Apparat goes for a ‘Devil’s Walk’ with Mogwai
apparat-goes-for-a-devil-s-walk-with-mogwai
September 08, 2011
ready
3
---
id: 9a2796db-4905-4657-9598-10fd05c809c3
blueprint: article
title: 'Apparat goes for a ‘Devil’s Walk’ with Mogwai'
date: 2011-09-08T12:49:11+02:00
wp_id: '10687'
slug: apparat-goes-for-a-devil-s-walk-with-mogwai
contents:
-
type: text
text: '<p> It comes with a bit of irony when it says “(we’re) losing our voices for the day” in <strong>Sascha Ring</strong>’s aka <strong>Apparat</strong>’s new song ‘Song of Los’ – when his new album itself seems to tell an epic story of death and evil. The track that was just released as a single together with remixes by <strong>Park Frequency</strong> and post-rock masters <strong>Mogwai</strong> comes alongside the new Apparat album ‘The Devil’s Walk’ – which is a direct reference to <strong>Percy Bysshe Shelley</strong>’s <a href="http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Devil''s_Walk_(Shelley)" target="_blank">poetical work from 1812 of the same title</a>.</p><p>During the early 18th century England was suffering from harsh economic conditions, food shortages and inflated prices. Shelley himself was experiencing this situation and published a collection of ballads as ‘The Devil’s Walk’ – in which he satirically criticised the British government with a description of satan meeting up with key members of the government, church and monarchy. The moral of the story: the rule of tyrants will be short-lived and they will eventually be overthrown – Shelley’s goal was to achieve political and economic reform.</p><p>So back to square one and Apparat: His new album ‘The Devil’s Walk’ is certainly no guide to revolution nor a direct hint towards the overthrow of a corrupt, unhuman empire but its title still fitted right into the London riots a couple weeks ago. However as soon as we focus on what we have heard of the music until now, Apparat’s ‘The Devil’s Walk’ isn’t a soundtrack for revolution either: ‘<a href="http://www.electronicbeats.net/music/apparat-exclusive-track-for-download">Ash/Black Veil</a>‘, ‘<a href="http://www.electronicbeats.net/music/news/apparat-black-water-video-premiere">Black Water</a>‘ and now ‘Song Of Los’ are complex but calm pieces of electronica featuring sweet vocals of both Ring as well as Chicago based singer and <strong>Telefon Tel Aviv</strong> contributor <strong>Alfredo Nogueira</strong>.</p><p>But enough of the chitchat: ‘Song of Los’ was just being released this week with the whole Apparat album out on the 23rd of September <a href="http://www.electronicbeats.net/features/news/mute-records-sign-apparat">via <strong>Mute Records</strong></a>. Catch up with <a href="http://www.electronicbeats.net/music/news/apparat-band-tours-across-europe">Apparat Band all around Europe and especially during <strong>Electronic Beats Festivals in Bratislava and Budapest</strong></a>, and now listen to that noisy-distorted Mogwai take on ‘Song Of Los’ already and watch the Apparat Band live recording from EB Festival Prague afterwards!</p>'
---
# Apparat goes for a ‘Devil’s Walk’ with Mogwai It comes with a bit of irony when it says "(we're) losing our voices for the day" in **Sascha Ring**'s aka **Apparat**'s new song 'Song of Los' -- when his new album itself seems to tell an epic story of death and evil. The track that was just rele...
Shelley himself was experiencing this situation and published a collection of ballads as 'The Devil's Walk' -- in which he satirically criticised the British government with a description of satan meeting up with key members of the government, church and monarchy. The moral of the story: the rule...
So back to square one and Apparat: His new album 'The Devil's Walk' is certainly no guide to revolution nor a direct hint towards the overthrow of a corrupt, unhuman empire but its title still fitted right into the London riots a couple weeks ago. However as soon as we focus on what we have heard...