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Psalm 137​:​9

by Terror Cell Unit

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Psalm 137:9 04:05
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about

Terror Cell Unit is the stern power electronics duo of Mac Chami (Koufar) and Sam Torres (Crawl of Time). The first shot fired by TCU was on cassette in 2014 on Chami’s own label, Crown Tapes, with more shots fired on cassette through accomplices Bacteria Field and Fusty Cunt. These releases dealt with the complexities of American violence, terrorism, and Christ, but it was in 2018 that TCU unleashed their magnum opus, Psalm 137:9.

Psalm 137:9 homed in on the 1995 American tragedy that was the Oklahoma City bombing. Carried out by Timothy McVeigh and accomplice Terry Nichols, a Ryder truck containing over 4,800 pounds of explosives was parked at the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building and detonated remotely; the explosion killed 168 people, 19 of them children, and severely injured hundreds more. Until 9/11, this was the deadliest act of terrorism on American soil and a horrific example of a man’s stringent conviction that the government pay the ultimate price for Ruby Ridge and the Waco siege.

Refusing to simply regurgitate the story of the bombing or to showcase the violence for petty shock value, TCU instead thrust themselves into the psyche of McVeigh and the rubble of the bombing to channel the complexities of the tragedy. “Suicide Mission Part I (Planning)” starts the album on a foreboding path with beats creeping in and out as heavily modulated vocals further increase the tension and conjure the image of a radicalized McVeigh repeating excerpts from The Turner Diaries to himself as he drives the Ryder truck to its final destination.

The album picks up the deadly pace on the third track, “Fear God/Hate Man” and reaches a violent peak on the title track, “Psalm 137:9,” where TCU lay bare the truly wretched question of how in the Christian heartland could a God possibly allow this to happen. Chami repeatedly screams variations of the psalm, happy is the one who takes your babies and smashes them against the rocks, over frenzied electronics. The track is unsettling in its execution and worse yet that it exemplifies how hundreds of innocents were at the mercy of man’s singular rage. The album slows down a bit into track six, “Patriot’s Day,” where excerpts of news broadcasts and interviews about McVeigh burn among churning noise, but explodes into an assault on the final track, “When The Chickens Come Home To Roost.” A tour de force, Psalm 137:9 is an uncompromising power electronics album that can’t be matched.

*Originally released on The Same Bird CS and available on the CD edition

credits

released March 6, 2020

Mastered by Grant Richardson

Found Remains 16

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Found Remains Brooklyn, New York

NYC CRUSHING ELECTRONICS

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