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Re: [idm] some reviews

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1995-04-11 07:45Jola Shepherd Some Reviews
1995-09-20 19:59Jon Drukman some reviews
2000-09-15 00:12Martin Glaubitz [idm] some reviews
2001-11-22 03:52Sandricks [idm] some reviews
2001-12-08 02:00Sandricks [idm] some reviews
2001-12-10 04:59d_jak Re: [idm] some reviews
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1995-04-11 07:45Jola ShepherdA couple of short reviews of some of the latest to come my way: Black Knight a1 capita a2
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Jola Shepherd
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Date:
Tue, 11 Apr 1995 00:45:37 -0700 (PDT)
Subject:
Some Reviews
permalink · <Pine.PTX.3.91.950410183133.22083B-100000@odin.cc.pdx.edu>
A couple of short reviews of some of the latest to come my way: Black Knight a1 capita a2 deliberation b1 moody b2 balance I know that Derek has already covered this, but I thought it was so good, that I would give it the business as well. Black Knight is Robert Gordon, driving force behind such excellence as the Forgemasters, Xon (with Richard Kirk), DJ Mink (Hey! Hey! Can You Relate?), the Fon Force, all kinds of great projects. This is a percussive little jam, every track deserves special attention. First, Capita starts with some funky drums, swingin' with a really tight almost breakbeat feel to it. A simple melodic plan soon syncs up (some would call this the hook...) and from there, it's resonant sounds go awry in a syncopated, funky blend. Rez like sounds bounce off each other, creating all kinds of different echos. The hook is quickly abandoned for a really random feel of the primary patches, the swingin' drums keep it all together. Deliberation goes a little more for the four-on-the-floor house base, the first sound...I think of old airplane sounds..., anyway, It moves into a detroitlike house track, with a thick sounding bassline and loverly layered string synth, than, back to the aeroplane action, than, and this it what makes the track for me, piano: low register vs. high register. Random playing that just sound so organic, it reminds me of the songs I used to make up while sitting at the piano, learning to detune. Again, back to a warm string synth, back to the plane and arrive safely back home. Bitchin'. Moody: Ragga echoic sample intro, melding into the beat, which has got to be sampled from another song of his...I just can't place it. This is a very Sweet Exorcist sounding track, that kind of ethnic bleep feel, will remind you of Networks better days, I'm sure. The sounds are very Gordon sounding, percussive, resonant, rhythmic. This follows a 808 workout that Rob seems to be fond of, and carries some deepass bass too. If it wasn't for the perrenial Ragga samples that pop up every so often, this might be the standout track. Ragga sampling just gets to me. Balance starts percussively strong, not typical Gordon drum sounds, but the programming is certainly familiar. A beautiful subbass carries the hook (abstract as it be) across the song. This, in a club with well structured bass cabs, could elevate a person. Blippy randomness in the upper register plays melody to the bass. Smart! I forgot to mention: this is on Source Records. Available as Import, don't wait for this to show domestic. Just shell out the money, dammit. Hazed "Bells" Plus 8 Records (plus8049) a1 Bells b1 World Watches On b2 Bellchant This is David Christophere (apparently the fella from Rabbit in the Moon, which is news to me) and Nick Simpson, more familiar as one half of Rhythm Invention. As a dedicated percussion junkie, I find anything loosely associated with RI pretty exciting. Thusly... Bells: One hell of a build-up. It starts off with quiet percussion, no heavy kick, just a small pattern of little blips of analog drum pads. To those familiar with a Plus 8 sound, youv'e heard these dums before. A kick drops after a while, all the while, more complex percussion joins in the jam, finally, a bit of filter sweep and phase and now a pretty heavy duty 303 inspired sound (probably a 101, definately Roland) starts to move the party, then bails for a quick percussion interlude, only to come ass kicking jam of crazy synth and inspired drum programming. Someone studied the DJ Pierre school of track structure. World Watches on: Track makes me Yawn. Similar in sound, but nothing catches me, does my head in. Very repetitive sample of the title of the song, but not really trippy, and honestly, way too long. Not where I hoped the track would go, fairly lackluster and only half-interesting. Bellchant is redemption, a reason to even really ever play the b-side. This is not (as far as I can tell) a derivative of Bells, if it is, the feel is slower, more melodic, and more interesting than b1. Still, Bells captures the most interest out of me. Of course, I always manage to catch the worst Plus 8 vinyl around, there is a fairly major glitch in World (lucky, I guess), one of those funny warps that gives a hollow bass thump during playback. It seems that only I pick up this stuff, as every time I complain, everyone tells me how great their Plus 8 stuff is. Substance Abuse and Ginger are the only Plus 8s I own that are pressing error free. Colin Newman "Voice" Swim Records Vwm 3 a1 Automation a2 Faq b1 Voice b2 Output Colin Newman's new(er) label puts out well-produced electronica with a certain ethereal feel I just dig. Robin Rimbaud helps out on Colin's solo EP, the first that I have seen on his label. Automation is downtempo, mellow, rich gear with (gasp!) low key vocals. Thick synths push this track along, Robin Rimbaud (Scanner) provides the signature conversations. Drum programming is minimal, some interseting percussion sounds, but nothing really expirimental. Very lush, perfect for snogging by the fire. Faq is a little more upbeat, and damn if it doesn't have that wierd squonky cowbell thing I dig so much from the 808. Bass has a almost live feel to it. Instrumentation plays well off each other, active, but this track too is certainly laid back. With a feel this laconic, it's hard to believe this track clock in around the mid 120 BPM stylee. Voice is the Meat and Potatos of this EP, it carries a strong dub bassline, and suprise! Newman dusts off the guitar, and lays a few textures over the top. Strange busy-signals are sampled in again, dropped in over the top of a s l o w beat totally oblivious to the rhythm. Much of the charm of this song comes from...Think of waking up hung over to the start of a weekend's summer day. Heady, but disorienting and comfortable Lastly, Output starts off fairly ambient. Beatless, rambling with rolling synths and gently blasts of white noise, and then, a hi-hat dances across the not much of anything...A lone synth similar to that of Gas's Microscopic welcomes you, then, a house beat kicks (gently, like everything else) upbeat, mid 120s again. Then the vocals start. This is not one of those recordings where the vocals dominate in the mix, they really are treated as more of a texture. Colin lets little blast of guitar come now and again, then, a bit of a ambient breakdown, with that hi-hat holding structure, then, in back into the track. More vocals, guitar beats and then. Abruptly, it ends. Immersion Remixes Vol. 2 Swim Vwm 4.2 Fred Gianelli, Iris, Claude Young, Mick Harris a1 Telepathic Water (Fred) a2 Hydraulic (Iris) b1 Slow Drift (Claude) b2 Walkabout (Mick) Fred is as Fred does. Mid tempo beats treat this remix with the mellow vibe it deserves. Lots of toms that gently say "boop". A swirly guitarish sound radiates in the background, while light, lonely synths trapse across the top of the track. A very mellow 303 makes it's way a couple of times. This track flows. Feel the flow, baby. My mistake: that's no 303. Hell, it's late. I've never heard of Iris, so this is a learning experiance for me. Hectic synth noodling at the beginning of the track point it in the right direction. How do they make such wild sounds sound so...mellow? The hi-hat in this track swings like a mother, but nothing else does, creating an interesting juxtapostion, the Kick stays quantized four times a measure. Filter sweeps. Nice. I look forward to more Iris fun. Only problem: this track is too short. (Five minutes compared to the god-knows-how-many of the Fred mix) Claude is also new to me, though I hear he's a Detroiter (Detroitoid?). This starts with a big synth patch, the kick comes across it uptempo, but seemingly on the off-beat. I like this feel, it lets you interpret the music in so many ways. Really disjointed, like if you wanted to, this could be a layered pattern to be interpreted in hundreds of perspective. Again, mellow, never agressive. Finally, Mick Harris does the ambientish low key electronica thing, echoic and trancy. Complaint: in this context, the drums could have used a little more effects for my taste. The feel is way low beat, with a Autechre like percussive roll pattern accross the top of a punctuating distant kick. I really like the feel of this track, it almost wants to be eerie, but it just ain't. Did I mention that it was mellow? Swim really has a vibe going on here that I think is worth checking. Immersion remixes were said to be limited to 500, but I always laugh at those figures. Probably available as we speak, just not very well known about. More again soon. Thanks to Derek at Importland for doing the dirty work. Catch these and other fine tracks late night at Lotus! Cameron psu00110@odin.cc.pdx.edu
1995-09-20 19:59Jon Drukmanvive le funk. i'm sick of the 4-to-the-floor tyranny... within these reviewed jams you wil
From:
Jon Drukman
To:
Date:
Wed, 20 Sep 1995 12:59:39 -0700
Subject:
some reviews
permalink · <ac85bd9c020210038d47@[204.162.86.102]>
vive le funk. i'm sick of the 4-to-the-floor tyranny... within these reviewed jams you will find little in the way of straight 909 thump, just syncopation and funky stuff (i can't get enough of... yeah, you've heard it before) heavy west coast presence in today's set... finally proof that there's more to SF than hardkiss. SOULSTICE rmx - brain candy enterprises I haven't heard the original, but here's what's on the remix 12: funky drummer beats into latin tinged electro into spaced out dub breaks and back into funk for a while, then the whole thing goes through a morph into a jungle version of the same... Crazy, varied, interesting... i like it. the b-side has a similar mix but with even better loops and more crazy fills. DJ WHO - Rhythm (shaken not stirred SNS001) A-side is "DJ Who featuring Tanisha" - a sort of bouncy synth bass over some nice loops and some housey-but-tripped-out vocals. Nice, but the B-side, which is "DJ Who vs The Bassbin Twins" is much cooler... Crazy loops with a synth break stolen from Baba O Riley, then it all goes into a dub breakdown and back out the other side with some Beastie Boys pickups 'n' fills. But that's not all... a voice shouts "drumbeats!" and it goes all gated and nuts and adds some old school "rave" synthwork... A complex and interesting production, I like it a lot. The second track on side B is a dubbier version of track one, but it doesn't work, kind of messy and clunky. ELECTROLINERS - Loose Caboose/Crazy Train (Twitch TWEP03) Twitch Records completes its morph from remix service to original production label with this 12" from Twitch guy Jim Hopkins and SF's DJ Dan. This is THE SHIT. Heavy funk beats, sick acid, lots of gated train sounds and vocal stuff that strongly recalls some of the solid gold classics of Exist Dance's best. The second mix is a little trancier. B-side features remixes by (yet again) Bassbin Twins (does this guy ever sleep?). The first mix is a little more acidic, but still very funky. The second one is a little more tripped out, weird and minimal. Good stuff but A1 is the cut. REBIRTH - Floor Essence/Pigs and Penguins (BASSEX 006) A side is plodding acid that takes way too long to get anywhere - skip it. B side is a different story - more energetic with some funky bass work and nice acid sounds... a cool electro break brings things up a notch, then some siren-ish noises, then even harder electro stuff. A good ride once it gets underway but it does take a while - DJs mix in late! quick notes... Bitin Back - She's Breaking Up/Boom Box - rerelease of the 1991 Mickey Finn classic! get it while it's still available... "dance with the speaker til you hear it blow" DJ Icee - Beats-a-rockin - you either like his stuff or you don't... first track is a little weak, second is pretty strong... Mephisto Odyssey - The Motive - mowax meets santana?? a little too live-band-ish for me, but if you like that... here it is. -- Name: Jon Email: jsd@cyborganic.com Web: http://www.cyborganic.com/People/jsd
2000-09-15 00:12Martin GlaubitzHere's what I'm listening to lately: Skull - Snaps - Output Recordings 31 minute five song
From:
Martin Glaubitz
To:
Idm (E-mail)
Date:
Thu, 14 Sep 2000 18:12:44 -0600
Subject:
[idm] some reviews
permalink · <000201c01ea9$ac8864a0$947db2a8@martin>
Here's what I'm listening to lately: Skull - Snaps - Output Recordings 31 minute five song cd. Very sample based, organic, not DSP-y or glitchy. Dark, downtempo, heavy, sparse hip hop beats. Beatless, haunting, staticky ambience. Lots of pitched-down-sounding samples. Feedbacky swells. The beats kind of trip over themselves at times, and the 4/4 is lost. No catchy melodic elements. Similar to some of DJ Shadow's Endtroducing or DJ Vadim, but more pessimistic and unsettled in nature. I believe an alternate version of one of the songs (Crash) was on the Headz 2 comp from a few years back. L-Usine - s/t - Isophlux 71 min cd. This shit swangs and is an argument in favor of the "intelligent dance" moniker. Distorted vocalish-type snippets. Fun squelchy synths. Nice panning effects with headphones. Has a classic Artificial Intelligence-era feel, but updated with more contemporary DSP type techniques. Constantly evolving. Lots of little stabby melodies and sort of icey, shiny noises. Someone (on this list I think) said this was like a cross of electronic stuff and traditional instruments - I don't hear that. It's pretty much 100% electronic to me. I think someone else said it was hip hoppy - it's not that either. Eminem - The Mashall Mathers lp You can hate it for its popularity, its misogyny, its homophobia. But I can't deny his cleverness and lyrical style and fuck-you-edness. Plus "Kim" and "Stan" both literally gave me goosebumps the first couple times I heard them. Geto Boys - s/t - Rap A Lot Records Just found this oldie from 1990 during a recent basement excavation of my old college stuff. This is "Hardcore rap." Houston's answer to NWA. Very explicit. Features a two-eyed Bushwick Bill. About a million samples from the movie Scarface. Standouts include the classic Steve-Miller-sample-based "Gangster of Love." Dated but lovable production style. Yes, I'm the white guy singing along driving his car, going to his cubicle, just like the movie "Office Space." NWA - Efil4Zaggin From the same excavation. This was the one after Straight Outta Compton. Side One of this tape is one of my favorite tape sides ever. Energy. Features a pre-HIV-symptom Eazy E. Production techniques and sensibilities that, for the time, were quite evolved, and to me still stand up and don't sound too dated. Side 2 rates 10 on the misogy-meter. Soul Center 2 Aw yeah. I don't know what subcategory of dance music this would be, like minimal soul house?, but it bangs and I'd love to get my move on to this in a club with the strobes and fog going off. Machiney rhythms with old soul samples, crowd claps and cheers. No synths or glitch/DSP type stuff, but well crafted, energetic 4/4 groovy. Building repitition. Unpretentious and comfortable, soothing. And whoa, is that a Flavor Flav "Boyee!" mixed in to the with the "can I ask you something" crowd noise? No I'm hearing things, never mind. But hey, that's a coincidence, that is the same "whew!" (sic) in track 3 as was used in NWA's "Findum, Fuckum and Flee" on Efil4Zaggin. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2001-11-22 03:52SandricksPolar-Still Moving (Certificate 18) DJ TeeBee- Through the Eyes of a Scorpion (Cert. 18) T
From:
Sandricks
To:
Date:
Thu, 22 Nov 2001 03:52:12 +0000
Subject:
[idm] some reviews
permalink · <1006401132.4d810ff9Mezzak@myrealbox.com>
Polar-Still Moving (Certificate 18) DJ TeeBee- Through the Eyes of a Scorpion (Cert. 18) TeeBee & K Present the Deeper Side of Drum&Bass (Subtitles) Yay! Lots of new records from our friends in Norway. No need for individual descriptions, as the same sort of thing is going on in all three; icy cinematic soundscapes over skittering breaks. The Polar disc has some nice chilly electro as well. I can't imagine that there is someone who could like Polar and not like TeeBee. So if you like any one of these three releases then get the other two as well, cause they're all good. Oh, and when you do, for some reason disc1 of TeeBee's album is mislabeled as disc2 and vice versa. Harmonic 33 - Kalidescopic Sounds (Alphabet Zoo) New record from Mr. Mark Pritchard with some assistance from Dave "Tidy" Brinkworth. It's crisp downtempo breaks over (or under if you prefer) some very lovely exotica style sounds. What a nice record. Gamers in Exile / My Selfish Desire - Split your Cerebellum (Unbearable Recordings) I think the lesson here is: if you're going to use a title like 'Split your Cerebellum' then you really should have something to back it up with musically. I mean it's okay, but, cerebellum splitting? Nope. Kind of noisy broken techno. You know the type; very avant-gauche. Oh yeah, and I wish this label, and others, would put their records in jewelboxes instead of crummy little plastic sleeves. h --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2001-12-08 02:00SandricksYunx - Customer Service ep (Yunx Recordings) I'd say this was the best thing Yunx has put
From:
Sandricks
To:
Date:
Sat, 08 Dec 2001 02:00:27 +0000
Subject:
[idm] some reviews
permalink · <1007776827.45701ff9Mezzak@myrealbox.com>
Yunx - Customer Service ep (Yunx Recordings) I'd say this was the best thing Yunx has put out yet, but I haven't heard all their records. So instead I'll just say it's the best thing I've heard by them. A very varied release with lots of different moods from upbeat to laid back. Track A1 is just the tops. Gique - (Device) - New pseudonym of Datathief on Datathief's new record label. Well, at least one member of Datathief anyway. Gique has a different sound than Datathief material. Icy futuristic electro with a techno/new wave edge to it. Sounds good on 45 and 33. A noisy electro remix by Mat 101 finishes things up nicely. And as an added bonus it comes in a really cool plastic sleeve. Bokatsu and Pliant - 1 up (Systorm Technologies) a two track 7" that might appeal to someone on this list. A Side has 'Mario vs. Bowser' by Bokatsu which is nothing more or less than a very faithful (and very good) cover of music from Mario Bros'. Kind of a medly of different themes. Side two is 'Zelda's Windmill' by Pliant. Which stands all by itself as a cool song, and features a really great lead synth melody. No familiarity with the games in question is required, but it probably helps. Hmmm, I don't know why I think that the this list might have a higher percentage of people familiar with the music of these games than the general populace. ///S --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2001-12-10 04:59d_jakspeaking of Device, i've been enjoying the second release on the label quite a bit as well
From:
d_jak
To:
Sandricks ,
Date:
Sun, 9 Dec 2001 23:59:12 -0500
Subject:
Re: [idm] some reviews
permalink · <00e801c18137$6a5abb40$d355f4d1@oemcomputer>
speaking of Device, i've been enjoying the second release on the label quite a bit as well: Carl A. Finlow - Electrilogy Part 1. As the title suggests, it's all electro. i don't by much electro, so this is no expert opinion, but i think these 3 track are great. they're definitely a lot more Fun! than what i usually buy. and one track has killer dead-on slightly, tastefully effected, german-accent-inflected, deadpan vocals. and it also comes in the same nifty blue polyurethane bag "with the clarity of digital...." i also like the Yunx record. quite a bit better than the ducky dickie bird ep and their early pitchcadet release, but that's the only yunx i have to compare it to. - d np: solvent - solvent city ----- Original Message ----- From: Sandricks <Mezzak@myrealbox.com> To: <idm@hyperreal.org> Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 9:00 PM Subject: [idm] some reviews Yunx - Customer Service ep (Yunx Recordings) I'd say this was the best thing Yunx has put out yet, but I haven't heard all their records. So instead I'll just say it's the best thing I've heard by them. A very varied release with lots of different moods from upbeat to laid back. Track A1 is just the tops. Gique - (Device) - New pseudonym of Datathief on Datathief's new record label. Well, at least one member of Datathief anyway. Gique has a different sound than Datathief material. Icy futuristic electro with a techno/new wave edge to it. Sounds good on 45 and 33. A noisy electro remix by Mat 101 finishes things up nicely. And as an added bonus it comes in a really cool plastic sleeve. Bokatsu and Pliant - 1 up (Systorm Technologies) a two track 7" that might appeal to someone on this list. A Side has 'Mario vs. Bowser' by Bokatsu which is nothing more or less than a very faithful (and very good) cover of music from Mario Bros'. Kind of a medly of different themes. Side two is 'Zelda's Windmill' by Pliant. Which stands all by itself as a cool song, and features a really great lead synth melody. No familiarity with the games in question is required, but it probably helps. Hmmm, I don't know why I think that the this list might have a higher percentage of people familiar with the music of these games than the general populace. ///S --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org ---------------------------------------------------- Sign Up for NetZero Platinum Today Only $9.95 per month! http://my.netzero.net/s/signup?r=platinum&refcd=PT97 --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org