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------------------------------ Date: Tue, 26 Apr 1994 13:13:21 +0100 (BST) From: Stephen Hebditch <steveh> Subject: UK-Dance Reviews #9 These are getting a bit behind... still in the pile: Air Liquide, Model 500's newie on R&S, Moody Boyz and Nyx going ethno techno, EBI, and the Concentrated Underground, Euphoria, Rush Hour 2, Saturday Night At Heaven, Rave Zone Montini and Fnac compilations and Laurent Garnier's X-Mix 2 'soundtrack'. In this collection of reviews... Cosmic Baby: Thinking About Myself Horizon 222: The Three of Swans Influx: Unique Lemon Sol: Environmental Architecture Locust: Weathered Well Renegade Soundwave: Howyoudoin? Resistance D: Ztringz of Life Sandals: Rite to Silence Luke Slater's Seventh Plain: The Four Cornered Room Urban Cookie Collective: High On A Happy Vibe Various: ESP Volume 1 - Extra Sensual Perception Various: ESP Volume 4 - Trance Atlantic Highways Various: New Electronica Vol. 3 - Global Technological Innovations Various: Parasols Various: Serious Listening Music Vol. 1 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ These and other reviews are available on the World Wide Web or by request via e-mail. On the WWW you will need to point your client at <http://www.tecc.co.uk/public/tqm/uk-dance/reviews/>. By mail, write to 'listserv@tqmcomms.co.uk' with a message body that starts with the line 'index uk-dance' to get a listing of reviews available. These can then be retrieved using the command 'get uk-dance filename'. 'get uk-dance everything' will retrieve all the reviews to date. Ratings at the end of each review are as follows:- * Dire - avoid like the plague ** Poor - not original and not even very capable *** Competent - just not very inspired and doesn't stand out **** Good - well worth seeking out ***** Excellent - one of the highlights of the year All reviews Copyright (C) 1994 Stephen Hebditch. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Cosmic Baby: Thinking About Myself Logic 74321 20348-2 Germany 1994 72:30 Thinking About Myself; Treptow; Tao 2000; Another Day In Another City; Brooklyn; Au Dessous Des Nuages; Cosmic Greets Florida; Herbst in Berlin; Fantasia; Loops of Infinity (Contemplative); Moments In Love. All the bloody same these musicians. A little bit of fame sends them off round the world performing in a different city each day and then they come back and inflict their road album on you. Still, at least the lack of vocals means there's no opportunity for the usual self-pitying lyrics and tales of mini-bar excess. We do, however, find Cosmic Baby in more reflective mode than on his last outing. He also draws further on his time studying classical piano at the Nuremburg Conservatory, attempting a marriage between that and the looped sequences of trance. It's an ambitious attempt which sadly doesn't come off. The solo acoustic piano tracks, such as Thinking About Myself and Herbst in Berlin, show up the shortcomings most obviously. The structures that might work as an element in a piece of trance are just too basic on their own. Coupled with a concert hall ambience which lends the tracks a certain portentousness, it starts to seem like Rick Wakeman and prog rock circa 1975 all over again. The more straightforward trancers are better, like the rather gorgeous Fantasia, but even here Cosmic puts in these naff little piano flourishes. Cosmic Baby does have an undeniable talent but really he's overstretched himself here. Stellar Supreme, his last long player which comes as a bonus on early copies, is far superior. ** Horizon 222: The Three of Swans Charrm CHARRMCD18 UK 1994 62:32 Justice (Long To Rain Over Us); Walking On The Air (Leap Airy Version Version); Hemp (For Fun And Profit); One Small Dot (Stardust Micromix); Love Shakuhachi; Liberation (Om-pa-na-da); As You Let Go; The Last Supper (Massacre Mix); Illuminum (The One True Name). The Three of Swans comes across as being very much a product of the hippyish / free festival side of the ambient / trance spectrum, encompassing all the usual styles and themes you'd expect from that. There are four main tracks here, long slowly evolving workouts every one, the odd-numbered tracks being only really linking passages, featuring lots of echo-laden cuts-ups. Walking On The Air is the digeridoo and dub track, but a rather cack handed attempt with a tired vocal sample. One Small Dot is better, reminding me of the Irresistable Force's first album. Liberation is the best track here, going more tribal in sound and dumping the superflous samples - even has a main theme that's based around the moody riff from the KLF's What Time Is Love. The Last Supper is based around a backwards loop over which sounds move in and out of the wash. *** Influx: Unique Sapho / Rising High SAPH CD1 UK 1994 76:19 Love Song; Monday; Emotions; Still; 2 A.M.; VS128; Braineater (Cylindrical Mix); Dreamscape (Ambient Mix); Dreamscape (Dawn Mix); Poly-Mod; Unique; The Future; Floating. Influx is the trancey techno side of James Bernard, who also has an ambient album out at the moment on sister label Rising High. Like a lot of trance this works at two levels. Pitched down low it comes across as well-produced easy listening music that melts happily into the background. Ideal for whacking on the CD player when you're doing something else. At more neighbour annoying wattage there's a few sections that stand out but Bernard rarely carries this off across a whole track. The structures used in the music are fairly simplistic, with tracks usually built up around one main repeating theme. Rather than developing though, elements just sort of get replaced. There's definitely potential, but at the moment this one goes into the also-ran pile. *** Lemon Sol: Environmental Architecture Guerilla GRCD 014 UK 1994 66:06 Sunflash; Memorandom; Natural Ratio; Polymorph; Red Drift; Powers of Invasion; Fuse; Universal; Environmental Architecture; Hybrid; Aura. Each time I put this album on my impression of it seems to change. On my first attempt at writing this review I loved the middle of it, but didn't like the beginning or the end. Then I decided it was rather ordinary and bland throughout and only really worth 3 stars so I scrapped what I wrote originally. Then I put it on late one night quietly while relaxing and decided the whole thing was Really Beautiful Man. Now I'm back to I Don't Know. Let's try some basics. Lemon Sol are a London duo who make multi-textured 'progressive' trance. Unlike a number of other British artists to jump on the trance bandwagon though, there's more depth to the tracks and the melodies are better developed. The sound is clean and electronic - perhaps digital would be more appropriate a word as it's not especially warm, definitely a Guerilla feel though. Clutching at comparisons I'd probably go for Orbital as a band with similar ambitions, particularly with the scuttering bleeps and buzzes that overlay each track. Ultimately though it needs more to pull you in to become something special. *** Locust: Weathered Well Apollo / R&S AMB 3929 CD Belgium 1994 67:44 Prospero; Moist Moss; Xenophobe; Weathered Gate; Tamed; Still; Music About Love; Lust; Fawn. Despite hailing from London, Locust's Mark Van Hoen gives the impression of coming from far more arctic climes. Either that or his heating packed up in September. This is an extremely bleak album which I find difficult to stomach at one sitting. There's minimal use of melody, most of the tracks sticking to a formula of repeating rhythms which although fairly uptempo convince you otherwise by hiding amongst the background fuzz. The opener Prospero is the most accessible, something akin to Biosphere atmosphere with a Reload melody. Moist Moss is the sort of thing anyone can dash off given a few spare moments but quite likeable nonetheless: slow-moving breathy chords which give the impression of a slumbering choir. Music About Love's frantic noisefest will go down well with the Aphexites, who R&S are obviously hoping to tempt back to the label with this release. ** Renegade Soundwave: Howyoudoin? Mute CDSTUMM 100 UK 1994 41:58 Renegade Soundwave; Bubbaluba; Positive ID; Funky Dropout; Last Freedom Fighter; Howyoudoin?; Liquid Up; Brixton; John Holmes; Blast 'em Out. Renegade Soundwave are one of those bands that splay themselves over several musical styles with varying degrees of success and probably take a hit on their overall popularity as a result. There's more tracks that work than on their last album proper, 1990's Soundclash, but it's still a mixed bag. Positive ID is the most chart-worthy, an excellent slice of pop that's got it all: the scrummy break from Snap's The Power, funky guitar, power chords, saxophone, street effects and Gary Asquith's wide-boy rapping. For the opening track and Brixton it's back to conjuring up stylised images of London lowlife as in their previous minor hit, Probably A Robbery. -10 on the dodgy lyrics scale for Brixton's Botswana / charm her / marijuana rhyme though... Last Freedom Fighter is an ambitious statement track, which sees AJ guesting on vocals. You can see what they're getting at, but Gil Scott Heron and The Lost Poets do it so much better. Howyoudoin? follows the Primals on Rolling Stones copycat trail, Bubbaluba and Funky Dropout are two reasonable funky instrumentals, Liquid Up and John Holmes get more dubby but the elements seem rather disparate. RSW close with a sub-Public Enemy destroy the neighbourhood attempt that hijacks The Shining. Oh, love the packaging with a logo inside that goes across the two halves of the transparent case and also onto the CD itself when it's in place. *** Resistance D: Ztringz of Life Harthouse HH-CD-004 Germany 1994 60:04 Pain of Sensibility; Paranoid; Day of Rebirth; Sonntagsmorgenruhe; Skylinie; Space Baby; Beautiful Silence; Cosmic RMX. You want lots of big fat analogue strings? You want mid-tempo beats? You want trancey uplifting melodies with just a hint of wistfulness? You want to know when I bought a thesaurus? You have any idea where I left my German dictionary? All this and more, coming up on UK-Dance, but first... the new Resistance D album. Maik Maurice and Pascal F.E.O.S., who's worked under the Magnifica, Bi-Face and Hearts of Space aliases amongst others, have been mainstays of the Harthouse label since its inception and are now rewarded with their first album. Although Ztringz of Life retains the Harthouse corporate sound, Resistance D have followed the usual path of dropping the beats in both intensity and speed for the album. To me though it's the faster paced tracks, like the excellent Sonntagsmorgenruhe, which work best. The first half of the album is definitely the better, towards the end it starts seeming a bit samey - one for dipping into I think. *** Sandals: Rite to Silence Opentoe / London 828-488-2 UK 1994 60:37 Feet; Nothing; No Movement; Change; Ardens Bud; We Wanna Live; We Don't Wanna Be The Ones To Take The Blame; Lovewood; Here Comes The Sign; Profound Dub. Support acts always seem to have one unique feature to enhance their future recognisability. Transglobal Underground were always "the ones with the belly dancer". Sandals are "the ones with the megaphone". Rite To Silence, their first album, fits broadly into the acid jazz pigeonhole although Sandals update the formula somewhat, drawing on more recent clubland moves for inspiration. This is most apparent on the Leftfield produced tracks Nothing and Ardens Bud - first Leftfield mix for a while that's actually at a reasonable BPM too. Elsewhere we move between spliffed-up mellow grooves, dubby bits and Galliano / Lost Poets style rap. Ideal nod-along stuff. There perhaps isn't enough top-notch material to fill out the whole 70 minutes but it's a promising start. **** Luke Slater's Seventh Plain: The Four Cornered Room General Production Recordings GPR CD3 UK 1994 76:41 Time Melts; Reality of Space; Surface Bound; Lost; The Needs of the Many; 7th Plain; Astra Naut-E; Trite; Seeing Sense; Real Life Ceremony; Grace. After the hard techno of his last album on Peacefrog, Luke Slater mellows out and spreads his wings on this new release. Well, sort of mellows - there's still a persistant beat throughout but it doesn't whack you against the wall and rip off yer ears. The tracks here have a slightly rough, bedroom studio sound to them, but what's lacking in production gloss is made up for by material that offers rather more to get your teeth into. The Four Cornered Room does, however, take a while to get into its stride. Lost is the first track that really made me sit up - mad percussion, space bleeps and a gentle piano theme that hides just beneath the surface. The best is kept till last though. Seeing Sense opens with this gorgeous low noisy rumbling which sounds like your speakers are setting up some dangerous resonance in the room. It then turns into the sort of trance that you'd usually expect to come from across the North Sea. Real Life Ceremony is simpler, but employs this understatedly beautiful plucked refrain that sets it alive. **** Urban Cookie Collective: High On A Happy Vibe Pulse-8 PULSE 13 CD UK 1994 56:20 The Key The Secret; Feels Like Heaven; Walk Right On; Yours Is The Love; Dreaming In Colours; Sail Away; Worldwide Reunion; Bring It On Home (Family); Hidden Land; High On A Happy Vibe; The Key The Secret (Kamoflage Club Mix); Sail Away (Judge Jules & Michael Skins Vocal Pop Funk Mix). Steps to writing an Urban Cookie Collective review. 1. Make it clear that this is *pop* but as you can dance to it you feel an obligation to review it. 2. Show your trainspotter credentials by pointing out that they ripped off Glam's Hell's Party for their first single which in its original form was a jazzy hip hop number before remixers The Development Corporation got their hands on it. 3. Admit sneaky admiration for main man Rohan Heath's ability to pack each belter of a track chock-full-a-hooks with exactly the production that's required. 4. Point out that on the minus side the formula doesn't change much through the album and it can't really be accused of taking dance music forward. 5. Stick in something about how pre-teens will love this but serious music fans shouldn't go near it with a bargepole just in case someone might get the idea that it's really rather good. 6. Omit to mention that Yours Is The Love has been on auto-repeat on the CD player for the past two weeks. **** Various: ESP Volume 1 - Extra Sensual Perception ESP ESP 9199-2 Netherlands 1992 73:56 Cosmic Baby: Cosmikk Trigger 2 Nighttripper: Megatone Beyond: Opus 1 Format: Solid Session Ghetto Brothers: Bass Manoevres Paradise 3001: Tribatol Brersoul: Flow (Zweef) Format: Damn Right Nighttripper: Tone Exploitation Time Warp: The Owls Are Not What They Seem Cosmic Baby: Hear Yourself Dreaming Paradise 3001: Normizon Time Warp: Birdrave Various: The Hyperspace Megamix 'The Cyberspaced Transcendental Dancefloor Experience' no less! Doncha just love these compilation compilers. Back in the shops again is the first of ESP's collections of less fierce techno and trance. While this is a welcome break from the heavy stuff, the tracks here never seem to quite reach their expected peak. It's possible that some may be edits and consequently fade too soon, but this can't explain why all of them just sort of fizzle out. Nighttripper's Megatone assaults you with loud horn blasts in a standard acidic builder but leaves you wanting when it fails to make the final ascent into spine-tingling territory and returns prematurely to base camp. The two Cosmic Baby tracks, taken from his first MFS EP, don't even seem to leave the intro. The Owls Are Not What They Seem chugs along with haunted house style melodies and the obvious bird noises, appearing in slightly remixed form as Birdrave. It's all quite likeable but a little on the bland side. *** Various: ESP Volume 4 - Trance Atlantic Highways ESP ESP 9195-2 Netherlands 1994 73:19 XMT: Liz Ambiente Nighttripper: Keep On Rising Beyond: Silver Paradise 3001: Secret De La Coeur Walter One: Sunny Days Nico: So Light Format: Take Me Home (Love Cut) Astronuts: Sputnik Wax: Coyote Beyond: Opus (Velvet) Cosmic Baby: Oh Supergirl (ESP Mix) Time Warp: Astral Heart Wax: Sun Drums (Nyonga Groove) Nico: Dream March (Outro) And up to date with the very latest ESP compilation. Wot? No silly subtitle? :-( Despite the year and a half since the first comp it's generally more of the same, though perhaps with a nod towards the growth of ambient on several tracks. XMT opens with distorted choirs that continue to swirl around when the beat kicks in and a deep pulsing then moves the track along along. Paradise 3001's Secret De La Coer reprises *that* Opus III sample again - okay but Orbital did a much more interesting job with it. So Light is a standard 303 workout with a vocal sample from someone like Earth, Wind and Fire to provide an odd twist. Robert Meijer's Coyote has glockenspiel arpeggios moving up and down while very Cosmic Baby sounding string melodies carry the main line. Cos's own Oh Supergirl is more of an edit than a remix adding nothing over the original. *** Various: New Electronica Vol. 3 - Global Technological Innovations Beechwood Music ELEC::4CD UK 1994 64:35 Sandoz: Ocean Reflection Infinity: Think Quick (Remodel) 2000 & One: Sensitive Space The Geep: The Geep Clip Talk: A.M.D. Max 404: 6am in Eindhoven As One: Asa Nisi Masa Quadrant: Dytiq Underground Resistance: A Moment In Time Underground Resistance: Mindpower The latest installment in the New Electronica series moves further away from the mainstream towards the realms of experimental electronic music. Well that's the theory anyway, in practice many of the artists just seem to be climbing out of one straightjacket and into another. They're just too content to sit in the shadow of Detroit when they should be moving on. In the case of As One, Quadrant and even Sandoz's Richard Kirk who should know better, the programming isn't even terribly good. From the home city itself, Underground Resistance come up with something more interesting, fusing jazz saxophone and techno on A Moment In Time before a new piece by Mills and Banks in more their usual style. The Geep, apparently The Orb in disguise, take a leaf out of the Sabres of Paradise metallic dub school - could this be a taster for their vaunted new direction? Clip Talk is fucked-up electronics arty Irdial style; Juan Atkins' Think Quick reworks an earlier track into dark floatiness; 6am in Eindhoven and Sensitive Space round off the better tracks. ** Various: Parasols Plink Plonk PLK CD 001 UK 1994 75:19 Rameses: Digi Space Mantrac: Apok Dub Underground Science: Protosynthesis Mantrac: Coaster Dub Somnambulist: Nightflyte Animus Amor: And On Megalon: Darkness Wild West: Citric Underground Science: Metamorphic Megalon: Semblance Pluto: Plutobeat Stranger: Krakatoa 'Plink Plonk is a London label residing somewhere between the neighbouring borders of deepest trance and silky techno with a weekend penthouse on the planet dub' it says here. To me though a London 'progressive' / dub house influence seems to be just as pervasive here. Most of the tracks settle into a mellow groove early on and then stick with it, which is less of a problem when you're out partying before dawn but a little tedious for straight home listening. *** Various: Serious Listening Music Vol. 1 Delirium DEL S CD 1 Germany 1993 71:56 Solar Eclipse: Human World Redeye: Green House Redeye: Floating Community Atom Heart: Nice Days Acid Jesus: 7 A 7 Pink Elln: X-PHB Ongaku: Mihon 5 Rebel Youth: Deep Star Atom Heart: Rhizom Arenatrax: Pejuca This album pulls together releases from Frankfurt's Delirium, After 6am, Klang and Ongaku labels. Not sure I'd particularly go along with the title but there's some good stuff on it. The Solar Eclipse and Redeye tracks all feature on the After 6am compilation reviewed previously: sophisticated light trance. Atom Heart again gets the thumbs down from me: too many obvious moves and poor programming. Acid Jesus continues with the more acidic style and although not exactly unique at least manages to conjure up some excitement. Pink Elln gets the album back on course with a mid-tempo track where simple loops fall over each other and send you into a trance. Ongaku's Mihon 5 opens in dramatic mode and builds slowly, its deep stabs straight out of those Frankenstein movies with the electrical discharge tubes. Rebel Youth's Deep Star is the stand-out track for me. A happier, more uptempo sound and some rather 'ardcore-ish rhythms nestling behind the fat synthlines. **** ------------------------------