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(idm) REVIEWS: B12, Kenny Larkin, Bochum Welt, ... [long]

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◇ merged from 4 subjects: (idm) excursions in ambience 3 · (idm) grain · (idm) reviews: b12, kenny larkin, bochum welt, ... [long] · (idm) saw2 & excursions in ambience 3 (re: reviews:)
1996-03-06 15:44CiM (idm) REVIEWS: B12, Kenny Larkin, Bochum Welt, ... [long]
├─ 1996-03-07 05:29Matthew J. Lehrer Re: (idm) REVIEWS: B12, Kenny Larkin, Bochum Welt, ... [long]
└─ 1996-03-07 08:59Brian Willoughby (idm) SAW2 & Excursions In Ambience 3 (Re: REVIEWS:)
├─ 1996-03-07 12:40Greg Earle (idm) Grain
└─ 1996-03-07 14:27Christopher Klausmeier (idm) Excursions in Ambience 3
└─ 1996-03-07 23:12Brian Willoughby Re: (idm) Excursions in Ambience 3
1996-03-06 22:34Marc Wangenheim Re: (idm) REVIEWS: B12, Kenny Larkin, Bochum Welt, ... [long]
1996-03-08 00:20g303 Re: (idm) REVIEWS: B12, Kenny Larkin, Bochum Welt, ... [long]
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1996-03-06 15:44CiMI thought I posted this a while back but I never received an IDM Cc:d copy so I uh, guess
From:
CiM
To:
Date:
Wed, 6 Mar 1996 15:44:49 GMT
Subject:
(idm) REVIEWS: B12, Kenny Larkin, Bochum Welt, ... [long]
permalink · <9603061544.AA13975@cpca6.uea.ac.uk>
I thought I posted this a while back but I never received an IDM Cc:d copy so I uh, guess not. Apologies if I screwed up and you've got this twice... -- Reviewed: B12 : Time Tourist (Warp) Kenny Larkin : Loop 2 (R&S) Bochum Welt : Les Dances D'Ete (Kromode) Red Snapper : Mooking (Warp) Kinesthesia : Volume 2 (Rephlex) Teep : Sewer Sounds 60 mixtape (-) Stephen Brown : A Function of Aberration (Djax-Up-Beats) Freeform : Free EP (Skam) Various artists : 1-7 (Chain Reaction) Round Two : New Day (Main Street) Drexciya : Aquatic Invasion (Underground Resistance) Psyche : Crackdown (Transmat) 2000 And One : Skunk Ice (100% Pure) Planet Gong : Phases (Djax-Up-Beats) B12 : Time Tourist (Warp) Ah - the British take on techno. Theres something identifiably separate between Detroit and UK techno. The warmth and emotion that usually oozes from the jacked up grooves of the big D is present in the UK sound but for some reason, its chilled down, well polished and usually with the rawness removed. This is far from a bad thing - any different interpretations on a sound are always welcome. Prime examples are the super smooth glides of Stasis' _Inspiration_ LP, Kirk Degiorgios dry beats, the gliding lushness of Luke Slaters 7th Plain, and of course B12. _Electro-Soma_ typified that chilled UK approach and whilst it tended to veer to a similarity between the tracks, it illustrated the thinking behind the "intelligent listening music" ideal. For the most part, _Time Tourist_ is a continuation of this sound - smooth chords slowly move into orbit around subtle building rhythms, all linked together through dreamy carefully rendered reverb. As a result, B12 seem to have built slightly on the richer sound hinted at on _The Silicon Garden_ (B12s contribution to the third Likemind 12", available on this LP in a shorter remixed form). However, line the tracks up against _Electro-Soma_ and it's apparent that there's been no real evolutionary 'next step' - the B12 sound is still as precise and as controlled as it ever was. Maybe this is important, maybe it isn't - it would have been interesting to hear the sound developed somehow but it's one which works. Listen to the floating warmth of _Gimp_ (and the attention grabbing effects tweaking that goes with it), the Derrick May-esq _Cymetry_ (complete with tribute paying reversed 909 drums) and the deep Autechran moods of _VOID/Comm_ for examples. Whilst lacking a sense of immediacy, all are beautifully enveloping tracks and make up for the similarity of some of the later pieces. This LP represents not a new milestone in B12s sound then, but rather an addition to what already exists. Like _Electro-Soma_, _Time Tourist_ isn't the sort of LP you might listen to all the time, but when you feel in the need of some laid-back, uncomplicated techno, you don't really get much better. Kenny Larkin : Loop 2 (R&S) Luke Slater and drum'n'bass guy of the moment Alex Reece are provided with the remix honours here. Reece turns out an engaging, if slightly overlight rework, (with little trace of the original) and Slater houses it up with abrasive shuffling beats, keeping the cascading strings from the original. Nothing tops the simple but fluid tones of the Kenny's original mix though, which is also present here - definitely the best track on this 12". The previously unreleased _Life Goes On_ completes the 12" - an abstract probe into detached chords and scratchy drum machine toms. A diverse and enjoyable 12". Bochum Welt : Les Dances D'Ete (Kromode) For me, Gianluigi Di Costanza is a composite of all my favourite IDM/techno artists - like a clinical Drexciya, a mature Richard James (now theres a thought :) and a more minimal Speedy J, all meshed together with the emotion of Detroit, inverted and passed through a super-cooled European filter. Tracks on this 12" like _La Nuit_ and _La Pensee_ are emotional yet surgical and as far removed from the Detroit warmth and emotion as is possible. And despite this vague feeling of familiarity, each beautifully produced track stands on its own with chrome chords and machinic 808 beats - something fantastic is at work here. The _Scharlach Eingang_ 12" on Rephlex was one of my 12"s of 1995, and this 12" matches that supreme green four-tracker, despite its slight shift into more ambient areas. Bochum Welt is one of my biggest hopes for 1996 - lets hope he delivers. Red Snapper : Mooking (Warp) Uh, its 'jaaaazz' maaan. Red Snapper go in for live jazz loops and occasional dub echos. There are some neat trip-hop beats on _Son of Mook_ and some chase-scene-tastic double bass on the brilliantly titled _Get Some Sleep Tiger_. Not really my scene, maaaan but it's all bouncey and enjoyable, if a slightly weird choice for Warp. Remix duties come courtesy of Depth Charge with a 'no suprise there then' trip-hoppy work-out and from the Plaid boys who drop their IDM sensibilities in favour of rolling snares and freeform breaks - they also have the sense to retain the bassline from _Get Some Sleep Tiger_. Gotta love it. Kinesthesia : Volume 2 (Rephlex) As with _Volume 1_, Chris Jeffs turns in a four-tracker with two journeys into Caustic Window type madness and two listenable melodious techno numbers. Stand-out track is easily the second one (sorry, no track titles as it's a promo) with it's aching far-off synth lead and crunching static beats - probably one of Chris Jeffs best tracks and mildly similar to Bochum Welt material. The two mad beat tracks are noisy fuckers and provide instant gratification for the first few minutes of clangs but suffer from the problem of under-development and over-length. Still, no-one attacks those trademark Rephlexian crushing beats like Chris Jeffs (and Richard James of course) and so if you're in the mood, they can't be beaten. The final track harks back to early 90's UK techno with it's uncomplicated beats and chiming square-wave bassline. Varied and pretty good then if, like _Volume 1_, lacking slightly in that 'spark' thats present in RDJs harder outings. Teep : Sewer Sounds 60 mixtape (-) A prime-time mixtape from that polyrhythmic Parillo guy. Toxic techno ooze on one side and bubbling electro effluent on the other, allowing you to pick and mix your toxins. Dropping the vinyl only track from _SAW2_ inbetween two electro jams is genius, although I can't help thinking that a batch of Drexciyan sewage would have seeped in nicely. Aquatic goo -> aran@mit.edu Stephen Brown : A Function of Aberration (Djax-Up-Beats) A double debut pack of Detroit grooves from a new figure from Scotland. Everything is present and correct - the strings, the shuffling beats and a preference for tweaked sounds. At times the tracks can veer towards sketchiness but for the most part they're enjoyable and fluffy - think of Morgan Geists material. Brown likes to tweak his beats and the Advent type broodiness of _Gasmask_ snuggles up beautifully to the tempo- shifting funk of _Status Byte Part 1_. Although the beats sometimes skip in and out of a track, theres enough food here for a hungry DJ and there are more than enough moods for the casual listener - _Endless_ is particularly good. I wanna hear more from this guy. Freeform : Free EP (Skam) Seven tracks of sub-Autechran deep-beat trickery. And really thats your lot. It's obvious that Simon Pyke has worked hard at these tracks but the honed focus of Autechre just isn't present here - on tracks such as _Fane_ and _Rail_, the programming is precise but the tracks themselves come across as just collections of like-sounding clicky rhythms. Two tracks introduce other elements and it's here that Pyke's talent is hinted at - the melancholic melody of _Siamese Telebox_ moves the focus away from the anal synth-drum sounds to an emotional if slightly under- developed conclusion and the soothing glide of _The Brink_s chords is comforting and intelligent. The possibilities are in place - hopefully Pyke can develop more fully in his later releases. Various artists : 1-7 (Chain Reaction) Various artists they might be, but they're all pushing the same sound. The Basic Channel people are at it again and this 7 track 12" of corroded clangs and filtered funk is enticingly sparse. The tracks veer from warm mis-timed ambience to cooler, 4/4 fueled grooves. It's the same as it ever was, but the rhythmic mechanics and annihilated clangs are still strange but welcoming and enforce the fact that whilst many use the BC sound, no-one does it better. Round Two : New Day (Main Street) Warm, moody house from Maurizio with vocals (yep, you read right) and the two almost garage vocal edits are very good indeed. The Basic Channel touches are subtle - the repeating 909 patterns and the occasional dysfunctional stab push the track along beautifully, rather than intrude. And for ardent lo-fi BC junkies, theres a Maurizio dub on the flip. Very good stuff - 'intelligent house' anyone? Don't let this one pass you by because of any 'no vocals in techno' hangup - the melancholic aspect of the edits is strangley beautiful and compelling. Drexciya : Aquatic Invasion (Underground Resistance) Drexciya can do no wrong. Filty, harsh electro beatz on _The Countdown Has Begun_, sparse but oh-so-competent tweakery on _Wavejumper_ and an emotional, uplifting melody-chord combo on _Sighting In the Abyss_ which brings me up in gorgeous goosebumps every single time. Nothing comes close. Psyche : Crackdown (Transmat) Gotta love those Transmat Classic repressings - the chance to own this early four-tracker 12" from Carl Craig is just too good to turn down. The tracks on here are super-sleek techno clasics - the racing beats and chords of _Crackdown_ link well with the shuffling warmth of _Andromeda_. You also get a stretched, flanging Mayday remix of _Neurotic Behaviour_ which takes the epic ambient original and hammers it to death with a 909. Not for the faint-hearted - full credit to Derrick May for mercilessly gunning down the original to brilliant effect. 2000 And One : Skunk Ice (100% Pure) Intelligent, concentrated IDM from this bargain-bin find. _Skunk Ice_ is a twisting journey through cool metallic clangs and pristine synth patches. _Skunk Eyes_ however scoops up a bundle of lo-fi breaks and scatters them over the previous tracks' carefully planned moods. Blended chords crash up against a cliff of hammering snares in _Faceless Mass_ but it is the last track _Korma_ which has the best mix of moods, rhythmic trickery and a growling synth bassline. A good varied 12" from the Lowlands - there's no stand-out epic track, just a collection of four tracks that work the IDM periphery beautifully. Planet Gong : Phases (Djax-Up-Beats) Early Djax beat malarky from 2000 And One activist Dylan Hermelijn. Theres some gripping cone-busting acid on _Oriental Program_, malfunctioning Detroit analogue tweakery on _Lunar 326_ and a commonplace but enjoyable piano house groove courtesy of _My Heart, My Soul_. Bizarrely for Djax, there are also some beatless ambient pieces and they are damn good - they don't really work as pure ambience because they're just so damn intrusive - the squealing filtered strings of _Quink_ are beautiful and original but just watch your graphic vu-meters peak. Nasty. || [CiM] || s.walley@uea.ac.uk || http://www.sys.uea.ac.uk/~u9323899/
1996-03-07 05:29Matthew J. LehrerOn Wed, 6 Mar 1996, CiM wrote: > B12 : Time Tourist (Warp) Finally got a chance to listen
From:
Matthew J. Lehrer
To:
CiM
Cc:
Date:
Thu, 7 Mar 1996 00:29:24 -0500 (EST)
Subject:
Re: (idm) REVIEWS: B12, Kenny Larkin, Bochum Welt, ... [long]
Reply to:
(idm) REVIEWS: B12, Kenny Larkin, Bochum Welt, ... [long]
permalink · <Pine.OSF.3.91.960307001218.24294A-100000@is3.NYU.EDU>
On Wed, 6 Mar 1996, CiM wrote:
quoted 1 line B12 : Time Tourist (Warp)> B12 : Time Tourist (Warp)
Finally got a chance to listen to this in the shoppe today. "Cymetry" floored me, but the verdict is still out on the rest. "Scriptures" already popped up on _AI2_, the longer mix of "The Silicon Garden" on the Likemind 12" is, IMHO, better, and "Infinite Lites" appears in a slightly altered form on B12 14.1. The overall feel is less dancy than _Electro-Soma_...more of a listening edge to things. Which of course begs the question, "Do I buy it on CD?" Well, I'd answer that with a resounding "No!" because, as far as general design concept/packaging goes, this is one of *the* fucking coolest LPs ever. There's this totally fab future video-game motif going on, with puctures of real video-game systems through the ages on the inside of the gate-fold, a whole "article" taken from some 21st century video-game publication, and tracks numbered as "levels." Plus, all the original artwork and layout is *superb.* The little, flimsy CD insert would *not* do this stuff visual justice. An A+ to Warp and to whoever designed this sucker. ;) - Matthew "I grew up thinking that techno music is actually something that you can't imagine. That is techno at its best. If you hear something that you'd never expect to hear - that's techno. If you hear something that kind of sounds like you've heard it before, then it's not techno." - Jeff Mills
1996-03-07 08:59Brian WilloughbyCiM (in a fine review) wrote: | Teep : Sewer Sounds 60 mixtape (-) | A prime-time mixtape
From:
Brian Willoughby
To:
Date:
Thu, 7 Mar 96 00:59:06 -0800
Subject:
(idm) SAW2 & Excursions In Ambience 3 (Re: REVIEWS:)
Reply to:
(idm) REVIEWS: B12, Kenny Larkin, Bochum Welt, ... [long]
permalink · <9603070859.AA14373@sounds.wa.com>
CiM (in a fine review) wrote: | Teep : Sewer Sounds 60 mixtape (-) | A prime-time mixtape from that polyrhythmic Parillo guy. Toxic | techno ooze on one side and bubbling electro effluent on the | other, allowing you to pick and mix your toxins. Dropping the | vinyl only track from _SAW2_ inbetween two electro jams is genius, | although I can't help thinking that a batch of Drexciyan sewage | would have seeped in nicely. Aquatic goo -> aran@mit.edu FYI: The "vinyl only" track from SAW2 is actually available in digital form on Astralwerks' "Excursions In Ambience * The Third Dimension". I purchased this for the Steve Fisk track (local Seattle artist), noted with some reassurance that the Seefeel and FSOL tracks would probably be good, and did not even notice the Aphex Twin track listed at the very end. You can imagine my surprise to have accidently completed my collection. By the way, the Mike Kandel track which preceeds RDJ's #19 is also a brilliant piece of true ambient which is a fine complement to the SAW2 piece. In fact, when I first listened to Kandel's "Slow Boat To China," I found that it was impossible to press the stop button on the CD player - that's how entracing this ambient piece is. Don't get me wrong, though. I'm not "correcting" CiM's terminology in calling this the "vinyl only track from _SAW2_" : it's as good a name as any for an untitled track! Since I've already practically started a review of The Third Dimension, I might as well complete it: The rest of the album is some of the best ambient. Tracks from Spacetime Continuum (Jonah Sharp), Grain (Jimmy Johnson), Spectrum (Pete Kember), Air (Peter Namlook), and Divination (Bill Laswell) are nicely sequed together. I must say that the FSOL and Fisk tracks break the flow because they are more on the attention grabbing side of ambient, but they are good tracks nonetheless. The Spectrum track did not do much for me, but neither did the Fisk track live up to my expectations. Excursions In Ambience * The Third Dimension (Astralwerks ASW 6199-2) P.S. Does anyone know if the Jimmy Johnson of Grain is the same as the bass player with Allan Holdsworth and Chad Wackerman releases? There is some really nice, deep bass on that Grain track... Brian Willoughby
1996-03-07 12:40Greg EarleBrian Willoughby writes: > P.S. Does anyone know if the Jimmy Johnson of Grain is the same
From:
Greg Earle
To:
Date:
Thu, 07 Mar 1996 04:40:39 -0800
Subject:
(idm) Grain
Reply to:
(idm) SAW2 & Excursions In Ambience 3 (Re: REVIEWS:)
permalink · <9603071240.AA11926@isolar.Tujunga.CA.US>
Brian Willoughby writes:
quoted 3 lines P.S. Does anyone know if the Jimmy Johnson of Grain is the same as the bass> P.S. Does anyone know if the Jimmy Johnson of Grain is the same as the bass > player with Allan Holdsworth and Chad Wackerman releases? There is some > really nice, deep bass on that Grain track...
If it's the Art Center College of Design-based "Grain" (as in, Southern California edition), I'm sure the answer is "No" ... - Greg
1996-03-07 14:27Christopher KlausmeierSpeaking of Excursions in Ambience 3, is it just me, or does Mike Kandel's song do weird t
From:
Christopher Klausmeier
To:
Date:
Thu, 7 Mar 1996 08:27:06 -0600 (CST)
Subject:
(idm) Excursions in Ambience 3
Reply to:
(idm) SAW2 & Excursions In Ambience 3 (Re: REVIEWS:)
permalink · <199603071427.IAA16497@biosci.cbs.umn.edu>
Speaking of Excursions in Ambience 3, is it just me, or does Mike Kandel's song do weird things to everyone's left speaker? If I turn the bass up past a certain point the left woofer practically goes into fibrillation. Nice mellow one. That Fisk song on the CD is perhaps the most grotesque song I've heard. Not as in bad-ass grotesque a la Coil, just plain disgusting. That vocal should be taken out and shot. Sorry for the revulsion, but if I could find that song on the CD and scratch it out, I would. The other songs are choice though. -- Chris
1996-03-07 23:12Brian Willoughby| Speaking of Excursions in Ambience 3, is it just me, or does Mike | Kandel's song do wei
From:
Brian Willoughby
To:
Christopher Klausmeier
Cc:
Date:
Thu, 7 Mar 96 15:12:46 -0800
Subject:
Re: (idm) Excursions in Ambience 3
Reply to:
(idm) Excursions in Ambience 3
permalink · <9603072312.AA20486@sounds.wa.com>
| Speaking of Excursions in Ambience 3, is it just me, or does Mike | Kandel's song do weird things to everyone's left speaker? If I | turn the bass up past a certain point the left woofer practically | goes into fibrillation. Nice mellow one. It's not just you - it does have some serious low end. But not any more so than the other CDs I have with sub-bass. You just need a really good amp and speakers. I hadn't noticed that it was the left speaker only, though, because I'm currently running a mono subwoofer. I can still see the fibrillating in the left satellite, even if it isn't as efficient as the sub. | That Fisk song on the CD is perhaps the most grotesque song I've | heard. Not as in bad-ass grotesque a la Coil, just plain | disgusting. That vocal should be taken out and shot. Sorry for | the revulsion, but if I could find that song on the CD and scratch | it out, I would. I agree. I was really hoping to hear some of Steve Fisk's better IDM. I heard him play live as the opening act for negativland, here in Seattle, and he played some very danceable music with a healthy about of bass. One of the pieces even had an anti-Japan-bashing theme to it - at least that's what I got out of his juxtaposition of choice spoken word samples. Since then, I've only found his pure experimental edge stuff on CD, along with the very nice PIGEONHed release, which, while certainly quite excellent, is still not techno. Is anyone aware of any other techno/ambient releases from Steve Fisk? CD or vinyl... Brian Willoughby
1996-03-06 22:34Marc Wangenheim(stuff deleted) > Bochum Welt : Les Dances D'Ete (Kromode) > For me, Gianluigi Di Costanza
From:
Marc Wangenheim
To:
Date:
Wed, 6 Mar 1996 23:34:44 +0100
Subject:
Re: (idm) REVIEWS: B12, Kenny Larkin, Bochum Welt, ... [long]
permalink · <199603062234.XAA05639@s33.informatik.uni-Bremen.de>
(stuff deleted)
quoted 14 lines Bochum Welt : Les Dances D'Ete (Kromode)> Bochum Welt : Les Dances D'Ete (Kromode) > For me, Gianluigi Di Costanza is a composite of all my favourite > IDM/techno artists - like a clinical Drexciya, a mature Richard James > (now theres a thought :) and a more minimal Speedy J, all meshed together > with the emotion of Detroit, inverted and passed through a super-cooled > European filter. Tracks on this 12" like _La Nuit_ and _La Pensee_ are > emotional yet surgical and as far removed from the Detroit warmth and > emotion as is possible. And despite this vague feeling of familiarity, > each beautifully produced track stands on its own with chrome chords and > machinic 808 beats - something fantastic is at work here. The _Scharlach > Eingang_ 12" on Rephlex was one of my 12"s of 1995, and this 12" matches > that supreme green four-tracker, despite its slight shift into more > ambient areas. Bochum Welt is one of my biggest hopes for 1996 - lets > hope he delivers.
You shoulda listen to his new release =) Its quite on the ambient trip as well. So if you like trax like _La Nuit_ you gotta LOVE this one... Don't know what release I'm talking about ?? Check the discography then.. it's right there =) Marc
1996-03-08 00:20g303At 00:29 07/03/96 -0500, you wrote: > >On Wed, 6 Mar 1996, CiM wrote: > >> B12 : Time Tour
From:
g303
To:
IDM
Date:
Fri, 08 Mar 1996 00:20:12 +0000
Subject:
Re: (idm) REVIEWS: B12, Kenny Larkin, Bochum Welt, ... [long]
permalink · <2.2.32.19960308002012.00740e1c@phago.demon.co.uk>
At 00:29 07/03/96 -0500, you wrote:
quoted 4 lines On Wed, 6 Mar 1996, CiM wrote:> >On Wed, 6 Mar 1996, CiM wrote: > >> B12 : Time Tourist (Warp)
quoted 9 lines [...]as far as general>[...]as far as general >design concept/packaging goes, this is one of *the* fucking coolest LPs >ever. There's this totally fab future video-game motif going on, with >puctures of real video-game systems through the ages on the inside of the >gate-fold, a whole "article" taken from some 21st century video-game >publication, and tracks numbered as "levels." Plus, all the original >artwork and layout is *superb.* The little, flimsy CD insert would *not* do >this stuff visual justice. An A+ to Warp and to whoever designed this >sucker. ;)
Those intelligences who designed it have not been born. But their new RAC cover is rather nice too ;) g. :::::Warp Net!(TM)::::: http://www.warp-net.com