179,854Messages
9,130Senders
30Years
342mboxes

← back to listing · view thread

From:
ozymandias G desiderata
To:
Christopher William Niemitz
Cc:
Date:
Thu, 25 May 95 01:06:03 -0600
Subject:
In defense of "deep" and "dark" (and possibly "dork")
Msg-Id:
<9505250706.AA09846@selway.umt.edu>
In-Reply-To:
<Pine.3.89.9505242052.A29147-0100000@ese.UCSC.EDU>
Mbox:
idm.9505.gz
quoted 2 lines No more boring than reading review after review of idm/ambient> No more boring than reading review after review of idm/ambient > material that declare how "dark" or "deep" something is.
Now, wait a minute here, Chris! Those are my two favorite descriptive words you're beating up on there! I would argue that both of those words have definite, useful meanings, even if there are those of us on the ambient and idm lists that use them overmuch. "Dark" music is exactly that: gloomy, brooding, maybe even a little menacing, and generally Gothic (in the classical, architecturally overwrought sense). Dark music has an edge; it's not safe; it has little rough edges that give listeners those little adrenaline kicks that cause full-on body rushes. Lagowski, some Autechre, quite a bit of the Aphex Twin's older stuff, and most everything on Sabrettes is dark music. "Deep" is a little harder to define, but it's still possible. To me, a deep track is one that goes all the way -- repetition, loopiness, slow permutation, minimalism -- all of these are qualities that make something sound deep. Deep music will lull you into a trance, soothe you when you're stressed, and generally take over your brain with its own rhythms and textures. Paragons of deepness include Orbital, Underworld, and just about everyone on Metroplex. The combination can be devastating. If you want to see both in action, I point you no farther than the inimitable Basic Channel posse. Or maybe Lustmord, if you're approaching things from the ambient side of the coin. There is music that will spook you out and put you to sleep at the same time. Granted, these terms may be a little vague, but they definitely are useful. If something's dark it's not likely going to be commercial wailing-diva house, and if it's deep it's not likely to be disposable "rave" music. do we have an understanding? ozy ozymandias G desiderata personal info : http://www.mbc.umt.edu/ogd/ discographies : http://www.mbc.umt.edu/ogd/aaxz/discogs Missoula raves: http://www.mbc.umt.edu/ogd/aaxz/raves/