Suffocation 12″

Released: March 29th, 2009

Title: Suffocation

Details: Limited to 200 records.
100 on Clear Vinyl, 100 on Multi Colored Vinyl. with CD. Packed in screen printed sleeve with sticker and poster. With cover art work by Justin. Screen printed by Kevin.
Recorded 8/28/2008 by Northern Liberties @ 2409

Label: Self-released

Tracks:

1. Suffocation

CD bonus tracks Live 9-25-08 on KFJC 89.7 FM – Los Altos Hills, California
08 – Silver Fire, 09 – Chromosomatic, 10 – Changing, 11 – Etheric Flame

Listen on the BC Page
Available now at the merch store at https://northernliberties.bandcamp.com/merch

Suffocation (Philly Weekly, 3/24/09)

NORTHERN LIBERTIES

It’s a grand plan: Release a limited-edition, 200-copy run of a vinyl album that features one song and then play that song/album in its entirety, “Thick As a Brick”-style. Northern Liberties say they will only play the piece, titled “Suffocation”, live twice, once in Bethlehem, Pa., and once at Johnny Brenda’s. What will it sound like? Only a select few know, but the band describes it as “somber – essentially a ‘winter song’ dealing with problems inherent to existence in a physical dimension.” If “Suffocation” is anything like the early 90’s DIY/grunge/postpunk vibe blended with off-kilter, avant-garde jazz rhythms the band is normally known for, it could be epic.

— Katherine Silkaitis, Philadelphia Weekly, March 18-24, 2009

Northern Liberties – “Suffocation” Live @ Johnny Brenda’s, March 20, 2009

Northern Liberties performs their 30-minute song, Suffocation, for the first of only two times ever. This ‘alpha’ performance of “Suffocation” was recorded at Johnny Brenda’s in Philadelphia, Pa, on the Vernal Equinox, March 20, 2009. Filmed by Chris Childrey, Scary Weather Films. Please listen to this loud on large speakers or headphones. Excerpts from the band’s press release: “This recording captures a piece of music that has been being forgotten, remembered, refined, scrapped, buried, exhumed, and reburied for several years. It has been given a final resurrection in the year AD 2009…we will only perform this piece of music two times for a public audience – an alpha and an omega, and then no more….The musical and lyrical tone are somber, and the song is essentially a ‘winter song’ dealing with problems inherent to existence in a physical dimension, as well as addressing personal and psychological traumas and nightmares. A slow ebb and flow through the necropolis of a ‘ghost version’ of Philadelphia seen from a dream moves into a meditation on the inevitability of suffering amongst all beings, and finally a musical vortex comes along to sweep away all the words…” The record is limited to 200 copies and can be purchased from the band at www.northernlibertiesband.com or www.myspace.com/northernliberties

Northern Liberties “Suffocation” (Philadelphia City Paper, 3/18/09)

Call it a prog-noise opus. Call it a gathering thunderhead. Need a better categorization? You have plenty of time to think one up. The new 12″ from captivating experimental punk trio Northern Liberties is 30 minutes of rumble, swell, shriek and release, a single thrilling song enveloping you in a manner that entire albums would struggle to match. The sludge riffing heard in the earlier part of “Suffocation” builds into pattering marching toms and mantra vocals, a beautiful feedback devotional. Then there’s some distorted bad-trip synthesizer and pounding march to the sea — so much is going on here, so many bits to chew on as the music runs its course. The band calls this its winter song, recorded last December and debuted on the vernal equinox to exorcise those dark months. On a higher level, we’ve been mired in winter for much, much longer than that, and the band has tinkered with this composition for all that time, all those years. Look at this as a rapturous catharsis to usher forth brighter days.

Northern Liberties will perform “Suffocation” in its entirety only twice. This Friday at Johnny Brenda’s will be one of those times. by John Vettese

Northern Liberties prepare to lay their ‘winter song’ to rest (Philadelphia Indie Music Examiner, 3/16/09)

Every so often there comes along a piece of music that is so much more than a just a song. Because of its length and brilliant composition, as well as the other components of its complex structure, it becomes a work of art, a masterpiece. In my experience, this has only happened a handful of times, with songs such as: Nofx’s “the Decline,” Craw’s “Caught My Tell,” and Maiden’s “Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner.” Such songs are somewhat like the “A la recherche du temps perdu” (Marcel Proust’s literary masterpiece) of music. It would seem that every generation has its own “In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida,” just as Iron Butterfly did in the late 60’s. And now, the Philadelphia avant garde punk and neo-progressive ghost-core band Northern Liberties has given the Suicide Generation its very own “In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida.” The song is titled “Suffocation,” and it consumes a small piece of eternity with its many-layered and intricate parts, which begins with a well-constructed noise base of feedback and distant vocals and continues along a course of varying intensity and heaviness and range. For some odd reason, “Suffocation” reminds me of old Christian Death, the Theatre of Pain days, along with Craw, somewhere between Lost Nation Road and Strontium. It’s obviously a very personal song, with an undercurrent of fierce emotion, in addition to a deep intellectual well from which springs a mighty fountain of thought. All told, “Suffocation” is twenty-nine minutes in length, and it’s worth every second of time that it borrows from the universe.

“Suffocation” is a song that’s not afraid to run with scissors. Nor does it throw salt over its shoulder or knock on wood. It laughs off the seven years bad luck of broken mirrors. And if a black cat should cross its path, it will kneel down and run its cold hand over the animal’s sleek midnight-colored coat, pick it up, and take it home. In other words, it is a rather daring composition. And, to be sure, it leaves enormous footprints in the ground of its path, making it quite easy to track through the wilderness of the City Earth. And I will no doubt follow it to one or both of the only two shows at which Northern Liberties will be performing it live. One in Philadelphia. And another in Bethlehem. Currently we stand on that invisible line which separates the seasons, spring from winter. It’s time to bid farewell to the biting cold and the frost covered ground, to the seemingly perpetual gray skies and the stoical faces of passersby on the street, and the lingering piles of dirty snow melting into the gutters around the city. The sun heralds the approach of spring, and with it the funeral procession begins with head-swelling feedback and noise art, with duel percussion, with keys and thick strings and voice. So, we follow it. And in doing so we realize that we are about witness a “winter song” laid to rest. Simultaneously we lament the loss of one season and celebrate the arrival of another. I am among them. “Suffocation” by Northern Liberties is the music of the occasion. We will hear it live only twice, the first time in Philadelphia, the second in Bethlehem.

James Carlson
Philadelphia Indie Music Examiner