Drone / ambient.
"Deep beneath the ocean is a world of mystery, wonder, darkness, and 
danger. Even if it weren't for the cover art of this German duo's 
brilliant new album, there is unmistakably no other place in the 
universe that has influenced the sounds and movement of what is 
represented within. These drones are not passive in the least. The depth
 and volume are all encompassing, and moving slowly but steadily like an
 ancient and lonely large whale through the graveyards of shipwrecks, at
 the very beginning of the food chain in which all living creatures 
depend. Recorded live in the studio without overdubs, the first two 
parts are based on live performances the band was touring around with in
 2001, the first being a dark blue rumble, heavy on the low end and 
marked by patient melodic movement, the second with swirling guitar 
strums and leads like the sun coming through in bended bands of beams: 
flickering, reflected, and refracted. The intangible overwhelming 
feeling of weight and pressure is unavoidable and inescapable, like 
being frozen in a dream, unable to move, but calm and comforting all the
 same. Around the half-way mark, it dips back into the darker regions as
 pitch and pace slow down deeper and deeper and deeper and deeper yet 
into the cold, black unknown. The third part was recorded as an 
afterthought, and is described as a new ending. Its brightness and 
chugging backwards-sounding guitars brilliantly accent the feel that it 
is a journey which is reaching its end. At this point, it feels that the
 central figure in the journey seems to be a vessyl of some sort, and 
the 16-minute Part 3 is thematic of a glorious resurfacing, 
reintroduction to the bright light of day, and returning to solid 
ground. But, as the brightness comes, so does an ominous sense that all 
might not be right. The world looks different than before, the places 
are familiar but everything's seemed to have changed. The credits may 
roll but this is certainly not the end."  [Jon Whitney / Brainwashed]
“Finally, the first Troum record to be widely available in the 
United States, released through Relapse subsidiary Desolation House, and
 we're pleased to say it's maybe their best yet. Troum are the 
ambient-drone ensemble that emerged from the dissolution of 
proto-industrial dronesters Maeror Tri. Unlike the primarily guitar 
based whir and rumble of Maeror Tri, Troum obfuscate their sound 
sources, laptops, found sounds, accordians, guitars too maybe, and the 
results are timeless, mysterious, haunting, ethereal and utterly 
breathtaking dronescapes. Sigqan is a lengthy three part epic, beginning
 with rich sonorous foghorn like swells, that ebb and flow, separated by
 near silence, and slowly building in intensity from warm crescendos to 
huge doomy pulses. Eventually, these roaring rumbles joined by 
complementary shimmers of high end, that sound out, and then dissipate 
like sonic ripples, fading into blackness. The swells slowly grow closer
 and closer until the edges begin to blur and a subtly more continuous 
melodic framework begins to emerge and so begins the second movement, a 
creepy and slightly ominous, slowly fluctuating slow-motion-melody, 
whose lazily shifting notes keep the sonic landscape dense and rich, and
 keeps the sounds from flatlining into monochromatic drones. As the 
piece winds down, the dynamics and melody start to smear together into a
 warm, diffused fuzzy hum, with the subtle traces of melody sinking 
deeper and deeper into the dark warmth. The third and final movement was
 a sonic afterthought, added/recorded later than the first two, but is a
 pleasantly dreamy coda, with a slightly sunnier tone, a keening upper 
register melody, stretched out into subtly slithering iridescence with a
 shuffling, staticky rhythm just below the surface. So nice.“ [Aquarius 
Records, 2003]
"Beauty and profundity are the evident merits of the album - like 
the unity of oceanic and atmospheric elements, and namely the ocean is 
most frequently mentioned association used by critics and musicians. 
When you are at a depth of thousands metres, even the storm on the 
surface is impossible to hear." [Dmitry Vasilyev, IEM]

