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

← back to listing · view thread

From:
andnbsp
To:
Date:
Thu, 7 Jun 2001 07:39:01 -0700 (PDT)
Subject:
[idm] Plaid: Double Figure
Msg-Id:
<20010607143902.21874.qmail@web4702.mail.yahoo.com>
Mbox:
idm.0106.gz
Got this in the mail over the weekend, and have gotten my head wrapped tightly enough around it to hopefully drop some helpful opinions. Not that it's a particularly difficult album; it pretty much continues in the smooth-but-angular vein cut out by their previous material. There are no real departures here from the typical "Plaid" sound (whatever that means to you), which is cool cuz it's a NICE sound, and it probably takes as much talent to find a niche and stick with it without stagnating as it does to constantly break new ground. Double Figure starts strong with four great tracks in a row. "Eyen"'s first minute finds Plaid playing all pretty-like, with guitar work similar to "Ralome" off of Rest Proof Clockwork. Eventually a beat is dropped and the tune evolves, and by the end of the track, they've added all sorts of fuzzy synth lines and other neat insturmentation while managing to keep it all tied to the opening theme for a cool ass aggro-ethreal vibe. "Assault On Precinct Zero" is smooth, smooth synth pop, and one of the best songs here. Beginning at track 8, Plaid start throwing short interludes between tracks, as was the style at the time during their BDP years with the Bolts and the Phils and the whatnot. What's sweet about the Taks on Double Figure is that they're actually sorta nice melodic pieces that bridge gaps between tracks instead of the random, jerky tangents on Spanners and Bytes. "Tak 1" introduces "New Family" quite nicely. "Zala" begins the second half of the album with a tense, cartoonish freak-out that sets the tone for what's to come. The rest of the tracks here are more dissonant than what's been heard previously, up until "Ti Bom" and "Manyme," where the album ends on a jazz tip. "Manyme" features a bunch of pretty processed vocals, "Ti Bom" a bunch of rolling drums. Cool. So what we've got is a solid but not groundbreaking album (which is a good thing, IMO). There are nineteen tracks (including the Taks), and things rarely sound same-y. The only real weak point here is "Twin Home," which ain't terrible, but just leaves me all like, "eh." This is good music for kickin it on your balcony on a nice clear night this summer. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get personalized email addresses from Yahoo! Mail - only $35 a year! http://personal.mail.yahoo.com/ --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org