Dan Powers, the man behind Mutual Shock, emerges from the shadows shrouding Seattle with his debut record, the arresting "Nervous Systems," a dark, synth-soaked exploration of societal collapse and the self. Over 10 painstakingly sculpted tracks, Powers transmutes disquiet into art, harnessing analog warmth, post-industrial grit, and ghostly minimalism to craft one of the most evocative underground records of the year.
"Nervous System" delves into the fractured emotional core of modern existence. Songs such as "No Other One" and "Body Together" throb with melancholic urgency, a rare blend of vulnerability and strength. These are songs that ache with yearning but still sound resolute, summoning the mechanical romanticism of Depeche Mode and the post-Soviet fug of Molchat Doma.
Powers' output also mines the shadowy threat of Nine Inch Nails, the grayscale surreality of Black Marble, and the stark, spectral swagger of Cabaret Voltaire. But "Nervous Systems" doesn't sound derivative; instead, the album establishes Mutual Shock as a new presence in the lineage of col wave revivalists, making them androgynous and unflinching.
There's a cinematic through-line that holds the album together, evoking a lost scene from a retro-futurist thriller. Synth lines flash like dying neon while the percussion marches with industrial relentlessness. It's music for late-night drives, empty streets, and unspoken truths.
With "Nervous Systems," Mutual Shock not only makes a debut but also makes a statement: that discomfort can be cathartic and that amidst system breakdown, new soundscapes can emerge. This is a soul-saving survivalism.
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