Counter-Evolution - Metals And Plastics (CD, Left Hand Path Records, 2022)
What it looks like:
A cardboard slipcase with a full-colour and glossy golden print featuring the above artwork on the front and the track list and credits in gold letters on a black background on the back and a proper CD inside with the same stark gold lettering on black. It looks really excellent while at the same time not very HNW-y, the whole thing reminds me both a bit of modern PE and especially of the type of HN and sound that Troniks has been pushing for the last decade and a half. Counter-Evolution is presented as the duo of Swedish wallers Mattias (of L-F-8, Singh Singh and MKWALLS) and Nils (The 1967 Handen Murders, Big Rig). Left Hand Path Records is also a Swedish label and has so far presented a pretty diverse and high quality output ranging across experimental genres.
What it sounds like:
The album runs a total of 63 minutes across five tracks, of which the first one is a brief intro of some Swedish (I guess?) monologue that I can’t follow, but the track title ‘Instruktioner För Att Göra En Rörbomb’ seems to mean ‘instructions for making a pipe bomb’, which I think is meaningful enough. The rest of the album tracks paint a continuing story: ‘Det Stora Guldrånet’, ‘Gisslan’, ‘Bombhot’ and ‘Göra En Flykt Mitt I Natten’, which I invite you to Google Translate yourself for an idea of what seems to be the album’s narrative. After the intro we are followed with four tracks of varying character with interesting sound design each of them: the gravely, seemingly ever-dying but never-relenting wall of ‘Det Stora...’, the plasticy squeaky sound embedded in the harsh ‘Gisslan’, the artificial-sounding synth rumble of ‘Bombhot’ and the desolate, windy ‘Göra En...’. There is real variety and pace to these tracks, without giving up the HNW character at any point, which only underlines the narrative sense that this CD has, like watching a riveting crime noir film.
In conclusion:
Great quality HNW from Sweden, both the inherent sound, the concept and the product itself. Makes one hopeful that this is a revival of the Troniks era of HN and HNW that excited many of us in the second half of the 00s to take on the challenge of recording HN(W) ourselves. In any case, as a a HNW enthusiast you must seek out this CD!

















