Rupert Lally – Teenage Wildlife / Rupert Lally & Benjamin Schabrun – The Whisperer In Darkness

Teenage Wildlife is a book.

Specifically, it is Rupert Lally’s third novel, following last year’s Backwater and 2017’s Solid State Memories. It is set in the past – 1987, to be precise – but also the future. Through its pages you feel Lally’s intense love of 1980s electronic music, his main protagonist (Rob) and friend playing covers of ‘Tainted Love’ and ‘Blue Monday’. In passages redolent of Patrick Bateman’s gushing eulogies for Genesis, Huey Lewis and Whitney Houston in American Psycho, Lally interjects his narrative with richly detailed and impassioned descriptions of keyboards, drum machines and vintage digital synths.

But Teenage Wildlife is not simply Lally’s paean to the 1980s. It also reveals his love of mystery, of terror, of psychological horror, of technology and of leading the reader casually and unknowingly toward sharp left-turns that leave you questioning what’s real and what’s not. Where this book starts and where this book ends can not be anticipated. Each time you think you have it pinned down, it makes a significant shift. It is an elusive, unplaceable, well-paced, full of uncluttered prose and a rewarding testament to Lally’s imagination.

Teenage Wildlife is an album.

Not exactly a soundtrack to the book, Teenage Wildlife nevertheless centres itself inside the 1987 music scene that Rob is so smitten with. These are pieces laden with hook-y guitar riffs, icicle sharp melodies and big, insistent drum machine rhythms. Quite unlike most of Lally’s more atmospheric work, a lot of the album leans into a smart pop sound, each track broadly corresponding with the chapters in the book.

In parallel to music and writing, Lally maintains a movie blog which reveals an expansive knowledge of film soundtracks. That knowledge gives Teenage Wildlife its distinctive emotional colour and timbre. And, like the book, it is an album that does not stay still. Where it starts in broadly electronic pop territory, by ‘Lying In Wait’ it has sharply pivoted toward darker, more brooding concerns, much more in keeping with Lally’s wider canon of releases. The noisy, atonal ‘Things In An Empty House’ is full of cloying, threatening atmospheric effects with a nagging rhythm approximating a quickening pulse full of nervous anticipation.

The Whisperer In Darkness is an album containing a hypothetical soundtrack to someone else’s book.

The work of Lally and his son Benjamin Schabrun, this is a suite of tracks inspired by a HP Lovecraft story. Resting comfortably in a sort of funeral darkness and shrouded, impenetrable mystery, these ten pieces have the capacity to engender a sense of grim unease. Key track ‘Disturbing News’ moves at what can only be described as a creeping pace, its cloying insistence building gently but ceaselessly across its six-minute duration. Full of drones, suppressed guitar melodies and squalls of Schabrun’s processed violin, ‘Disturbing News’ is Actually pretty terrifying, occupying the same psychological terror locale as Lally’s Teenage Wildlife, without ever once resorting to hackneyed, overblown horror soundtrack histrionics – but still 100% guaranteed to give you nightmares.

Teenage Wildlife (the book) by Rupert Lally was published October 17 2023 and can be found on Amazon here. Teenage Wildlife (the album) by Rupert Lally was released November 3 2023 by Third Kind.

The Whisperer In Darkness by Rupert Lally & Benjamin Schabrun was released October 31 2023 by Spun Out Of Control.

Thanks to Nick and Gavin.

Words Mat Smith

(c) 2024 Further.

 

 

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