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From:
Jola Shepherd
To:
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Date:
Tue, 11 Apr 1995 00:45:37 -0700 (PDT)
Subject:
Some Reviews
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<Pine.PTX.3.91.950410183133.22083B-100000@odin.cc.pdx.edu>
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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