The all-night jam session from which a band sculpts multiple albums looms large in progressive rock myth -- to this day, some believe that all of
Amon Dueuel I's albums were recorded in a single marathon 24-hour acid-fueled freak-out -- but it rarely turns out to be true. However, not only did internationalist ambient-noise trio
Aethenor record two albums in a single night (the second is scheduled for release in late 2008) with different guest artists, but supposedly, the basic tracks were laid down in a working meat locker at temperatures below freezing, so that the cold would affect both the players and their instruments. Besides the core trio of guitarist
Stephen O'Malley, keyboardist and electronics mastermind
Vincent de Roguin, and electric pianist
Daniel O'Sullivan,
Betimes Black Cloudmasses features guest vocals from
Ulver's
Kristoffer Rygg and free improv drummers
Alex Babel and
Nicolas Field on its three lengthy tracks. (Unlike the four entirely untitled tracks on the trio's debut,
Deep in Ocean Sunk the Lamp of Light, each of these ten-minute-plus pieces is titled with a Roman numeral.) Unlike the debut album, a more constructed piece that incorporated tapes of earlier improvisations by
O'Malley and
de Roguin,
Betimes Black Cloudmasses is basically a single extended free improvisation that passes through a variety of moods and sounds. Aside from some of
O'Sullivan's trademark Fender Rhodes parts, like the chiming susurrations in the middle section of
"II," there is little melodic development here, but nor is there the carefully constructed atmosphere of the debut. Instead,
Betimes Black Cloudmasses is simply an occasionally interesting, occasionally tedious example of post-rock experimentation in free improvisation. ~ Stewart Mason