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From:
nat hawks
To:
Date:
Fri, 10 Jan 2003 12:08:47 -0500
Subject:
[idm] yawn... another TopTen '02 posting...
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i was asked to put together a topten with comments for a publication, and figured i'd share what i made-up. while reading the comments, please realize the "critic-tone" is just that... bullshit (trying to sound cool and knowledgable when you're not), i make bold statements in a shameless attempt to get a quote published (take it with a grain of salt). so, with that in mind... and yes, in the BOC comments i exaggerate a bit, but it's just to make a point. :> (comments appreciated) 1. Sigur Ros- ( ) 2. Boards of Canada-Geodaddi (warp) 3. Mum-Finally We Are No One (fatcat) 4. Astrobotnia-Part One (rephlex) 5. Flaming Lips-Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots 6. Venetian Snares-Winter in the Belly of a Snake (planet-mu) 7. Black Dice-Beaches and Canyons 8. Joseph Nothing-Dreamland Idle Orchestra (planet-mu) 9. Tujiko Noriko-Make Me Hard (mego) 10. AE-Gantz Graf (warp) Whose gunna hot shit in 2003? Cherry (forthcoming on AudioDregs) 1. Sigur-Ros- ( ) Sigur-Ros? music may seem soft spoken, but in actuality theirs is a rather extreme response to the arrant music landscape. As with the slowcore movement popularized by Low in the early 90s, their rebellion against the mainstream goes in the opposite direction from teen angst filled metal (the motivation was there, but lack of any sophistication de-legitimized a stronger notion). Dancing the line between pop accessibility and emotionally challenging art, this may be the most heartbreaking music ever created. Sigur-ros offers a new voice/vision that is both f1ully-realized and expertly manifested. 2. Boards of Canada-Geodaddi Like with a lot of rewarding music/art, it can take a while for BOC?s genius to become apparent. Despite BOC?s deservedly legendary status on the influential idm-list, Geodaddi initially was met with disdain? of course, months later, it also ended as many of those same poster?s album of the year. Filled with seemingly endless attention to detail, BOC?s sound forest is a stoner?s wet dream with its crunchy, slippery beats and signature lullaby melodies that haunt and uplift. With tons of back material ready to be released, and an ever thickening personal mythology, BOC are officially legendary. 3. Mum-Finally we are no one It wasn?t until I got to see them live at the Knitting Factory this year that I realized the breadth or organic instrumentation FWANO held. Many sounds I assumed to be synthetic in origin were in fact created by melodiums, accordions, and guitars. They have taken revelations from the electronic scene and applied them back to archaic instruments in blissful innocence, creating a new kind of quilt to keep to you warm. 4. Astrobotnia-Part One Criminally overlooked, Astrobotnia is a 3 part (the first installment being the best) team-effort from the Rephlex stable. If only people would quit complaining about the disappointing Druqks and pick this up. Here in lives the perfect ethereal blend of Eno soundscapes and Braindance breakbeat. Updating the Rephlex sound for the new millennium. 5. Flaming Lips-Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots Ok, so they?re in TV commercials, so what? Wayne and his band of merry pranksters are the most inventive, motivated, and downright fun band in American music today. Refreshing, transcending, and poppy, Yoshimi shines so bright! And with a full-length film just around the corner, it looks like the fun is just starting? what's not to like? 6. Venetian Snares-Winter in the Belly of a Snake Aaron Funk lives in Canada and makes electronic music, lots of it (he releases a new LP every couple of months). Recording as Venetian Snares, Aaron is quickly securing a spot in the coveted drill-and-bass pantheon founded by Aphex, Squarepusher, and Mu-ziq. What sets VS apart? He has a legitimate and consistent hardcore streak, maintaining a tension that?s sexual, horrific, and painfully brainy. That and the fact that the emotional and aesthetic depth he throws around is unmistakably the work of a frustrated genius. Bow down to the new master. Oh, and WITBOAS is his most fully-realized and varied release to date. 7. Black Dices-Beaches and Canyons While one could argue that what Black Dice are doing has been done before (lord knows the 70s were filled with driving, droning space jams), but Black Dice?s immediate relevance and hopeful influence on the waning NYC scene is undeniable. Once an infamous hardcore band, after a tour with Avey Tare and Panda Bear they rethought their approach and came up with Beaches and Canyons, a majestically hypnotic tidal wave of throbbing sound. 8. Joseph Nothing-Dreamland Idle Orchestra Joseph Nothing?s name really isn?t Joseph, he?s from Japan. Playful and chaotic, JN?s albums unite hyperactive lullabies with soft-spoken ADD beatage, throwing in some just-being-weird-for-the-fun-of-it Japanese freedom love. Inspired by an amusement park he visited as a child, Dreamland Idle Orchestra is an absolute wonder of an album and it?s a shame it?s been so overlooked. A real gem. 9. Tujiko Noriko-Make Me Hard Also from Japan, Tujiko Noriko pushes Fennesz?s sound aesthetic into the realm of pop. Doing everything herself, Tujiko?s albums are so fully-realized and heady and warm and refreshingly playful and it?s made by a female (rejoice!). 10. Autechre- Gantz Graf ep Once again, Autechre remind us that they are God. Not only are their technical abilities in sound design light years ahead of the competition, they are making some very bold aesthetic comments that will become very apparent say? ten years down the line. Absolutely mind bending. _________________________________________________________________ The new MSN 8: smart spam protection and 2 months FREE* http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org