Crack Cloud - Pain Olympics (New CD)
Like Psychic TV before them, Crack Cloud have a philosophy, and one that
they are not afraid to wear on their sleeves. While their anarchic, phantas-
magorical visuals, heavy use of symbology, and seemingly never-ending
cast of colourful collaborators have often invited cult comparisons, this
really does the collective no justice.
There is no apocalyptic death drive here; no cult of personality; no hierarchy of
power. While frontman and lyricist Zach Choy is in many ways the face of the
group, the collective is one founded on equality, and in his cryptic lyrical blend-
ing of poetics, polemics and personal experience, Choy is truly the mouthpiece
of something far larger than himself. Nowhere else is this more apparent than
on the album’s first single, ‘The Next Fix.’
What begins as a caustic, claustrophobic account of addiction swells into a
sprawling, euphoric hymn as Choy is joined by a choir of seemingly endless ce-
lestial voices. Less a cult then; more a church. Listening to this song or watching
its accompanying self-directed video is a truly spiritual experience, and in its
building, jubilant movement it offers a glimpse of Crack Cloud’s most vital mes-
sage: using community to turn adversity into hope. This isn’t just bravado; its a
story born of deep, personal experience. Crack Cloud operate on the frontline
of Canada’s out-of-control opiate crisis, mobilising and organizing in Vancou-
ver’s harm reduction programmes.
The group themselves have had their fair share of trauma, and the collective
offers its members a vital vehicle for rehabilitation and recovery. As the tagline
on the album’s back cover makes clear then, this is absolutely ‘based on true
shit.
.
1 Post Truth (Birth Of A Nation) 5:41
2 Bastard Basket 4:29
3 Somethings Gotta Give 2:04
4 The Next Fix 3:24
5 Favour Your Fortune 2:06
6 Ouster Stew 2:21
7 Tunnel Vision 4:37
8 Angel Dust (Eternal Peace) 4:26