179,854Messages
9,130Senders
30Years
342mboxes

← archive index

(idm) Review: Monolake "Hong Kong" (fwd)

1 message · 1 participant · spans 1 day · search this subject
1998-12-10 15:42Noah (idm) Review: Monolake "Hong Kong" (fwd)
expand allcollapse allclick any summary to toggle that message
1998-12-10 15:42Noahsorry if this adds to the confusion, i thought i'd drop this off.... ---------- Forwarded
From:
Noah
To:
IDM
Date:
Thu, 10 Dec 1998 09:42:32 -0600 (CST)
Subject:
(idm) Review: Monolake "Hong Kong" (fwd)
permalink · <Pine.A41.4.02.9812100939030.11540-100000@orion.it.luc.edu>
sorry if this adds to the confusion, i thought i'd drop this off.... ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Fri, 24 Apr 1998 22:39:12 -0500 (CDT) From: Noah <njurcin@orion.it.luc.edu> To: Ohmbiont <ambient@hyperreal.org> Subject: Review: Monolake "Hong Kong" Monolake "Hong Kong" (CRD-04) Took this home from the local Tower (tm) one day and filed it next to the other C.R. Metal-boxes on my shelf, and waited for an appropriate time to listen. After hearing the Maurizio disc and the Various Artists release, I kinda new what to expect: lots of semi-atonal percussive sounds echoing to the left and right sides while a spacious reverb keeps funneling them into the background, most likely synced up to some kickin' 4OtF rhythms, and perhaps a few unforeseen surprises. If the Chain Reaction artists were photographers, rather then the faceless German Detroiters (?) that they are, they'd surely work only in that highly granular variety of black & white film. The stark nature of their releases forces the listener to look more into the sonic details of each piece. But don't let the word "stark" hold you back, the pictures this crew takes are often evocative of illicit foggy warehouse jams. The often deep melodies are hidden in impressive echoing gray clouds. The tracks are selected from a 12" series induced by Gerhard Behles and Robert Henke (from the earlier v/a). The first track Cyan combines a muffled yet driving 4OtF rhythm with a warm, regularly recurring chord. Repressed lower-octave bleeps blend in discretely, and all the while a low-fi environmental recording of random birds adds another layer. Index gets a little more serious, with harder-edged percussion sounds, and drives like a dark lowrider. #4 Macau: If you were to mate the sound of someone playing the spoons with the ripped-whirlwind quality of a low-flying chopper between highrises (highrisers?), you may just end up with a percussion sequence like the one in this track. All solidly integrated into a kickin' dub rhythm, mind you. Track #5, minimal dub territory further expanded and explored. That is, even more kickin' dub, and a synth wave scrapes itself against a finely honed bassline...this is the Arte. Another environMental recording near the end there has you thinking your listening session has moved outside to a local pier with the waves slapping the rickety wooden plank undersides. Track #6, still talking business they are. A solid 4OtF bassdrum clears a path for tunneling echo collections, each playing the melody in turn. The minimalist CR dance formula surfaces yet again and proceeds to rock the haus for just over 7 minutes. The title Occam might suggest the use of the proverbial razor to shape and cut an impeccable dance track, and clearly joins the growing handful of others I've heard from this label's CD series. no@h . . . . . . ..... . . . . . .