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From:
nick davey
To:
IDM mailing list
Date:
Thu, 4 Jan 1996 11:43:55 GMT
Subject:
(idm) Reviews
Msg-Id:
<ECS9601041155A@essex.ac.uk>
Mbox:
idm.9601.gz
I just thought I'd review some of the stuff I bought over Christmas...These are mostly the major releases and from 1995. De-Magnetized a Compilation Of Magnetic North Records (dbl CD) The Magnetic North label had been going until 1994 an in its two year long life managed 15 releases some of which are featured on this almost two hour compilation. The main artist featured is the notorious Dave Clarke under guises as Directional Force (the Peel Session has also just been released) and under the name of Grapite. All in all 8 of the tracks are acredited to Dave and most of them are stunners. The style is dance-floor, and the beats tend to be fast. 303 workouts by Woody McBride play out the first disc with a 13 minute stunner and the second disc shows how fast techno can get. Christian Vogel appears to know how fast his drum machine will go, and Russ Gabriel shows how intelligence and dance-floor techno can converge all under the Pseudoname of VCF. All in all a good retrospective of a label that was underground in it own respect and did have degrees of sucess and failure. Not for the easy listening pile. The only draw backs to the album was the rather annoying vocal samples looped on both of the DJ Hell tracks. Generally a good compilation and it does grow on you. Serius A Tresor Compilation. This is the latest compilation from the German Tresor label that seems to have released tracks by nearly all of the Detriot artists. Jeff Mills starts the compilation with a short track that cuts deep the harder detriot sound and then we have an all cast list featuring Eddie Flashing Fowlkes in top form, Model 500 with an excellent cut, Robert Hood gets funky need I say more. If you like detriot techno then this is for you. Fresh Emissions and Audio Emissions Output Compilation. Also a double CD this features Artists known mainly for previous releases on Andrew Weatheralls new label(s). Being starts the ball roling, slowly however at first, definately a hint of intelligence and ambience both his tracks lasting in excess of 10 minutes, Vermin have the next to tracks which totally devistated me, there is a resemblance to lots of different artists not many of which i'm able to place, but there's definately a hint of something different. I haven't heard of Vermin before buit i definately want to hear of them again. Then comes a track by Bishop wierd title-killer track, finally the first CD ends with a dub out techno/intelligent type beat track. The second CD is reminicent of the Emissions Echoic stuff, alot of LO-Fi as the cd starts With Conemelt. I saw there album a few days ago which looked as lo-fi as i've seen of any Techno so far. The produce some interesting sounds but to begin with I wasn't all too impressed. Panash have the next two tracks which revive the spirit of the first excellent disc, especially a track called Five-minutes of wierdness. Uriel have the following two tracks and they display the seventies style funk of starsky and Hutch type cop shows can be created by computers anbd synths...i wasn't too keen of the tacky-ness of the Uriel tracks. Then comes a track by two lone swordsmen, yep Andy Weatherall on a lo-fi type kick interesting track. All in all a worthwhile investment. JellyTones by Ken Ishii, I've never reviewed this so I thought I'd like to as it was my album of the year (excluding compilations). Great first track Extra....also single of the year (IMO) Ken Ishii shows his versitilaty by doing Jungle stuff, Heavy beated intelligence and delicate ambient-esque techno, a must. I got a load more stuff but thats all i can be bothered to review. If anyones got any furter info on Vermin I'd like to hear it. Bye for now, Nick.