequences with which he triggered the machine, and the output was manipulated and recorded. As well as some manipulation afterwards. So no, you will not hear complex drum patterns, and if that is what you are looking for, better skip this album.
The beauty in this album is the sound itself. The interpolation of the waves generated by the synthesis engine, the patterns evolving of the concrete sounds, and the manipulation flow afterwards. The complexity of the minimalism of just sounds. Because, well, if you have a particular sound and repeat it in 120 BPM, do you have a sequence? Or do you have a sound with a fundamental frequency of 120 Hz, but with a waveform so complex that tuning and twisting that waveform generates some kind of rudimentary drones?
That is the quest Ilia Belorukov, who lives and works out of Novi Sad in Serbia, went on between 2022 and 2024. And this CD is the result of said quest. As mentioned before, highly conceptual in its approach and maybe more of an advertisement for the Clavia Drum than an album to listen to and relax. But believe me, when I say that many layers underneath the obvious make this an album worth exploring. Like Ilia did. PS: No rings were harmed or thrown into volcanoes during the quest. (BW)

via Vital Weekly