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Re: freeke reviews #8 [3]

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◇ merged from 3 subjects: freeke reviews #8 · freeke reviews #8 [3] · freeke reviews #8 [3]
1995-03-23 22:36Dave Walker freeke reviews #8
└─ 1995-03-30 17:53Jasper de Jong freeke reviews #8 [3]
└─ 1995-04-01 21:31Dave Walker Re: freeke reviews #8 [3]
└─ 1995-04-09 17:08Che Re: freeke reviews #8 [3]
└─ 1995-04-09 21:29Kevin Farnham Re: freeke reviews #8 [3]
1995-04-02 04:08allert Re: freeke reviews #8 [3]
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1995-03-23 22:36Dave Walker_ freeke reviews #8 These reviews may be freely reproduced electronically, just give me cr
From:
Dave Walker
To:
I D M
Cc:
Midwest Raves List
Date:
Thu, 23 Mar 1995 17:36:03 -0500 (EST)
Subject:
freeke reviews #8
permalink · <Pine.BSI.3.91.950323173236.24289A-100000@garnet.msen.com>
_ freeke reviews #8 These reviews may be freely reproduced electronically, just give me credit. If you reprint them in a publication, please consider sending a copy to the address at the bottom. This was supposed to go out in December. It didn't. There ought to be another one of these coming soon, but if it takes another 3 months don't say I didn't warn you, 'kay? this time --------- Spanners (CD) - The Black Dog (Warp) Amber (CD) - Autechre (WaxTrax!/TVT) Classics (CD) - The Aphex Twin (R&S) Sea Biscuit (CD) - Spacetime Continuum (Astralwerks) Mu-Ziq vs. the Auteurs (CD) (Hut/Astralwerks) Elements of and Experiments With Sound (CD) - Various (Planet E) Spatial Specific - Legion of Green Men (+8) Dummy (CD) - Portishead (Go!/London Discs) Growth (EP) - Jeff Mills (Axis) Dark Energy (Double EP) - Suburban Knight (UR) Escape Ventures (EP) - Sons of the Subway (Infonet) Sorcery/Bewitched/Bewitching (EP) - Giannelli (Telepathic) Premonition (EP) - Deneuve (Telepathic) Kooky Scientist (EP) - The Kooky Scientist (+8) Spike / Live at Jimmy's (EP) - Octaves/Tremelos/BUaRP (+8) Texel / Ameland (EP) - C/Sphere (Telepathic) Bass Magnetic (Double EP) - Aux 88 (430 West) Aux Quadrent (EP) - Aux 88 (Direct Beat/430 West) Dopplereffekt (7") - Dopplereffekt (label unlisted) Namlook VII: Subharmonic Interference (CD) - Pete Namlook (FAX) Seasons Greetings: Autumn (CD) - Pete Namlook (FAX) Dark Side of the Moog (CD) - Pete Namlook & Klaus Schulze (FAX) The Sinking Of The Titanic (CD) - Gavin Bryars (Point) -- Spanners (CD) - The Black Dog (Warp) Outside of a few stunning cuts (like "Object Orient" and "Cost II") Black Dog's previous full-length albums _Bytes_ and _Temple_ did very little for me -- the lack of cohesion and seeming contrivance of their disjointed rhythms always kept me from really getting into the records: they always felt like a few strong singles glued together with tape snippets of malfunctioning power equipment. I always felt their work was much stronger on their EPs. Allow me, then, to completely abase myself before the altar of the Dog and beg forgiveness. This record _works_ -- the tripped out rhythms are seamlessly integrated with beautiful melodies, as on the sublime "Pot Noodle", the acidic prayer chant "Psil-Cosyin", and wistfully warbling "Further Harm". This record is so far out in front of anything else I've heard lately that it's almost scary. A must buy. If this _does_ turn out to be their swan song, they've gone out on top. -- Amber (CD) - Autechre (WaxTrax!/TVT) I usually think it's a bit of a copout for a reviewer to say "if you like/hate their other stuff you'll like/hate this". Well, I'm saying it. :) Autechre's tracks are more like state machines than compositions -- given a set of inputs, they progress to a logical equilibrium, and stay there until it's time for the fade-out. This approach really leaves no room for waffling; chances are if a cut doesn't wow you in the first thirty seconds it's not going to do it at all. I go for it in a big way, but if you thought _Incunabula_ was unbearably tedious, stay away. Anyway, the noises (clanking, crunching, whirring, metallic...) are as wonderful as ever: low BPM syncopation for your listening pleasure. Tracks like "Teartear", "Nine", and "Foil" are as good as anything they've ever done. On some level though, it lacks something. I still can't help feeling that these guys have the potential to make a truly classic record, but I can't tell what's missing -- the thrill of randomness, perhaps? Oh, and the cover photo is gorgeous. -- Classics (CD) - The Aphex Twin (R&S) Cast your mind way back -- before the silly interviews, before the trainspotting, before the inevitable (and inevitably tiresome) backlash... and you have the tracks -- low-fi as hell, these tracks rock hard ("Flaphead"), otherworldly ("Phlange Phace", "Dodeccaheedron"), cheesy ("Tamphex"), crazy ("Isopropanol"), anthemic ("Digeridoo"), stately ("Analogue Bubblebath I"), and just plain perfect ("Polynomial-C"). For the first time in a long while (and the first time ever on CD, for most of them) you can walk down to your corner record shop and pick up all of these tracks for a reasonable amount of money. Be happy. -- Sea Biscuit (CD) - Spacetime Continuum (Astralwerks) Um... I wanted to like this. I've enjoyed Jonah Sharp's work with Pete Namlook - his bleepy burbles play well off of Namlook's space fetish. I've been eager to hear how his material would sound without Terrence "Don't Call Me Emo" McKenna's nasal whine on top (cf. the grating _Alien Dreamtime_ from '93). Despite a few enjoyable moments (particularly "Ping Pong" and "Floatilla"), there's far to much whooshing and faffing about for me to really be engaged by this, and the sugary melodies are a definite turn off. Without the bouncy electro-derived percussion found in Sharp's better work, it just doesn't do anything for me. As the old saying goes, there's just no THERE there. No thanks. -- Mu-Ziq vs. the Auteurs (CD) (Hut/Astralwerks) Absolutely mad. The now familiar formula of pairing an English indie rock band with and IDM nutter (or two) pays off big dividends once again. Well, it works on four out of the six cuts... Track one borrows a single word ("VALENTINO!") from the chorus of the original track and takes off around it with ominous blasts of white noise drums and portentious chords -- taut and menacing. Track two is the sublime subliminal wonder. Spoogingly gorgeous strings and acoustic guitar are all that's left of the original track, carefully draped over a completely deranged melange of chukking wood blocks, blasts of white noise, a sampled voice grunting "baby baby" in some time signature beamed in directly from Venus or something. It's always a delight when something this weird works. Track three drops full-on corpone banjos over submarine bass hits and those trademark Mu-Ziq distorted FM drums. The end result falls somewhere between Hee Haw and Analogue Bubblebath I. If you can hack the cheezy histrionics it'll take you on a trip. I, for one, am intrigued. Track four once again drops strings and guitar over a skippy / funky / noisy drum track, and to good effect. Track five, unforunately, submerges all melody and detail in a turgid miasma of sub-gothic low tempo plodding, and the percussion isn't creative enough to sustain interest. Track six abuses a nagging calliope melody, and, as on track 5,the percussion falls short. But hey, you've still got tracks 1-4 for the autorepeat button on your player... -- Elements of and Experiments With Sound (CD) - Various (Planet E) One of the things that makes Planet E one of my favorite labels is that all the releases fit a definite aesthetic without having the same sound -- what distinguishes the label is the overall quality, rather than adherence to a given style. Many chances are taken, and there's really not a dud here. This followup to 1992's excellent _Intergalactic Beats_ compilation is a worthy successor. What's most exciting is that this is predominantly unknown talent. Rubbing shoulders with known names like Paperclip People (Carl Craig) and Quadrant (Basic Channel) are new artists like Mode Selector, New Signal, and Enhanced, along with artists like Connection Machine and Chris Hani who aren't well-known yet but ought to be. A petri dish full of pleasure! -- Dummy (CD) - Portishead (Go!/London Discs) It's got vocals on every track. The single is being played on the local top 40 stations. The lyrics and downbeat vibe verge on hide-the-razors depressiveness. I don't care, it's goddamned _gorgeous_. The Portishead sound is built around low-res samples, slo-mo hip hop beats, and Beth Gibbons' quavering voice. Works well as a reminder that now and the radio plays the hell out of something that really deserves it. -- Spatial Specific (CD) - Legion of Green Men (+8) The debut full-length release from Burlington, Ontario's Legion of Green Men is a complete delight, from the cool op-art cover to the weird and wonderful tracks inside the package. The collection is roughld divided into halves, with the first part containing the more upbeat, dancier tracks. The sound here is swirly and bleepy, perhaps reminiscent of Telepathic, only much funkier. A good example is "Mosaic Eye", which pairs swirly arpeggiation with a straight up rolling bassline and syncopated drums -- an admirable marriage of strastospherics and body-rocking. "Synaptic Response (faculties of cognition)" throws bleeps around a swinging rhythm, while "Veneration of the Goddess" has a bit of west-coast feel. The second half of the album takes off in the ambient, direction, and does so in fine style. "Extended Shadows" layers textured resonant lead string and vocal sounds, picking up a very whacked rhythm line (sorry, anti-beat snobs) later in the piece. Other tracks, like "Ashes Rolling Over (still or nearly still)" have a vaguely FAX-y feel, but LGM make the elements their own. -- Growth (EP) - Jeff Mills (Axis) What a great title for this EP -- like one of those fractal ferns, Mills' compositions swirl upon themselves, with close attention revealing more and more detail the harder you listen. The opening track is (surprise, surprise) deceptively simple: an oscillating four-note figure that swings back and forth over a trademark Mills galloping rhythm. Simple, that is, until you realize that the melody and rhythm are running at subtly different tempos from each other, going in and out of phase. The second track is even sneakier -- it's based around a tinkling little space music figure that cycles over a rhythm track that builds in speed and volume before ending in a perfectly clean locked groove (the first time I played it took me 5 minutes to realize the cartridge had stopped moving). -- Dark Energy (Double EP) - Suburban Night (Underground Resistance) After too long of an absence, the Suburban (K)Night returns with a nice double EP on UR. "Midnite Sunshine" merges wistful searching tones, remiscent of the more contemplative Red Planet material, with a booming underpinning of big bass drums. "Acid Africa"'s intricate electro rhythm track and 303 work bear the obvious marks of Mad Mike, while "Atomic Witchdokta" sports what almost sounds like a funk guitar scratching over a dense, tribalesque backing. -- Escape Ventures (EP) - Sons of the Subway (Infonet) I've been told this is a Bandalu alias. Anyway, I like it tons. The first track, "Who's to Blame" is the best of the lot. It kicks a tuff 4/4 on top of a rolling, shifting breakbeat with a nice flutey lead line careering over the top. The second track, "Quick to Blame", is a straight drum and bass reworking of "Who's to Blame" that drops the kick drum for a more traditional jungle approach. The two tracks on the B-Side sound almost like a Carl Craig tribute, with jazzy breaks underneath clipped up housy vocal samples. -- Sorcery/Bewitched/Bewitching [PSI 015] (EP) - Giannelli (Telepathic) Premonition [PSI 016] (EP) - Deneuve (Telepathic) Kooky Scientist (EP) - The Kooky Scientist (+8) Fred G. is a busy guy, isn't he? My favorite of these three releases is "Sorcery". As on Giannelli's best work, he combines an experimental acid sensibility of a knowledge of what works on the dancefloor. The two versions of "Preminition" on the EP of the same name stake out housier territory, but are less memorable. The "Kooky Scientist" EP, as the name implies, falls on the more experimental side of things, with strange burbles and hiccuping rhythms galore. -- Spike / Live at Jimmy's (EP) - Octaves/Tremelos / BUaRP (+8) Born Under a Rhyming Planet's "Analog:Heaven" EP from '93 is still one of my favorite 12"'s, so I was eager to hear this release. I'm happy to say I wasn't disappointed at all. This EP, a collaboration with Industrial Strength artist John Selway, has a completely different sound from that earlier release, but it's just as layered and deep. "Spike" is a whirlwind of pounding kicks, funked up breaks, and whistling melodies. "Live At Jimmy's" is, as the title implies, a looser improvisational piece with a strong jazz feel in the chordings and voice choices, set over a jungle-y rhythmic backing. -- Texel / Ameland [PSI 014] (EP) - C/Sphere (Telepathic) "Texel" is swirly, and meditative, and reminds me a bit of last year's "Microset Morning" EP. Towards the end it evolves into soft acid, with the 303 mixed oddly far back in the track. Even better is "Ameland" on the flip, which has a warmer sound and an effective, bouncy rhythm track, and do I detect a slight Jeff Mills influence in the string sounds here? -- Bass Magnetic (Double EP) - Aux 88 (430 West) Aux Quadrent (EP) - Aux 88 (Direct Beat/430 West) Have the electro threads on IDM piqued your interest? The grooves are cut wide and deep for maximum frequency response [i.e. your Jeep will quake ;)]. This is the real stuff, delivered with a passion and without the self-consciousness that tinges a lot of the other "electro revival" material, straight out of Detroit's east side, where the sound never died. Both EP's cut with no-nonsense, straight up techno funk -- swinging precision whipcrack snares, subsonic reverbing bass tones, and the occasional vocodered vocals. Isolationists run away, run away! :) -- Dopplereffekt (7") - Dopplereffekt (label unlisted) Is this Drexciya, going even more incognito than usual? Nobody knows, but I can tell you it kicks like Secretariat on crystal meth. These cuts are 3-4 minutes short so there's no time for playing around: the A-side track (with a Cyrillic title I won't try to reproduce here) blasts through with a flood of syncopated burbles and a _nasty_ bouncing snare. Before you catch your breath the B-side, "Cellular Phone", comes barreling in with funky whipcrack drums and some suspiciously aquatic sounds, if you know what I mean. A corker -- grab one if you can, not many were pressed. -- Namlook VII: Subharmonic Interference (CD) - Pete Namlook (FAX) Seasons Greetings: Autumn (CD) - Pete Namlook (FAX) Dark Side of the Moog (CD) - Pete Namlook & Klaus Schulze (FAX) _Seasons Greetings: Autumn_ has got to be just about the toughest record I've ever tried to review. There is really so little going on here that I got angry at the disc the first time I listened to it. For about the first 2/3 of the disc, the only sounds are some heavily reverbed processed strings and vague whooshing noises. I listened a few more times to see if I was missing something. Not really. Then, before going to bed a few nights later I took some NyQuil to help subdue a nasty cold, and put the disc on to help me off to slumberland... and something happened. Suddenly the record, in all it's nonexistent splendor, started to work for me. The spaces between the twanging, the icy whooshing wind, and the ominous buildup at the end all work according to a peculiar logic that only exists inside the piece. _Subharmonic Interference_, Mr. Kuhlmann's 7th live solo disc, was an instant hit at Chateau Marmoset. All the best elements of Namlook's solo work are in evidence -- severe analog tweakery, subsonic bass tricks, and subtle, skittering beats. As others have noted, he pulls off the delicate juggling of prepared segments and live improvisation with aplomb. The "Black Hole" samples and Macintosh "Plaintalk" bits work well within the spacy surroundings, too. _Dark Side of The Moog_ was slightly disappointing, because it doesn't really feel like a collaboration. Klaus Schulze dominates the sound, and it feels like perhaps Namlook was perhaps a bit overawed to find himself working with someone who so obviously was a huge influence on him. The record is good as a Klaus Schulze album, but as a collaboration it falls a bit short. I was secretly hoping for another stunner like _From Within_ or _Dreamfish_. -- The Sinking Of The Titanic (CD) - Gavin Bryars (Point) The little sticker on the cover of this disc reads "infinitely ambient", and boy, did they get that right. It's actually a case of clever marketing -- Bryars is a "serious" minimalist composer who has been making quiet, subtle experimental music since the 1960's. This is a new recording of a piece he originally conceived over 20 years ago. What if the band that was playing on the deck of the Titanic had continued playing after the ship slipped beneath the waves? This work attempts to answer the question. A string quartet plays variations upon an Episcopal hymn, along with various electronic treatments and choral additions. The overall effect is quite haunting and infinitely sad. -- NASA Select's coverage of the Astro-2 Mission (Cable TV/ Satellite) I just wanted to spread the word here about the coolest video accompaniment I've found yet for IDM listening. NASA has a television network dedicated to showing clips from space missions, educational programming, and the like. During shuttle missions, they show tons of downlinked video, including gorgeous shots of the Earth from space and the like. Many of the records reviewed above were listened to while NASA Select worked its magic (with the sound turned down.) -- Send all hatemail/free records to: _ freeke c/o dave walker p.o. box 271 lincoln park, mi 48146-0271 ----------------------------------------------------------------- dave walker, detroit art services _ marmoset@msen.com absolutely sweat, marie <A HREF="http://www.msen.com/~marmoset/">Dave Walker</A>
1995-03-30 17:53Jasper de JongDW> Texel / Ameland [PSI 014] (EP) - C/Sphere (Telepathic) DW> "Texel" is swirly, and medi
From:
Jasper de Jong
To:
Date:
30 Mar 95 17:53:56 +0000
Subject:
freeke reviews #8 [3]
Reply to:
freeke reviews #8
permalink · <a55_9503310745@idn.nl>
DW> Texel / Ameland [PSI 014] (EP) - C/Sphere (Telepathic) DW> "Texel" is swirly, and meditative, and reminds me a bit of last year's DW> "Microset Morning" EP. Towards the end it evolves into soft acid, with DW> the 303 mixed oddly far back in the track. Even better is "Ameland" on DW> the flip, which has a warmer sound and an effective, bouncy rhythm track, DW> and do I detect a slight Jeff Mills influence in the string sounds here? J*zus, do you know where this record comes from? Texel and Ameland are little islands on the north-cost of holland... Still strange names though...;-)
1995-04-01 21:31Dave WalkerOn 30 Mar 1995, Jasper de Jong wrote: > DW> Texel / Ameland [PSI 014] (EP) - C/Sphere (Tel
From:
Dave Walker
To:
I D M
Date:
Sat, 1 Apr 1995 16:31:00 -0500 (EST)
Subject:
Re: freeke reviews #8 [3]
Reply to:
freeke reviews #8 [3]
permalink · <Pine.BSI.3.91.950401162908.26649A-100000@garnet.msen.com>
On 30 Mar 1995, Jasper de Jong wrote:
quoted 5 lines DW> Texel / Ameland [PSI 014] (EP) - C/Sphere (Telepathic)> DW> Texel / Ameland [PSI 014] (EP) - C/Sphere (Telepathic) > > J*zus, do you know where this record comes from? > Texel and Ameland are little islands on the north-cost of holland... > Still strange names though...;-)
Well, I'm pretty sure the guy who does the C/Sphere stuff (Coleman Horn, right?) is on the Net... he may even be on this list. -d.w.
1995-04-09 17:08CheOn Sat, 1 Apr 1995, Dave Walker wrote: > On 30 Mar 1995, Jasper de Jong wrote: > > > DW> T
From:
Che
To:
Dave Walker
Cc:
I D M
Date:
Sun, 9 Apr 1995 10:08:13 -0700 (PDT)
Subject:
Re: freeke reviews #8 [3]
Reply to:
Re: freeke reviews #8 [3]
permalink · <Pine.BSD.3.91.950409094452.20263B-100000@synthcom.com>
On Sat, 1 Apr 1995, Dave Walker wrote:
quoted 10 lines On 30 Mar 1995, Jasper de Jong wrote:> On 30 Mar 1995, Jasper de Jong wrote: > > > DW> Texel / Ameland [PSI 014] (EP) - C/Sphere (Telepathic) > > > > J*zus, do you know where this record comes from? > > Texel and Ameland are little islands on the north-cost of holland... > > Still strange names though...;-) > > Well, I'm pretty sure the guy who does the C/Sphere stuff (Coleman Horn, > right?) is on the Net... he may even be on this list.
He IS on the Net, but he finds IDM too boring to sub to (small wonder). His email is finn@teleport.com Don't expect an immediate reply.
1995-04-09 21:29Kevin FarnhamAnd yet another Rochester NY ex-resident Just for the hell of it other Rochester people: M
From:
Kevin Farnham
To:
Che
Cc:
Dave Walker , I D M
Date:
Sun, 9 Apr 1995 14:29:36 -0700 (PDT)
Subject:
Re: freeke reviews #8 [3]
Reply to:
Re: freeke reviews #8 [3]
permalink · <Pine.3.89.9504091410.A25859-0100000@eat.organic.com>
And yet another Rochester NY ex-resident Just for the hell of it other Rochester people: Mark Gage - Vapourspace Nev on GPR - Forgot his name - his brother's name is Pete. - Kevin Farnham - kevin@organic.com = - Organic Online - Hedonic Engineering - Select Media - - Graphic Design - Intelligent Lighting Programming = WWW Production =
quoted 4 lines Well, I'm pretty sure the guy who does the C/Sphere stuff (Coleman Horn,> > Well, I'm pretty sure the guy who does the C/Sphere stuff (Coleman Horn, > > right?) is on the Net... he may even be on this list. > > His email is finn@teleport.com
1995-04-02 04:08allert>> J*zus, do you know where this record comes from? >> Texel and Ameland are little island
From:
allert
To:
Date:
Sun, 2 Apr 1995 06:08:42 +0200
Subject:
Re: freeke reviews #8 [3]
permalink · <9504020410.AA03661@indy.knoware.nl>
quoted 7 lines J*zus, do you know where this record comes from?>> J*zus, do you know where this record comes from? >> Texel and Ameland are little islands on the north-cost of holland... >> Still strange names though...;-) > >Well, I'm pretty sure the guy who does the C/Sphere stuff (Coleman Horn, >right?) is on the Net... he may even be on this list. >
He is on the net. He is on the Analogue Heaven mailing list.... sorry, don't know his adress... Love, AA Allert Aalders - Big Time Concepts |"When you eliminate the improbable allert@knoware.nl | whatever remains, however impossible | must be the truth" - Svlad Cjelli