Tunnels Of Āh – The Smeared Cloth (2012 – 2018 Unearthed)

The Smeared Cloth collates together previously unreleased material from Stephen Āh Burroughs’s Tunnels Of Āh. Burroughs was formerly a founding member of Blast First unit Head Of David, a group that grew out of the Comicide duo.

Like those other projects, Tunnels Of Āh is brooding and impenetrable. My first play of this was through earphones on a crowded Northern Line train on a busy Monday morning; its sinister, grainy textures and harsh, enveloping blanket of dirty, primal sound left me looking at the world around me in a manifestly different way. It was almost as if these pieces allowed me to see through the veil of cheerful optimism that my fellow commuters had shrouded themselves with, revealing instead a swirling mass of uncertainty, paranoia and fear.

With the possible exception of the final track, ‘White Distribution’, which has a sort of springy euphoria to its unpredictable clusters of electronic echoes, this is a uniformly dark collection. I was reluctant to draw comparisons with anything I’d heard before, but I was unintentionally reminded of Coil here, specifically their unused work for Clive Barker’s Hellraiser. Pieces like ‘Aceldama’ and ‘To The Paschal Victim’ share a similarly ritualistic edge to the unused Coil cues, brutally forcing you to stare deeply into an abyss of swirling, tempting, unending darkness. These pieces find Burroughs intoning mysterious, oblique verse over undulating drones, intense, head-cleaning bass, scratchy percussion and hissing, sibilant sounds that seem to gnaw away at you ceaselessly. One of the highlights, ‘Multi-Storey’, occupies an interstitial zone of high-pitched whining, gravelly distortion, slowly-fluttering metallic drones and muted, crashing sounds. Taken together, these interventions feel like the macroscopic, slowed-down exploration of a car crashing headlong into the concrete wall of an abandoned, dimly-lit inner city carpark.

Other pieces like ‘Amorphophallus’ and ‘Fountains Of Light’ might, at least nominally, fall into a dark ambient category, but it is an uneasy and uncomfortable association. Dark ambient is often characterised by a feeling of foreboding and tension, whereas these pieces feel like that tension has abruptly snapped, replaced by a sort of clawing, incessant acquiescence and surrender.

In case it wasn’t obvious, this is not an easy listen, and one that definitely isn’t for the feint-hearted. These tunnels that Burroughs has constructed bore deep into sinister, uncomfortable territory, pathways to a twisted, savage part of our collective psyches that we rarely choose to acknowledge. When the first passengers took to the nascent, smoke-clogged Tube in London, they felt like they were being confronted with a hellish inversion of Victorian progress. Perhaps Tunnels Of Āh’s music was always there in those tight, constrained pathways beneath the surface, waiting for the right moment to be drawn out from behind their blackened and grimy brick walls.

The Smeared Cloth (2012 – 2018 Unearthed) by Tunnels Of Āh was released 16 June 2023 by Cruel Nature and Zoharum. Thanks to Steve.

Words: Mat Smith

(c) 2023 Documentary Evidence

Comicide – Moral Improvement (Live 1984CE) (Cruel Nature album, 2019)

Comicide were a duo of Eric Jurenovskis (guitar) and Stephen Àh Burroughs (synths and vocals), who would later go on to form celebrated Blast First unit Head Of David. They formed Comicide in 1984 specifically for two gigs, each consisting of the same set list of four tracks, opening for CON-DOM at two venues in their native Midlands – the Star Club in Birmingham and the possibly unlikely setting of the Eve Hill Afro-Caribbean Community Club in Dudley.

A new archive limited edition cassette by Cruel Nature puts these eight live tracks into the cassette players of Head Of David completists for the first time, as well as providing another insight into the early Eighties noise movement. These tracks are, as might have been expected, noisy and uncompromising affairs. Each track is built up from ground-out guitar riffs and disturbing synth shapes that have been subjected to the same extensive distortion as Jurenovskis’s guitar. Tracks like ‘Hatehouse’ swell with layers of dubby reverb, each time adding an element of compelling dissonance, finally becoming nothing more than bleak echoes of the racket Burroughs and Jurenovskis were curating.

The second set introduces Burroughs’s angry, shouty vocals to the tracks ‘Bloodmeat’, ‘Muscular Jesus’ and the aforementioned ‘Hatehouse’. Those vocals aren’t obviously missing from the Star Club set, but when added in they have the effect of making the duo’s loud, repetitive riffing less uncomfortable somehow – even though Burroughs’s voice could never really be considered comforting. Though still a challenging, impure experience, the Eve Hill set sounds more polished, perhaps more studied, probably because the pair had longer to develop the songs. The instrumental ‘Bruised Organon’ takes on an atmospheric, installation-like tone, as if the two were actively countering the maximalism of their other pieces and seeking to channel the cultural echoes of Warhol’s Exploding Plastic Inevitable.

(c) 2019 Mat Smith / Documentary Evidence