New Release I Cut People brainRot
brainRot, a new release by I Cut People:
brainRot; a change of sorts. An incredibly complex, 3-pound organ suffering from decay. An overdue death. Both a superfluous and an imperative death. A faint farewell to the known. An influx of electrical currents leading to faulty memories. An unworthy and long-winded threnody to another historical epoch and its antiquated, stubborn, and immutable first principles. The premise of brainRot is revealing the intonation of an unraveling system’s delusions of grandeur and imagines being in the throes of systematic demise. This opening isn’t from a point of subjectivity, as it doesn’t pertain to a “being” but uses the Deleuzian concept of “a life” which is continuous, free-flowing, subjectless; outside the ontological closure of the individual. As technology transfers and transitions communication through a variety of networks, the mystery of a life is voluntarily demystified.
Similar and perhaps a sequel to In Ruins, brainRot uses less of the linguistic cut-up method and relies mostly on tonal effect. Built mostly from live improvisations, the work has minimal edits outside the initial compositions.

