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RObert Armani "Madman Stand"

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1995-09-29 17:02Ashok Divakaran 39191 RObert Armani "Madman Stand"
1995-09-30 00:28ozymandias G desiderata Re: RObert Armani "Madman Stand"
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1995-09-29 17:02Ashok Divakaran 39191Anyone heard this? Is it more interesting than his older stuff? It's has an amazingly cool
From:
Ashok Divakaran 39191
To:
Date:
Fri, 29 Sep 1995 17:02:26 +0000 (GMT)
Subject:
RObert Armani "Madman Stand"
permalink · <"A1370ZVYSINJGA*/R=WBWASH/R=A1/U=ASHOK DIVAKARAN/"@MHS.worldbank.org>
Anyone heard this? Is it more interesting than his older stuff? It's has an amazingly cool cover, that's for sure! Thanks, Ashok
1995-09-30 00:28ozymandias G desiderataDue to reasons that I'm not at liberty to discuss (mainly because they make me look kind o
From:
ozymandias G desiderata
To:
Ashok Divakaran 39191
Cc:
Date:
Fri, 29 Sep 1995 17:28:39 -0700
Subject:
Re: RObert Armani "Madman Stand"
permalink · <199509300028.RAA21249@eat.organic.com>
Due to reasons that I'm not at liberty to discuss (mainly because they make me look kind of dumb) I have _both_ the vinyl and CD versions of Madman Stand. If I had to place it in a rough hierarchy with the Armani stuff I have, it would fall at the bottom. This isn't to say that it isn't good; it's just not as rife with goodness as some of Armani's other work. There are a few good tracks, most notably "Secret Bass" (only on the CD) and "Supermarket Sweep", but on the whole, it's an incredibly monochromatic (not to say boring) album. Plus it's just too damn heavy -- it's mastered _very_ loud and the kick drum in almost all of the tracks is distorted. I'm sure the effect is intentional, but it makes mixing with it somewhat rough, and also makes listening to the whole album a somewhat abrasive experience. In other news, if any of you ever find a used copy of the Armani remixes on Djax, snap that ishwit right on up. Not only do you get the classic Hardfloor remix of "Circus Bells" (as heard on X-Mix 2!), you get mixes from White Delight (before he got so obnoxious), Armando, Spasms, and Mike Dearborn. Damn fine stuff, and properly aged at this point too. Yes, I'm still alive, and yes, I'm still writing reviews. But now that I've joined the Organic Online Conspiracy (world domination through server pushes!), I don't have the time to devote to this that I once did. Keep yr eyes peeled, though, because reviews of many fine and sundry things is on the horizon. Oh heck, here are some capsule reviews to tide you over: Freddy K - Soundz (ACV) [ACV1040] Freddy K - Rage of Age (ACV) [ACVDP008] Goofy, weird acid housy techno. Lots of crunchy beats interspersed with odd vocal samples and the occasional bit of synthesized flute. In parts it's very melodic, but in a good, wonky way. Leo Anibaldi - Block One (ACV) [ACV1044] Leo Anibaldi - Canibald (ACV) [ACVDP002] Fuck yeah! These records are great! Demented, fast, hard acid, alternating with creepy ambient moments. Yeah! Robert Armani - Right To Silence (ACV) [ACVDP006] Robert Armani - Madman Stand (ACV) [ACVDP007] The first is _much_ better than the second, but I like them both a lot. The best way to describe Armani is as a really REALLY hard house guy. Some of this stuff would even count as hardcore, but there's an overriding house aesthetic guiding it all. It was worth getting "Right To Silence" just to have the original version of Road Tour, the Adam X remix of which is one of my all time faves. Emmanuel Top - Acid Phase (Attack) [ATT-V-94 003] Emmanuel Top - La Pipe A Eau (Attack) [ATT-V-95 001] Emmanuel Top - Radio (Attack) [ATT-V-95 002] Ooo boy -- everybody needs at least one Emmanuel Top 12". These are some of the best fucking trancy techno records I've ever heard. Loopy, deep bassy, and slow (~120-135 BPM). All kind of samey sounding, but that's all right, because it's a great sound. Acid, echoey bleeps and, the occasional bit of deep, pounding coliseum-style old-school rave madness. H&M - Tranquilizer (Axis) [AX-001] Inner Sanctum - Inner Sanctum (Axis) [AX-003] Jeff Mills - The Purpose Maker (Axis) [AX-011] Millsart - Humana (Axis) [AX-012] X-103 - Tephra (Axis) [AX-013] Good stuff, but it's all kinda weird. Slower and more laid-back than most of the stuff I've bought recently. It's taking a while to sink in, but I think it's the kind of music that I wake up months later with a burning desire to hear. That Jeff Mills guy, he's a character! X-103 is particularly arresting, if only because the remix of Tephra is much dancier than the original. Insider - Enter The Electra World [World 1] (Bonzai) [BR95084] Insider - Enter The Electra World [World 2] (Bonzai) [BR95093] Amazing hard techno with lots of bleeps and heavily reverbed kick drum. Somebody really got into those poundy old-school tracks that had the crowds going nuts when raves first started, for sure. There's a lot of boom on these slabs of vinyl. "Blue" on _World 2_ is perhaps the only song I've ever heard that qualifies as deep hardcore -- it has that warm, enveloping feel that good deep house or trance has, but it's fast and has abrasive flanged noises at the same time. System 7 - Alpha Wave (Butterfly) [BFLT25] If you buy this on vinyl, get the Butterfly version, because Butterfly's pressing is about twice as loud as the Astralwerks version. Plus the sleeve looks cooler. I was actually surprised by how good the System 7 mixes were. Normally, System 7 sucks the big one (too much guitar wankery), but these mixes walk the line between progressive rock and deep techno (!) nicely. Plus the crowds do go apeshit for the Plastikman mix, yes indeed. Sad but true. Oxidation - Icicle Gun (D*Fusion) [DFR12004] More quality funky bizness from D*Fusion. Lots of pretty trancy chords over the top, but not overdone. Plus some of the beats are just too cool for words (all stuttery and shit). Rhythmically complex and upbeat, yet non-dorky. Cooooool. Emmanuel Top - Emmanuel Top (Dance Opera) [DO 420] Not as good as the other Emmanuel Top stuff, but still lots of fun. Very fast and ravey, with the old-school rave breakbeats thrown in. I kind of like this, kind of don't. I think most of my disappointment stems from the fact that it didn't sound like "Radio", which is one of the finer songs I've heard in a long while. Robert Armani - The Remixes (Djax Up-Beats) [DJAX177] Two words: Hardfloor remix. The Hardfloor remix of Circus Bells is one of the greatest classics of the rave world ever. Acid, cool sireny noises, and more acid. Lotsa thump. Hardfloor. Need I say more? The doublepack also has cool songs remixes by White Delight, Mike Dearborn, and other cool acid house folks. It was worth what I paid for it, no doubt (don't even _ask_). Suburban Hell - Shell Shock (Djax Up-Beats) [DJAX159] I've been looking for this record ever since I first heard "List 2" on the World Techno Tribe compilation. This is great, crunchy techno. It doesn't sound like it's three years old at all. Some of it is _really_ weird sounding, too. A treasure, and also worth the price. I was pleased but unsurprised to discover this 12" was by Edge of Motion, who has been cranking out the quality Dutch techno for quite some time now. Jammin' Unit - Flower Swing (Djungle Fever) [DF012] A pricey little tune ($16.99 for the 12"), but it's on yellow-orange vinyl and it's fucking WORTH IT! It's got some of the creepiest intro samples I've heard in a while: "There's you, me, and a dead girl. Let's see what happens." Plus a funky, skittery rhythm loop and ominous sounding thumps and scrapes in the background. The other tunes are quality Khan fast acid, with lots of unusually techno-sounding stuff in it. Woody McBride - Balance (Drop Bass) [DBN013] Ahhh, great shit on Drop Bass. Acid. Deranged acid, but acid. There's really not a whole lot more you can say about Woody, but that this is really fucking fun to DJ and to dance to. The Midwest Hardcorps knows how to have a good time. X-Trax - DJ Tim & DJ Misjah (Fokuss) [X-002] X-Trax - Special Acid Edition (Fokuss) [X-005] X-Trax - X-Connection (Fokuss) [X-006] X-Trax - Volume 3 (Fokuss / Aura) [SUSSX021] Like the Emmanuel Top stuff, this is excellent deep trancy (BOOM BOOM) techno. There's some surprisingly housey sounds in what is otherwise bass-heavy, ominous trance. It works, though. These tracks aren't very intelligent sounding, but they _will_ completely fill the floor, have no doubt. "Deeper inDeeper inDeeper inDeeper inDeeper inside myself..." Cerpent - Pacific / Mark V (Growth) [GTH104] Very very VERY melodic trance, but in an off-kilter way. The whole record is deeply soaked in reverb and echo, which keeps it from being bright and jolly. It sounds like it was recorded at the bottom of the ocean, but still is plenty danceable. Cool label art, as well. Bandulu - Fight The Oppressor (Infonet) [INF20T] Bandulu - Now / Non-Stop (Infonet) [INS001] Fight The Oppressor is good, but Now / Non-Stop is just plain strange. Very very loopy and kind of funky in an odd way. I don't really see it working on the dancefloor, but it's fun listening and it would work wonders on the floor if you built it up right. C.J. Bolland - Starship Universe (Internal) [LIARX22] I REALLY REALLY like one side of this three-sided EP, like one side, and the other side, eh, it's all right. The good side just slews all over the map, though. CJ Bolland has been making rave soundtracks since before there were raves (almost), and his expertise shows. Yeah, tracks like this manipulate the crowd somewhat (wait! Here comes a snare roll! Let's see those arms up in the air!), but the musical quality more than compensates. Stripped-down, fast techno, with acid farts and samples from Highlander. Robert Hood - Moveable Parts Chapter 1 (M-Plant) [MP304] This EP caught me off guard. I was expecting the same loopy, housy techno I usually get from Robert Hood (who used to be Underground Resistance's MC, is still good buds with Jeff Mills, and collaborates with him on a lot of the Axis records), but this is a beast of entirely a different breed. Yes, it's still a very repetitive record, heavy on the loops, but it's also darn fast and abrasive. Although it's not really hard, it would work well in a hard techno set. See how I reduce everything to DJing? Cristian Vogel - Beginning To Understand (Mille Plateaux) [MPLP8] Well, maybe not, because this record is definitely targetted at the home listening audience. I don't even think I can describe Cristian's sound to someone who hasn't heard any of his stuff. Abrasive beats, nothing really approaching a traditional melody, and heavy experimentation. You'd either have to be exceptionally creative and/or sadistic to unleash the majority of the tracks on this album on a dancing audience. Even the acidheads would have difficulty getting inside this music whilst bopping about. Great stuff, but weird. Consolidated - Brutal Equation (Nettwerk / IRS) [V13822] Consolidated - Consolidated (Nettwerk / IRS / Zoth Ommog) [W1-6308] Classics. You're shit if you don't own the Consolidated EP. The phattest industro-hip-hop beats EVER. Just my opinion, of course. :) The Mover - The Final Sickness (PCP) [PCP932] White Breaks Frankfurt - Volume 1 (PCP) [WB01] The Mover & Lunatic Asylum - Frequency Surfer (PCP / Dance Extacy) [DE2025] Heh heh heh. This music is eee-vil. Take an old, beat-up 909, a Casio SK-1 and a piece of shit old analog keyboard and record it straight into a cheap, old ghetto blaster. Make sure you do lots of drugs and are in a really bad mood before you start recording, but keep in mind that people (preferably skinheads on crystal meth, wearing black leather over their entire bodies) will want to dance to it (preferably in really big stadiums at 3 in the morning) at high volume. It helps if none of the songs are over 3 minutes long, because you're going to be cramming them 5 on a side onto a 12", or as a 45rpm side of a 10". Have fun! Go wild! Mescalinium United / Aphex Twin - We Have Arrived Remixes (R&S) [] Same as above, only now make sure you're in a REALLY bad and/or sadistic mood, because you're the Aphex Twin. Fucking brutal, man. Maybe that's why it's one of my favorite records of all time. Sonic Solution - Arab Girl / Bagdad (R&S) [RS93004] Perhaps my opinion of this track is colored by the fact that the tape I first heard it on also featured Moby's "Move" played at 45 rpm instead of the customary 33. At +8. Perhaps not. Good, solid old-school techno by CJ Bolland and Steve Cop. Bagdad has lots of neat samples from the old-school classic, "The Horn Track". Heavy on the straight-ahead kick drum. It's actually pretty stripped-down stuff for 1993, when it was released. The Source Experience - Synesthesia (R&S) [RS95055] All right. I love this guy, but he seems to be getting more boring over time. I like the most recent album, but hardly ever listen to it because of its sameyness. With that caveat, the b-side of this 12" is very good, in a traxxy (read: very directed towards the dancers) sort of way. But he better start getting more interesting, or he'll lose his coveted status as ozymandias' Favorite Techno Artist. Tournesol - Moonfunk (R&S) [RS95074] Blarrgh. Every so often I have to buy a loser, just to stay in shape. Bad hip hop, bad jungle, pointless ambient. I have something else by these guys that rocks ass, but this don't. In fact, it sucks. Avoid. Locust - Weathered Well (R&S / Apollo) [AMB3929] Locust - Natural Composite (R&S / Apollo) [AMB4935] Ahh, more like it! This is ambient music with class. It also isn't really ambient, but don't tell Mark Van Hoen that. Lots of very fast, skittery beats underneath menacing synthesizer washes. Occasional vocal snippets drift in at random moments just to show that Mark cares. It's very discordant and spooky, and is it any surprise that I think that's a Very Good Thing? Completely unplayable as dance music (don't tell me that, though, because I'm going to try to use it on your hapless selves at a convenient point in the near future), but a lot more interesting than most of the garbage that gets called "intelligent dance music". Most of _that_ only qualifies under the M of the name. Accelerator - Accelerator II (Reload) [REL95205] I really like the Accelerator records, but I'm somewhat at a loss to describe them. Take the hard bits of Jeff Mills' Waveform Transmissions, smooth them out a bit, make them a bit more moody, and add some really haunting and beautiful synth washes, and you have Accelerator. There's a sterile kind of funk at work here which keeps the music from being hardcore. Let's put it this way: I really like this 12", and it fits in _extremely_ well with the music I like to spin to the crowd. The fact that it is actually quite intelligently put together is only a bonus. Kinesthesia - Volume 1 (RePHLeX) [CAT 011] Kinesthesia - Volume 2 (RePHLeX) [CAT 014] Ummmm... hmmm... About half of the tracks on these two EPs are hideously weird and nasty hardcore tracks, and the other half are very pretty melodic techno. The hardcore tracks move from place to place without settling down and evince a very relaxed attitude towards structure (which is about the only thing about them which is relaxed). Sometimes I think that that's a good thing, sometime's I don't like it very much at all. The pretty songs are very pretty, which again leaves me feeling ambivalent. Overall, I'm very glad I have these two EPs -- they're experiments, and as such are worth cherishing. Chelsea Grin - Animal Factory (Sabrettes) [SR021] These girls are _mean_, and they're obviously out to make a point (the songs are titled "Slicing Machine" and "Piggies"). I think the point is lost on Americans, who as a whole are much less up on the whole animal-rights movement than the British, but maybe I'm too pessimistic. Anyway, the dark mood of the makers comes through strongly in the music. The beats are _very_ distorted, and are pretty much all that make up the song. There are muffled and tweaked samples in the background, along with a hint of acid, but that's all. Good for when you need to clean the goo out of the speakers and you're just not feeling very happy with the human race. Strongly recommended. Just owning it makes me feel better. Innersphere - Out Of Body Remixes (Sabrettes) [SR024R] This 12" surprised me. The original "Out of Body" is basically ambient dub, and the two remixes here are pretty radical reworks. The remix by Innersphere ditches most of the original elements of the song (ahh, those are the best kinds of remixes! :) and turns the song into a tense hardcore number that's so crunchy it's almost unplayable. Sabrettes seems to specialize in that kind of music. The other side is an Orb remix. If everything the Orb has been doing recently has been this cool, I need to pay closer attention to them. Their mix is some rockin' ambient. I like it lots. Pyrex Detox - The Bells of Induction (Sabrettes) [SR017] Smooth, trancy techno with cleverly-used samples. The title track (well, actually, the whole EP has a title, but I'm too lazy to look it up right now) uses bell samples so subtly that it took me a while to even figure out what they were. Dark without being ominous, and crunchy without being very hard. This label has some serious class. Sapiano - Spike It! (Sabrettes) [SR010] Sapiano - Mark 1 / Pound Flesh (Sabrettes) [SR022] Hmm... perhaps the titles give a hint as to what the music sounds like? Pretty generically hard techno, but with enough twists to keep it interesting. It's worth mentioning that this stuff is _very_ minimal, which makes it good stuff to mix. Plus the B-side of Spike It! is solid dark ambient stuff. I swear, there's very little difference between ambient techno and ambient industrial at times. Turbulent Force - Distorted Fantasy (Sabrettes) [SR026] I can see why Sabrettes stuff doesn't fly off the shelves. It takes a very particular kind of aesthetic to appreciate it. This is a fast, minimal techno EP that sounds much like the above Sapiano stuff, but which also has its own distinguishing moments. Sorry I'm not more specific, but it's not particularly describable music. I like it, but I know it's not everybody's cup of tea. Winx - How's The Music? (Sorted) [SO20091] Josh Wink may be an egotistical fashion victim who cranks out the cheese whiz tracks, but there's a reason for his popularity. I love this record, and have loved it ever since I discovered another copy of it hiding in Tobin's crate. Although I strongly prefer the "Original Philly Mix", with its repeated "how's the music" samples, I also like the other mix on that side of the EP. The two mixes on the other side are pretty tepid (like most of Josh's stuff), but the a-sides are classics. Minimal without being boring, somewhere between house, trance, and techno, and dark without being brooding. It's amazing that he can put records like this one, and then go crank out cheesy crowd pleasers like "Higher States of Consciousness". Felix Da Housecat - The Chaos Engine (Touche) [TO9514] Heads up! Felix is in da house! The reason Felix Stallings is my very favoritest house artist is that he completely fucks with every expectation you might have about house and techno. His music sounds like both at the same time, without the lack of quality that the merger of the two sounds normally implies. I also think that Jamez and Dobre (nee Tata Box Inhibitors) are the last saviors of trance -- they make it interesting to me. So when they remix Felix, I'm bound to be interested in the result. Which is perfect -- it's nothing that would stand out from the crowd, but it's an effortlessly breezy house / trance / techno track that builds and fades. It's packed with cool, smooth sounds and blurs dance music categories to the point of meaninglessness. The b-side tracks are cool as well. Tata Box Inhibitors - Protein (Touche) [TO9512] The single most perfect trance 12" produced in 1995. This is one of the few pieces of music I can think of that make me trance out every time I hear them. Jamez and Dobre are unsung geniuses. Subtle keyboard washes and relaxed acid lines come together to make a set of songs that simultaneously remind me of :zoviet-france:, Speedy J, and I don't know what else, but it's a good mix. A must-own piece of vinyl. Beautiful. Transcendant. And stuff. Tetraflux - The Untold Story (Touche) [TO9509] Take a soap opera theme song. Polish it a bit, but stay heavy on the piano. Filter it some. Let it build and develop a bit, and then drop a rhythm track under it. Fade it out quickly, and then bring it back just as fast, only with a big beat underneath it. There you go, that's "The Untold Story". I like it, but it's sort of a goofy track. The b-sides are a bit housy for my taste, but sometimes I get into them. RAC - Double-Jointed (Warp) [WAP61] A good review to end with. This is bad music to listen to with a hangover. The rhythms are clattery and loose, the acid is thick and bass-heavy, and this could be more electro-influenced, but not without trying really hard. I was surprised by how fast and abrasive it is (considering Warp's generally more sedate reputation), but not in a bad way. In fact, I think I like this even more than the last RAC EP I bought, which I liked quite a lot. You can probably tell that I originally wrote these for another friend of mine and as such they aren't as polished as I normally like, but hey, they're reviews, right? Hopefully I'll polish some of these up and get them out over the next few weeks, along with some of the other stuff I've been harboring for a while. Talk to y'all later. yrz, ozy ozymandias G desiderata ogd@organic.com Tomorrow's Web Sites Today (415)284-6888 http://www.organic.com Organic Online