Dub Asylum is the musical alias for Peter McLennan, former member of 90's reggae-thrash-punk-ska mutants the
Hallelujah Picassos. Now working solo, Peter McLennan's
Dub Asylum is a musical mash-up of dub reggae, hip-hop and
funk. All genres that weigh heavy on McLennan's ears.
Dub Asylum continues on with many of the musical elements present in the Picassos sound, taking them on a more electronic
bent. Mixing up scratchy old hip hop drum loops and samples with dubbed out guitar and keyboards.
After a long string of cover versions, the asylum has come out with new music in the
Time & Space EP.
McLennan describes it as "Sparse, moody, repetitive dubs to tune in or zone out to. Written over five days in the middle of
(NZ) winter, staring towards the future thinking about lux flakes, lost causes and loose units, while watching
dem youth make a difference."
Every song is full of mind-stretching delay tails and deep, chesty bass notes that mean you can't help but breathe longer and
feel wiser as you zone in your chosen direction. Ebbs in the instrumentation leave you feeling as if you've been thinking deeply,
even if you've only n that you haven't moved, let alone thought anything, because the sound of the tracks changing makes
you realize yourself again. Touches like the Gregorian-esque chanting in
Critic of Clouds leave relaxing footprints in the air that
they
travel through to get to your brain.
While centred around meditative motifs,
Time & Space EP is like a day spa in purgatory, combining reliable and relaxing
rhythms and tones with chaotic intermittent tweaks and musical suggestions.
Calming elements like the steel drums in
Bass on the Backlash, which alternate between two pairs of pitches that become a
hypnotic, semi-regulated frequency, are not so much interrupted as they are assaulted by short contributions from other
instruments.
The effect is like being in a damp forest full of birds singing back and forth with each other.
Also like a forest of birdsong, eventually all the components become part of the scene, just long enough to patch into the chaos
before it gives way to the next track.
Perhaps the most endearing quality to
Time & Space EP is the playfulness of the sound choices. From the soft and cuddly
laser beams of the title track to the sinister balloon rubbing sounds and drum attacks so slow they sound like gunshots in
Delectable vs Electable,
Dub Asylum has a quizzical wrinkle of noise set to spring around every corner.
Heartbeats, stretchy synth pads and crunchy, possum-in-a-cereal box sounds await you when you make the choice to spend
a few minutes in time and space with
Dub Asylum and the
Time & Space EP.