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From:
Papa Lazarou
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Date:
Thu, 20 Apr 2006 16:46:20 -0700 (PDT)
Subject:
Re: [idm] Music Reviews? wake up
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Is it a post genre of ambient gabba? ;) Ed Hoc <meatsock@gmail.com> wrote: yeah but what does breakcore mean On 4/20/06, Papa Lazarou wrote:
quoted 18 lines Mash Up Soundsystem - A Great Escape from Lunacy Reviews » Fusing together samples, breakb> Mash Up Soundsystem - A Great Escape from Lunacy Reviews » Fusing together samples, breakbeats, electro noise, hip hop, and techno core, Mash Up Soundsystem smashes the rules to bits and tramples them to dust. "A Great Escape From Lunacy" could also have been written with a question mark at the end of the title. Offering an alternative lunacy to the one in which we live, Mash Up Soundsystem constructs a tower out of remnants from a Dadaist collage and stainless steel rejects from a modern architectural project. Intelligent and humorous, the music never fails to entertain. "The copier broke down, but tonight you're a star", are lyrics lifted from "Everybody Dance!" which kind of gives you an idea as to what you are in for. There are so many great tracks, such as "Plastic Bag", "Sourpuss Suicide", the brutal "Domestic Violence", the Capitol Hill party circuit song "Cocaine", and the follow-up track "The Fast Lane". There's even a little Big Brother ambience on > "Mikolaj", thrown in, as a totalitarian voice repeatedly urges you to "Control Yourself". Mostly, what you have here is a full-scale onslaught of beats and noise and blender ethics, done supremely well, and culminating on the final track "Like Dynamite". Not for the squeamish. 9 / 10 Michael Casano - Virus Magazine An antagonistic collective of noise anarchists, Mash Up Soundsystem has been leaving their mark on speaker systems and house parties with a series of 12" records. A Great Escape From Lunacy, their first CD, collects the best mind bombs from the underground vinyl in addition to some new noise grenades to toss onto your dance floor. The contributors -- aliases that further the collective's obscurative Singularity -- are Concrete Cookie, the Dog, Depth Error, the Maggot Farmer, Jism, Retrigger and Incredibad. Additionally, some tracks are collaborative efforts. This confusion is so you don't know who to blame when you slam dance your way into a > body cast or head trauma. Skewed vocal samples, blistering beats, acid trip hip-hop, noise-core filled with the sizzling percussion of bacon grease and ADD-fueled cut-ups are the styles of the day for Mash Up Soundsystem and these 23 tracks certainly play the field as they mangle and distort electronics. You'll get thirty seconds of vaguely sex-kitten moans (Jism's "Promenade") or a Merzbow-ian wash of noise for a little over a minute (Jism's "The World Pt2") before galloping off into chaotic splinter beat territory for four minutes with the Dog and Concrete Cookie stomper, "Reload." Retrigger, from Brazil, clevers sends up California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger by layering some of his cringe-worthy dialogue from a Rio travelogue video over a waterfall of electronics; while in "Tmnt vs The Sunset Riders," he captures a video-stream collision between animated turtles and sepia-toned westerns. The Maggot Farmer's "Sourpuss Suicide" is a beat poet's febrile nightmare > set to a stomping industrial Iszoloscope-style beat; while his "Domestic Violence" burns through the house like a techno party lit by flaming tribal torches. Concrete Cookie offers squelchy IDM punctuated by bubbling synths and tinny percussion ("Northern Lights") and rollicking street-party dance rhythms ("City Boy") filled with crowd noises and Rastafarian MCs hurling verses through decrepit megaphones. Depth Error's drum 'n' bass ("The Seeker") is charged with electrical current, guttering wires that make echoing sparks run across tautly programmed beats while "Please Reflect" groans with undercurrents of flexed rhythms, melody bending that lends menace to the caustic beats. The organization of A Great Escape From Lunacy keeps the listener off-guard. You roll from the hard mechanical beats of "Please Reflect" to the more tribal rhythms of Concrete Cookie's "Shut Up! [PMF]" to the groaning, mumbling ambience of Jism's "Mikolaj." Expectations are meant to be destroyed, > much like all preconceptions of music. Mash Up Soundsystem's guerilla assault will leave you dazed and confused, often within the same song. Heads wrecked. Mission accomplished. Mark Teppo - Igloo Magazine Mash Up Soundsystem's full-length debut mixes slaughterhouse electronix by underground beat wreckers like Concrete Cookie, Depth Error, and Maggot Farmer into a mutant hour-long set of techno-hip hop-breakcore ferocity. Strap yourself down for the chainsaw beats of "Reload," the decimating roar of "Plastic Bag," and twenty-one other tracks of noise-punk madness, ghoulish voices, and throbbing breaks. Retrigger contributes warped Mexican glitch ("Mete Bronco No couro do Cabrito") and arcade collage insanity ("TMNT vs the Sunset Riders") but, based on the evidence of industrial dance burners like "Shut Up [PMF]" and jittery electro-pop like "Northern Lights," it's Concrete Cookie's star that burns brightest. Though the proudly over-the-top and brazenly > politically incorrect ("Cocaine") mix careens over the cliff in "Everybody Dance!" the album's nadir arrives with Maggot Farmer's merciless grinder "Domestic Violence," its screeching howl about as calming as its title suggests. A Great Escape From Lunacy? More like an immolating plunge into it. Textura . org The opening sample on this album asks "what's there to smile about?" Well, if you apply that question to this album then the answer would be "plenty"... M.U.S.S (for abbreviations sake) are a collective of artists out of L.A who dabble in a variety of electronic styles and as a result are impossible to pigeonhole yet I think it can definitely be agreed that this collection of both old and new tracks is most definitely "drinking music". The album spans twenty three tracks, this may sound excessive but considering most of the tracks barely exceed the two minute barrier it's far from overkill and give M.U.S.S plenty of space in which to experiment with > styles from hip-hop to rhythmic noise, gabba to ragga and industrial soundscapes to breakcore. In fact that is nary a subgenre that remains impervious to the M.U.S.S treatment. The album tracks run into each other seamlessly and their short length means that (in this age of short attention spans) the listener does not have a chance to get bored at all. Particular tracks of note are the MC-led "Everybody Dance" (previewed on Hive Records "FUCK" compilation), "Fast Lane" and ode to the party drug, "Cocaine". Power Noise luminaries are given a run for their money with "Domestic Violence" and M.U.S.S prove they are at the best when doing something a little different from the norm with the wacky "Mete Bronca No Couro Do Cabrito" and "TMNT Vs The Sunset Riders". My only real criticisms of this album is that it is sometimes lacking in direction which was always going to be a slight problem given the variation on display and that the stand out tracks by far are the ones that > incorporate MCing into the mix. Given that there are only three tracks like this I think it could be something for M.U.S.S to exploit more next time around. 8 / 10 Rivetmike - Connexion Bizarre Mash Up Soundsystem, a politically conscious collective around a.o. the Dog, Concrete Cookie and the Maggot Farmer, has made quite some name with a series of 12 inches on their own label Mash Up Records. They mix industrial noise, hard techno, idm, hiphop, gabber, breakcore and more styles and with this are comparable with DuranDuranDuran and Doormouse. This cd is a compilation of their best tracks taken from the previously mentioned 12 inch releases and complemented with new tracks and tracks that have been released on the Fuck compilation of Hive, and i can assure you that this record is a total sonic mindfuck. Great broken beats, ambientgabber, hardcore idm, breaks, punknoise and clashing electronics. It doesn't matter, since it is all techno! The tracklist > counts as much as 23 tracks. Contributions from Concrete Cookie, the Dog, Depth Error, the Maggot Famrer, Jism, Retrigger [Brazil], Incredibad and more. This cd is limited to 1000 copies and available via Hive records in the USA. TekNoir - Gothtronic "A Great Escape From Lunacy" happens to be my first experience with Mash Up Soundsystem and I'm sure will leave a long lasting impression. From the beginning of the album to about "Sourpuss Suicide" you get aurally pulverizing hardcore Noise. This of course being the kind of Noise you can't help but want more of. Uniquely layered and relentlessly eclectic in character. With "Everybody Dance" the album begins to pick up and unleashes Mash Up's pop sensibilities. Soon you realize why they sport the term "mash up." Breakcore, Drum and Bass, Ragga, Industrialized Hip-Hop (see "Cocaine" and "Fast Lane") and hardcore tracks remain through out. I really like how loopy they let their drums go, which I'm sure makes it > impossible for people to refrain from dancing in the club, bedroom, rooftops, or Uranus. 8 / 10 Justin Mathew Mooney - Re:Automation Webzine Freeform electro mayhem that goes from zero to drill-press in under a second. The promo materials included with this CD shone no light whatsoever on what exactly this is, but Hive — a Jersey label specializing in promoting modern noise conundrums ranging from Tricky-on-downers melancholia (Leaf) to droid-romance navel-gaze albums (Pneumatic Detach) decked out with jewel case inserts starring pleasant motifs of no-kiddin-around cow hearts laying in all their bletchfulness on white tables — was eager to explain. It's a collaborative effort of producers/artists from Mash Up Records, you see, a brand name that would lead the culturally ambivalent to believe they'd be hearing things like Russell Crowe's Gladiator lines turned into vocal tracks over "ABC" by The Jacksons, but instead it's a buffet of experimental > laptop-noise Morse codes, post-hip-hop and inescapably trance-danceable hard techno. Includes contributions from Incredibad (Andy Samberg, Jorma Taccone and Akiva Shaffer from Saturday Night Live), who tag-team with Concrete Cookie for three rounds of MC Hammer-like spazz-rap. Eric Saeger - Hippo Press (NH) > > > > > --------------------------------- > Yahoo! Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low rates. >
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