| 1 | Melloncholie Battlecat | 4:00 | ||
| Featuring [Bass Ace] - Brian Herman | ||||
| 2 | National Anthem Of WOR | 6:08 | ||
| Featuring [Bass Ace] - Brian Herman | ||||
| 3 | Astral Sexual Predator | 3:04 | ||
| 4 | Worlock Radar | 7:36 | ||
| Featuring [Bass Ace] - Brian Herman | ||||
| 5 | Space Between II | 3:57 | ||
| 6 | Bebe Barron's Panties | 4:10 | ||
| Synthesizer [Synthi 100] - Jack Dangers | ||||
| 7 | Hawkin Chakras | 3:35 | ||
| Featuring [Bass Ace] - Brian Herman | ||||
| 8 | Aleatoric Funk | 3:43 | ||
| Featuring [Metrognomes] - Karl White | ||||
| 9 | Polaris | 5:32 | ||
| Featuring [Metrognomes] - Karl White | ||||
| 10 | Night Driving | 4:23 | ||
| Featuring [Metrognomes] - Karl White | ||||
| 11 | Garmonbozia | 7:03 | ||
| Featuring [Phone Scan] - Chris Cones | ||||
It’s wholly possible that there’s some kind of arcane subtlety to this album which I just don’t get. Certainly, a lot of care went into the making of it, it is rich in complexity, and it seems clear to me that the artist(s) had a definite vision in mind. I just didn’t feel it. What bugged me the most was the inconsistency of the music, with the artwork and the title. Some of the background music was actually reasonably spooky. There is some kind of ghostly operatic vocal drifting in and out, on the fifth track, “Space Between II”, but it’s horribly marred by the main feature sound—A kind of imitation washboard noise, which is rivalled in ugliness, only by the beat, which is tinny, flat, and inexplicably speeds up and slows down. These two noises are evidently the focal point of the piece as they are featured on every track.
I couldn’t figure out what any of the music had to do with “Carrion Sounds”, as none of it evoked anything particularly menacing or Gothic for me at all. There were some elements in the album which I liked, but none of them gelled with the other parts, and ultimately I was left with a feeling of cheese. My personal opinion is that if you want to create an atmosphere of magic, or menace, and you want to do it electronically, you need to use a synthesizer that is damned posh. It should be so smooth as to cause the listener to forget what is making the sound and convince them that the music could only be achieved by supernatural means. On that score, it failed for me, and worse than that, it sounded dated.
On the other hand, Jesse Peper’s artwork is absolutely stunning, both front and back, and I’m still glad I bought the album just to have such a cool looking CD in my collection. At the very least, I would say there are some elements of the music which reflect the artwork; unfortunately, they are not the main features.