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From:
Martin Glaubitz
To:
Idm (E-mail)
Date:
Thu, 14 Sep 2000 18:12:44 -0600
Subject:
[idm] some reviews
Msg-Id:
<000201c01ea9$ac8864a0$947db2a8@martin>
Mbox:
idm.0009.gz
Here's what I'm listening to lately: Skull - Snaps - Output Recordings 31 minute five song cd. Very sample based, organic, not DSP-y or glitchy. Dark, downtempo, heavy, sparse hip hop beats. Beatless, haunting, staticky ambience. Lots of pitched-down-sounding samples. Feedbacky swells. The beats kind of trip over themselves at times, and the 4/4 is lost. No catchy melodic elements. Similar to some of DJ Shadow's Endtroducing or DJ Vadim, but more pessimistic and unsettled in nature. I believe an alternate version of one of the songs (Crash) was on the Headz 2 comp from a few years back. L-Usine - s/t - Isophlux 71 min cd. This shit swangs and is an argument in favor of the "intelligent dance" moniker. Distorted vocalish-type snippets. Fun squelchy synths. Nice panning effects with headphones. Has a classic Artificial Intelligence-era feel, but updated with more contemporary DSP type techniques. Constantly evolving. Lots of little stabby melodies and sort of icey, shiny noises. Someone (on this list I think) said this was like a cross of electronic stuff and traditional instruments - I don't hear that. It's pretty much 100% electronic to me. I think someone else said it was hip hoppy - it's not that either. Eminem - The Mashall Mathers lp You can hate it for its popularity, its misogyny, its homophobia. But I can't deny his cleverness and lyrical style and fuck-you-edness. Plus "Kim" and "Stan" both literally gave me goosebumps the first couple times I heard them. Geto Boys - s/t - Rap A Lot Records Just found this oldie from 1990 during a recent basement excavation of my old college stuff. This is "Hardcore rap." Houston's answer to NWA. Very explicit. Features a two-eyed Bushwick Bill. About a million samples from the movie Scarface. Standouts include the classic Steve-Miller-sample-based "Gangster of Love." Dated but lovable production style. Yes, I'm the white guy singing along driving his car, going to his cubicle, just like the movie "Office Space." NWA - Efil4Zaggin From the same excavation. This was the one after Straight Outta Compton. Side One of this tape is one of my favorite tape sides ever. Energy. Features a pre-HIV-symptom Eazy E. Production techniques and sensibilities that, for the time, were quite evolved, and to me still stand up and don't sound too dated. Side 2 rates 10 on the misogy-meter. Soul Center 2 Aw yeah. I don't know what subcategory of dance music this would be, like minimal soul house?, but it bangs and I'd love to get my move on to this in a club with the strobes and fog going off. Machiney rhythms with old soul samples, crowd claps and cheers. No synths or glitch/DSP type stuff, but well crafted, energetic 4/4 groovy. Building repitition. Unpretentious and comfortable, soothing. And whoa, is that a Flavor Flav "Boyee!" mixed in to the with the "can I ask you something" crowd noise? No I'm hearing things, never mind. But hey, that's a coincidence, that is the same "whew!" (sic) in track 3 as was used in NWA's "Findum, Fuckum and Flee" on Efil4Zaggin. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org