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freeke reviews #5

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1994-09-08 15:12Dave Walker freeke reviews #5
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1994-09-08 15:12Dave Walker_ freeke reviews #5 These reviews may be freely reproduced electronically, just give me cr
From:
Dave Walker
To:
Intelligent Dance Music List
Date:
Thu, 8 Sep 1994 11:12:57 -0400 (EDT)
Subject:
freeke reviews #5
permalink · <Pine.3.88.9409081126.A8653-0100000@garnet.msen.com>
_ freeke reviews #5 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 time --------- Snivillisation (CD) - Orbital (FFRR) Sysex (CD/EP) - Sysex (+8) Cowboyphunk/Elektrophunk (EP) - Hardtrax (Probe) One Complete Revolution (EP) - Claude Young (Utensil/Dow) Millenium (CD5) - Killing Joke (Butterfly/Zoo) Space Grass (EP) - Space Grass (Telepathic) -- Snivillisation (CD) - Orbital (FFRR) Boy, the prerelease stories we heard about this one... "it's gonna be a jungle record!" and "they're big Crass fans so there'll be lots of guitars!" Instead, the first non-eponymous Orbital album is (surprise, surprise) an Orbital album. Sure, the bits and pieces are in different places, and the Hartnoll brothers pull some new tricks out of their bags, but this record is composed with the same attention to melody and detail as their earlier ones, though they do venture away from the swirly cathedrals of sound that they're best known for. I'm also happy to note that, unlike so many of their contemporaries, Orbital have not given up on rhythm -- indeed, on this front the album takes some of its biggest chances: as on the jungle-derived rhythm track on "Are We Here" and the space conga of "Sad But True." Not everything works, ("Quality Seconds" bites, but it's only 90 seconds long) but the hit ratio is good. While there's no immediate standout as obvious as the Lush/Impact/Remind suite from the brown album, the album has plenty of charms to reward repeated listening: the panoramic sweep of "Are We Here", the jazz-inflected vibe sounds on "Science Friction", and the nice melodic touches on "Kein Trink Wasser" are but a few examples. -- Sysex (CD/EP) - Sysex (+8/Intellinet) This one's actually been around a few months, but I finally got around to picking up my own copy. Even though it's got 15 tracks and lasts over 60 minutes, it's packaged as an EP. Most of the tracks are firmly in the acid realm, but Heinrich Tillack varies tempos and approaches enough to keep it interesting. He also knows when to give the Silver Box a rest. Standout tracks include the much-compiled "CR Acid Trax I" along with "Intruder", "Pulsar Loops", and "Echoes". -- Cowboyphunk/Elektrophunk (EP) - Hardtrax (Probe/Intellinet) I love singles like this. While artists keep prattling on about how "restrictive" the bounds of the dancefloor are, producing reams of admittedly pretty bedsit music, gems like this one still pop up with regularity in the dance arena, where the competition to stay current is fierce. "Cowboyphunk" moves much booty, even at a positively sedate 120 BPM, thanks to a subtly "off" syncopated kick and some reverse gated drums. Regardless of its title, at its heart this track is pure bleep. The ingredients are all familiar, but somehow the end result sounds very fresh -- definitely one of my favorite tracks so far this year. "Elektrophunk" on the flip is a shorter, housier take on things. Oh, and I'm not supposed to mention that this is a Richie Hawtin record. :) -- One Complete Revolution (EP) - Claude Young (Utensil/Dow) Very deep, very basic, very Detroit. Nothing particularly surprising here, just well-executed midtempo housy techno. -- Millenium (CD5) - Killing Joke (Butterfly/Zoo) The story on this one: Youth drags Killing Joke kicking and screaming into the 90's... or something like that. Well, about half of this is in the sampled guitar/distorted vocals style that I burned out on years ago (somebody please slip Trent Reznor some happy gas), but the tweakier mixes are just fine by me. The original version is a pretty respectable piece of alternametal, if you're into that sort of thing. The Juno Reactor mix percolates along, playing the synth textures off of the guitar lines to good effect. The Drum Club mix isn't quite my cup of tea (to me, their tracks always seem to run about twice as long as they ought to) but does a good job of working with the original elements of the song, once again putting the guitars to good use. My favorite, though, is Youth's own mix, a deep ambient dub excursion that takes off into space and doesn't wait for the stragglers to catch up. Smart shopper's note: it appears that the US CDingle collects all the salient bits from the multiple UK singles -- all this for $5 woohoo! -- Space Grass (EP) - Space Grass (Telepathic/Intellinet) _ I wouldn't be freeke reviews without at least one Telepathic record, right? :) It's not intentional, it's just that they're releasing about a record a month, and I keep stumbling over them... Anyway, the original mix is the real keeper here: a weird semi-tribal rhythm and a swinging freaky melody, with just a slight hint of acid. It's funkier and more upfront than the typical Telepathic material. The "Telepathic Space Grass" remix on the other side adds a slightly cheesy melody line that doesn't quite fit with the other elements in the track, and adds a more conventional house beat. -- That's it. 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 play sim freeke <A HREF="http://www.msen.com/~marmoset/">Dave Walker</A>