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Sexa
Sedatives From The Pharmacy
Along with Belgrade's Disciplina Kicme and Sarajevo's SCH, SexA was the most striking creature to prowl the Yugoslav
underground of the 1980s. But unlike the aforementioned ruffians, this art-damaged troupe from Zagreb released zero CDs
and only two slabs of vinyl: 1990's noise rock classic 'No Sleep Till Pussy'/'Fuck Piction' as well as a subsequent
single-over its decade-plus run. In hopes of enlisting avowed fan Steve Albini to engineer a sophomore album, the band
decamped to the Netherlands just as political and ethnic unrest began tearing apart the Balkans. The change of scenery
led to an altogether different struggle: Having weathered the collapse of communism and the prelude to war in their
native country, these outspoken expats had to survive sans the cultural and social frameworks that originally nourished
their creativity. Worn down by this and other tensions, they played their final gig in December 1992. Approximately 20
years later, Ines Pletikos fashioned the story into the documentary film 'Kako Smo Usli U Europu-Slucaj SexA' (aka How
We Entered Europe-The SexA Case). From a purely musical perspective, though, the group's evolution had barely been
chronicled. A slew of pivotal songs remained buried beneath the rubble, either confined to homemade cassettes or never
issued at all. Now, Ektro's Full Contact imprint has excerpted hours of largely unheard demos and concert tapes to
compile a definitive retrospective. Titled for the English translation of 'Sedatives Ex Apoteka' -for which the name
SexA is a contraction- 'Sedatives From The Pharmacy' beautifully summarizes the three idiosyncratic phases of the
project's existence. For the earliest chapter, 1980 through 1984, guitarist Darko Kordovan masterminded the material,
which frantically amalgamates such disparate elements as rousing drinkers' choruses, Croatian folk rhythms, Dadaist
absurdity, no wave destruction, and bizarrely angular interpretations of funk and ska. After his departure, the style
mutated into a slower, less kinetic strain of alienated post-punk. The mood also grew decidedly bleaker, thanks to Nik
Valentic's psychically disturbing babble, Sasa Last's hot-wired synth blurts, and Ivan Bilosnic's brittle guitar
innovations, which stand proudly with the accomplishments of Pere Ubu's Tom Herman, the Contortions' Jody Harris, and
Gang of Four's Andy Gill. A posthumous LP, 'SexA U Äivo', captures a superb show from this same period. Following a
brief split in 1986, the beast roared back to life before the turn of the '90s. A scorching performance by Albini's
fleeting power trio Rapeman, served as a partial catalyst for the rebirth. And so SexA developed into an infinitely
louder, more primal concern. Shaven-headed and shirtless, the delightfully mischievous Valentic looked like a soulful
thug and growled like a profane caveman. Bilosnic skillfully ripped the guts out of his instrument, coaxing forth
distorted mayhem by mercilessly jerking his tremolo bar. Surprisingly groovy basslines, jackhammering beats, and
whinnying feedback brought up the rear. This blunt savagery was somehow both miles away from and the logical conclusion
to the quirky complexity of the Kordovan era. Housed in cover illustrations by founding drummer Ratko Danilovic,
'Sedatives From The Pharmacy' seeks to introduce a wider international audience to SexA's legacy. Suffice to say, it's a
thrilling ride, one that's as fascinatingly messy as history itself. (Jordan N. Mamone, New York City, October 15,
2021).
Price
€ 21.95
Genre
Format
LP - 1 disk
Release
15-11-2021
Label
Item-nr
514227
EAN
6417138672247
Availability
In stock