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Review[LONG]: Autechre+Plastikman, Live@Decadog

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1995-09-29 23:43g303 Review[LONG]: Autechre+Plastikman, Live@Decadog
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1995-09-29 23:43g303[Deep intake of breath]. Here we go... Date: Friday 23 September 1995 Venue: Brixton Acade
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Fri, 29 Sep 1995 16:43:17 -0700
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Review[LONG]: Autechre+Plastikman, Live@Decadog
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[Deep intake of breath]. Here we go... Date: Friday 23 September 1995 Venue: Brixton Academy, London, UK. Event: Decadog (Megadog 10th Anniversary) LIVE: Plastikman, Autechre, Speedy J, Kenny Larkin, Ege Bam Yasi, Drum Club. DJs: Carl Cox, LTJ Bukem, Richie & Matthew Hawtin, David Holmes, Andy Weatherall, Roni Size, DJ Rap, Michael Dog... The last Megadog at the Brixton academy I went to (and reviewed) was many years ago now; and very special. A combination of the likes of Orbital and Aphex Twin live, in front of 4000 people was always likely to be memorable. Each big event I go to has to measure up to this previous Brixton outing, my best nights at the Orbit and *that* Tribal Gathering. For 50 minutes Decadog surpassed them all and set a new benchmark. Decadog celebrate's 10 years of Megadoggyness around the UK. Spread over two days at 25 quid a head per day, it should certainly buy the Dog brothers some nice birthday prezzies. The second day (Sat) was for die hard Doggers only (read Crusty), but the first was an 'IDM' delight to which yours truely was invited (Thanks C.) So I arrive at about 9pm, and have a heart attack as I convince myself that I can hear Autechre playing from outside the venue. This of course is untrue, it's just some DJ. I wander in and around and take in the sights and sounds. The main stage area is even bigger than I remember it, and already moderately full, a few people are already dancing at 9:20 in London! (This is a Megadog remember.) I begin to worry that the sound system is shit. Outside the main room things are a bit warmer (and louder). DJ Rap (Yum!) is blasting out jungle to a minicrowd in the foyer. Upstairs I find another female DJ playing jungle to herself near the cloak room. Well it was early. Back in the main arena Carl Cox has every one on their feet and bouncing. It was the first time I'd ever seen Carl Cox DJ live and to be honest it was disappointing, fairly bland hard techno mixed adequately. I got the feeling his heart wasn't really in it, as he was on before most people get out of bed, and he was playing at the Final Frontier later that night anyway. So after 20 mins I gave up on him and wandered back to the foyer. And a good job too. Richie Hawtin has received quite a bit of stick lately from various bodies after 'poor' sets. Well, this was the night he set the record straight. He probably only played 15 tracks or so and wasn't on for long at all, but this was more like it, almost straight in with the acid biz, he banged from the word go, slowing things down later. And no OTT EQ tweaking! And then on came the jungle. I think it was Roni Size, not sure, but fuck, this was some of the most exciting stuff I had heard for a very long time. I've obviously heard lot's of jungle before, but this was the first time I'd been to a big event with more than a few token jungle tracks. This little rig in the foyer was shaking the place to bits with sub bass. The crowd out there were cool too, all night. After being blown away by 45 mins of full on jungle I had fun with bouncers, endless stairwells and corridors for 30 mins, trying to find the VIP room with a friend. Found the VIP room. It took a full 5 mins to conclusively confirm my "VIP-rooms-are-full-of-boring-disappearing-up-own- arsehole-journo-types" theory. Exit. Whilst on my travels I managed to get up to the auditorium bit, rows and rows of seats high up over-looking the main stage. This was open to the public when I was last there, but I think security cottoned on to the fact that it was in fact a 'Smokers Delight' and it was out of bounds to the general public. But it provided me with a good view for most of Speedy Js performance. I'd missed most of his act, what I caught was good, but not amazing, a few tracks of G Spot stood out, but the set sounded overwarm and samey. The crowd seemed to enjoy it. Things get a bit vague, but ah, yes. I catch some more searing jungle courtesy of DJ Rap and have to leave David Holmes, to get ready for Plastikman. Unfortunately so did everybody else. Don't think poor Dave had much of an audience, which was a shame. I secretly hoped Hawtin would blow everyone away as Plastikman, at the same time afraid that it might go all experimentally wrong. Naw! He came at about 01:10. The lights went down. The music went up. To another plane. This was the perfect set. Flawless in every detail. Eyewateringly awesome. It was hard. It got harder. It got funky, and funkier. It was pure measured acidic bliss. As with the Tribal Gathering Plastikman set you were able to recognise elements, little snatchs of Plastique say, and (wow the place erupted) Spastik, but everything was new, twisted, mutated. I can't honestly remember specifics, but I do remember my head coming off, when it all slowed down, about half way through, and *that* incredible mournful acid cry/wail thing built up. And I do remember the finale, a hard as nails track that got harder by the minute and then faster and faster until everyone was fit to explode. It was flawless because everything was worked and timed perfectly, massaging the crowd into a frenzy. Most acts, even ones you know and love (Mu-ziq/LFO/Orbital etc) have dull moments (though you might not admit this). There was nothing dull about Plastikman that night. I want that set on tape!!! 50 minutes of techno perfection. Hawtin was his usual stoic self, though he did permit a bit of a head wriggle/nod when he brought in an exceptionally smart acid line :) Left in a head shaking state of disbelief, I stayed in the main arena after Hawtin. Michael Dog played some decent stuff (surprisingly) and Kenny Larkin followed fairly soon. Didn't quite know what to expect from him live and you had to feel a bit sorry for the chap, following Hawtin's crowd devastating performance. Larkin turned out ok in the end, but didn't seem to play anything original, he started with a slightly remixed _Funk In Space_ from Azimuth and played maybe four more tracks from _Azimuth_, his setup wasn't very good though, he had to pause for far to long between each track to sort out the next track, which pissed the impatient crowd off. He appeared to cock up with one track and just played the raw bass line, nothing else, for minutes, before everything else came in. Turned out to be quite a good effect! Larkin finished and we wandered off in to the lobby area again. LTJ Bukem. Seriously good jungle, for what seemed like hours. David Holmes and a few mates were in the box with him watching the crowd and looking glum. Probably contemplating a change in musical style. Jungle won me over that night. But I'm not sure that I could have stuck it for the whole 11 hours. Being able to walk between top quality jungle and techno gave a good balance. After that it was just about waiting for Autechre. Drum Club came and went. Pretty dull. They had a jungle DJ (missed who) in the main area later, and some well cool BMXers who cycled about, flying and twizzling over the stage for nearly 45mins. They also had the obligatory Megadog stiltwalkers, who outdid themselves this time with a four legged robot thing with head lamp, being led by a mad professor with a remote control... Autechre. 05:20am. Again I was worried about audience reaction. I got the feeling an hour of Incunabula wouldn't have gone well at that time, not many people wanted to chillout or use their brains, unfortunately some of the crowd had begun to drift away by then, but well over a thousand remained. They played it hard, Anvil Vapre and Tri Repetae style. Alas because Drum club had over run they were cut short by nearly 20 mins :( I only recognised two tracks _Eutow_ from Tri Repetae, a complete anthem, about halfway through and _Second Bad Vilbel_. This was the one that blew the sound system. It overloaded something somewhere and the sound died for a few seconds. When you hear the track you'll understand why. Really, really nasty! I enjoyed it all and the crowd for the most part did too, but it didn't really feel right. The crap sound rig cut out and muddied most of the mid-range, much of the synthy stringy bits were lost underneath the bass. I think the Autechre sound is more suited to smaller more intimate venues and sharper rigs. Still it banged though and I was left totally drained by 06:00. A very hard, almost percussive set. So in all a good night. Hawtin climbed back to the top of the pile. Untouchably the best live act. (Orbital are good in a different way. Aphex doesn't play live any more. (Lie ;)) Jungle proved it could work for me, with a suitable crowd. What was crap, apart from overcharging, was the apallingly poor sound main sound rig, not having Andy Weatherall on the main stage and reports of nasty rastas smoking crack and hassling people upstairs... Amusing(?) anecdote type story thing. I was handing out a few Autechre stickers to the best most nutty Autechre dancers in the crowd during the set. The *first* person I go up to... g3: Hello. So you like Autechre then? Random guy: Yeah(?) [eyeing me suspiciously] g3: Correct answer! You've just won yourself an Autechre sticker! Random guy: 's all right mate, I've already got one. g3: Oh. [Deflated]. How come? Random guy: [Dead pan] My best mate's [points to kid in camaflage trousers] touring with them next month. His best mate was Simon Pyke aka Freeform. They were well over 2000 people in the building. I should do the lottery more often. g3 g The WARP Web Site 3 0 3 http://www.ncl.ac.uk/~n264671/wap-indx.html