[dropcap style=”font-size:100px; color:#992211;”]W[/dropcap]illiam Controlās release schedule is intriguing, given how heās releasing Revelations as a series of four EPs which will ultimately combine to form an album.
Iād been aware of this since a trip to Manchesterās Factory 251 in September ā where he announced the impending release of EP The Pale, also showcasing a few tracks (three-quarters of the EP, in fact) for good measure. First impressions ā theyāre as catchy as I remember.
It all begins with the single, āThe Monsterā. A rather lively track where Control has seemingly thrown aside his Dark Wave tone to kick off the EP, adopting instead a cheerier Synth-Pop sound reminiscent of AFI spin-off Blaqk Audio. Controlās lyrics, however, stay true to form, with sexual undertones from the start. The song is about a relationship, mainly the dark and lewd side.
William Control isnāt shy when it comes to themes of sexuality in his music, and many parts of this track could point either to the pain you can feel in aĀ relationship, with Control pessimistic from the outset, or perhaps referencing his own sado-masochistic sexual desires ā pre chorus line āOh Iām ready to hurt againā and āI can be the darkness you hold dearā from the chorus are great examples of this. āI will be the amplifying reason for your tearsā is another lyrical inclusion pointing towards his pessimistic nature.
āConfessā follows on, taking on a darker sound musically. The layered dark-wave synth patterns and guitar taking over the melody towards the end echoes early New Order. Lyrically, āConfessā takes a twisted look at Christianityās doctrine; damnation, temptation, Christ, God, and salvation are all mentioned. Of the new material played live at Factory, āConfessā was the catchiest ā its chorus and Controlās call of āsave meā lodge perniciously in the head. The lyrics talk about how weāve torn the world in half and asserts that we kill for love, possibly hinting towards his disdain of religion and the way he sees it as completely negative force.
āWhen The Love Is Painā is eighties inspired from the get go ā from the drum machine to the chorus-like synth effects. From the songās title, itās obvious Control is about to delve once more into his sexual predilections. Which he duly does in an evolution of prior material of a similar nature. Here Control isnāt just overtly sexual, but also talks about the relationship as a whole, discussing love, lust, heartbreak and pain. It isnāt just about dominating his partner, as Control has at times done in tracks like āThe Filth and The Fetishā (one Iām yet to introduce my Catholic mother to). However, like āThe Filth and the Fetishā (and other songs in Controlās back catalogue), sampled moans of female sexual pleasure and/or pain feature heavily, perhaps all just excerpts from the incoming amateur porno directed by Control. While I donāt hate it, I definitely feel thereās something here Iāve already heard.
The final track is āMother Superiorā, the third song from the EP Control has already debuted live. From the opening lyrics itās clear the song is rather dark ā Controlās lyrics in both William Control and Aiden have always had their dark moments, and here weāre told about an existential crisis Control is going through. The song touches upon suicide and drug abuse, as well as the hook stating āWe fall inside early gravesā. The song and EP closes out with the multi-layered synth parts of āMother Superiorā as a long instrumental, slowly breaking apart until a single synth is left and fading away.
With this release, itās clear Control has taken a stronger influence from 80s electronic music (mainly New Wave) whilst lyrically staying close to home. The Pale induces optimism for the rest of the Revelations project ā as an EP it has a very polished sound, and does justice to the sounds Control has paid homage to. The downside though, is that the new EP bundles seem to have pushed the bootleg Morrissey shirts out of his webstore, meaning we have to retract his title of āSports Direct for Goffsā. A crying shame.
