179,854Messages
9,130Senders
30Years
342mboxes

← back to listing · view thread

From:
Jon Drukman
Date:
Tue, 10 Aug 93 10:43:29 PDT
Subject:
IDM TIMES 1.3
Mbox:
idm.9308.gz
INTELLIGENT DANCE MUSIC TIMES V1.3 XDWombat checking in again to beam some techno jammies straight into your brain. Digital dump THIS, baby. Note to those unfamiliar: if I say something is The Shit, this means that it is a GOOD thing. Sandoz - Digital Lifeforms Touch TO:21 125 7:40 Armed Response 128 7:30 Chocolate Machine 121 8:01 Digital Lifeforms 124 6:54 Human Spirit 98 6:57 Drum Meditation 126 8:44 Limbo 133 8:24 Zombie Astral 126 6:44 Beam 120 7:49 Steel Tabernacle 121 9:11 White Darkness Sandoz == Richard Kirk of Cabaret Voltaire. Now, I've never been a huge fan of CabVol's house music, but this is The Shit. Originally released as 3 separate 12" singles, it reminds me of Orbital or Black Dog, in that the tracks tend to spin around and around in loops, building up to big towers of geometric abstraction. However, it's way better than either of those groups because the sounds and melodies are a lot cooler. The Digital Lifeforms of the title are strange multi-legged affairs with snaky tentacles. They writhe sensuously on "Zombie Astral" or slink along with a sleazy house beat on "Drum Meditation." It's sort of techno-tribal-jazz-dub house, if you can imagine that. Really trancy and wonderful. 10/10. Hardfloor - TB Resuscitation Harthouse HH CD 1 133 8:10 Lost In The Silverbox 128 8:15 Trancescript 146 4:41 Teebeestroica 140 7:47 Into The Nature 140 4:50 Brachalde Rontzdrate 125 8:56 Acperience 1 132 5:04 Drugoverlord (remix) 119 7:58 AM-Trip "Dedicated to the inventor of the Roland TB-303" is says on the back, and it's not hard to see why. This album is basically nothing but 303 acid and (mainly) 909 drums. The songs are all pretty similar - they build and build, adding layers of 303 and 909 and the occasional extra synth until you've got a huge throbbing tower of power. This formula recurs with the main difference between tracks being the tempo. If you've heard Acperience 1, this is still the definitive statement, in my book, probably because I prefer medium-tempo stuff to the headbanging 140+ things. Acperience just grooves along at a nice pace until the snares come in and the thing explodes in an orgasmic frenzy of squirting 303 sounds. Quite a rush. "Drugoverlord" is actually kind of a change, having little in the way of 303, and having a more bouncy, swung beat. Pity it's not very interesting. Summary: acid acid and more acid. 7/10. Eat Static - Abduction Planet Dog BARK CD 001 132 7:21 Prana 136 6:29 Gulf Breeze 142 6:46 Kalika 118 8:39 Splitting World 134 6:41 Kinetic Flow 142 8:13 Forgotten Rites 102 7:56 Abduction 138 6:07 Intruder 130 6:29 Xenomorph 135 6:07 Inner Peace I nearly shit a brick when this disc commenced with yet another sample of Terence McKenna. Please God, I prayed, cause all the recordings of this man's voice to be erased immediately. Fortunately, it was only a 3 second sample and there are NO MORE anywhere else on the disc! (Tim Leary, Gen P-Orridge, McKenna - if I never hear these voices on record ever again, I will be VERY happy.) Even more fortunately, the music on this disc is really incredible. "Prana" is a wonderful bouncy techno tune with some lovely analog squelches. "Abduction" is a gorgeous trip, with a long ambient intro leading into a memorable and pretty melody. This is quality stuff! One thing I should mention is that the songs actually *go places*! Yes, they have direction, rather than being 8 minutes worth of loops. Right on. And despite the prevalence of high tempi, the songs are absolutely NOT typical headbanging hardcore. Summary: Solid album of intelligent listening music - danceable and highly melodic. 9/10.