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Perdition City

Perdition City
Ullver Perdition.jpg
Studio album by Ulver
Released 19 March 2000 (2000-03-19)
Genre Avant-garde, electronic, trip hop, ambient, jazz
Length 53:31
Label Jester
Producer Ylwizaker, Audun Strype
Ulver chronology
Metamorphosis
(1999)
Perdition City
(2001)
Silence Teaches You How to Sing
(2001)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars
Pitchfork 2.6/10

Perdition City (subtitled Music to an Interior Film) is the fifth studio album by Norwegian collective Ulver, issued in March 2000, via Jester Records. The album was recorded and edited by Kristoffer Rygg and Tore Ylwizaker, mixed by Ylwizaker at Beep Jam Studio and mastered by Audun Strype at Strype Audio.

Perdition City continues the experimentation seen on Themes from William Blake's The Marriage of Heaven and Hell and Metamorphosis, containing elements of trip hop, jazz, ambient music, spoken word and electronica. Described on its release as moody, atmospheric electronica, cinematic in scope, evoking a soundtrack for an imaginary film. Kerrang! praised the album, noting "This ain't rock 'n roll. This is evolution on such a grand scale that most bands wouldn't even be able to wrap their tiny little minds around it." Musically, Ulver not only explores new genres, but also shift from extroverted, into more introverted moods, or interior music.

The Metamorphosis EP, issued in September 1999, showcased Ulver's new electronic sound, delving into what would become the foundation for all future records, thus acting as a musical trailer for Perdition City.

Now consisting of only two members — Rygg and Ylwizaker — the duo started to incorporate field recordings into their work. During the making of Perdition City they would hang microphones outside the window of Tore’s 5th floor apartment, to capture inner city street sounds, car horns, people chattering, etc.


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