Worldās End Girlfriend ā Resistance & The Blessing [Things You Might Have Missed 2023]
By Dolphin Whisperer
For those unfamiliar, Worldās End Girlfriend has been producing a unique brand of cinematic music rooted in classical composition, post-rock sound palette, glitchy and warped electronics since 2000ās debut Ending Storyāvery much a stepping stone on this long and forlorn path. Though thereās plenty to enjoy in this Japanese one-man exploration, it was 2007ās Hurtbreak Wonderland that first took my breath away and signaled a string of increasingly wide-viewed, somberly-toned albums that cemented me as a WEG die-hard. Having released only in spurts and singles since 2016ās Last Waltz, Resistance & The Blessing functions as a reinterpreted collection of those smaller works in the grand context of an epic that details the heart-breaking cycle of love, loss, and memory. What a tale it is.
Sometimes your words come back to haunt you, and often sooner than you realize. Kind of like when you ask whether something can go wrong in a given situation. Or when you lambast a one-hundred twenty-four album of unearned epic proportions but end up falling deeply in love with a one-hundred forty-five-minute experimental electronic album that showcases a careerās worth of ideas and a lifetimeās worth of heartache. But I already knew that I was in love with Worldās End Girlfriend before I hit play, thatās the way insanity works. And the more I listen to Resistance, the less I feel that any of it is out of place.
True to the nature of a work that looks back at an artistās past as much as toward the future, long-time enjoyers of WEG will find little details that earmark already striking moments with a stronger sense of purpose. Opening on āunPrologue Birthday Resistanceā plays on this most directly by taking a familiar piece from Hurtbreak Wonderland (āBirthday Resistanceā) and fizzling it with scratchy obstructions and hard skips, as if a broken cycle threatens to turn again. And in closing it does, with the same melody picking back up, giving way to an ominous sample of a childās birthday song, and then instead of fizzling out in wild guitar feedback like the Hurtbreak original, āunEpilogue JUBILEEā tumbles up a rising synth clamor that breaks away to what sounds like a heartbeat, amplified and cut away for a short and sweet goodbye message. Songs like āMEGURIā and āRENDERING THE TWO SOULS,ā1 originally lacked context as statements of unwanted departure and frantic longing, but in their new respective positions (and with slight re-workings) can give movement to the fragments of emotion that surround them.
Despite the other nature of an album of this magnitudeāitās significant lengthāeach movement of this piece has a powerful and entertaining identity. If youāve a taste for the whimsy and naivetĆ© of bright love, the initial swing up to āIN THE NAME OF LOVEā will waltz you between triumph and smile alike. If your dreams place you in a world inhabited by vocaloid choirs and reimagining the Edward Scissorhands ice dance in a tunnel of neon lights, the one-two flaying of āReincarnation No.9ā2 and āRENDERING THE TWO SOULSā will twirl you a fanciful landscape. āBlue/0/ +9ā might be the best R&B ballad Iāve heard in ages, complete with a tasteful Isley Brothers-kissed, fuzz-filled solo wail. The āBlack Boxā duo, featuring Japanese footwork specialist CRZKNY, shakes the floor in a way that only hellish EBM can. And, if you make it this far, the final movement from the delicate āhimitsuā through the dutiful but frightening rendition of āAve Mariaā leading up to āSEE YOU AGAINā may cause a tear or twenty to drip from your weary and wondering eyes.
Itās entirely possible that Resistance & The Blessing is a masterpiece. Itās equally possible that it didnāt have to be this much all at once. However, when the heart bleeds with this kind of passion, the only proper reflection rests in staring at the sanguine pool and letting it be what it is. We only know snippets of what has occurred throughout Worldās End Girlfriendās life to release an album full of so much pain, catharsis, hope, and adoration. If Katsuhiko Maeda, the man behind the mask, could ever sit down and explain what each moment means to him, Iām sure words wouldnāt be enough. Iāll be listening to this one for a long time to see if I can get even that close.
Tracks to Check Out: Haha⦠All of them?3
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