Tuesday Nov. 8th @ the Baltic Room
Oscillate, Decibel & the Red Bull Music Academy proudly present:
MORGAN GEIST (a.k.a. Metro Area, Kelley Polar Quartet) - New Jersey
Eviron, Clear, Metamorphic, Naked Records
ANDREAS TILLIANDER (a.k.a. LowFour, Mokira) - Sweden
Mille Plateaux, Raster.Noton, Ideal, Type Records
w/ Oscillate residents:
Greg Skidmore
Electrosect
Visuals by Shannon Palmer
$10
21+
9am - 2am
Baltic Room
1207 E. Pine St.
quoted 1 line CHECK OUT THIS WEEKS STRANGER PREVIEW:
>>>CHECK OUT THIS WEEKS STRANGER PREVIEW:
Data Breaker
ANDREAS TILLIANDER/MORGAN GEIST
BY DAVE SEGAL
This week's Oscillate offers the unusually flavorful bill of Swedish
producer Andreas Tilliander and New Jersey DJ/producer/Environ Records
magnate Morgan Geist, together for the first time (partially due to the Red
Bull Music Academy). This should be interesting.
The best place to start your Tilliander studies is with Elit (Mille
Plateaux, 2002), a heady exploration of glitchy, fractured funk bathed in
hazy whorls of digital ectoplasm. It's a mystery why American rappers
haven't Blackberry-ed Tilliander to lace some Nordic magic into their
tracks. "Duplicity," featuring the alpha-male rapping of Fu Dogg, is a
paragon of glitch-hop, sounding like a series of power-squatting rhythm
boxes. "When Routine Bites Hard" is gorgeous, aquatic dubhop. Also check
"Nerdy South" off the Clicks & Cuts 3 compilation, a louche, Scandinavian
inversion of Hotlanta rhythmic schematics over which Andre 3000 would flip
(the script). Elit is one of the finest specimens of the short, spasmodic
clicks & cuts movement.
Under the name Mokira, Tilliander freeze-dries interiorized glitch funk ? la
the great Frank Bretschneider (for whose Raster-Noton label Mokira issued
Cliphop). On Album and FFT POP, Mokira similarly takes ambient music to a
virtual Antarctica and crystallizes it into weird new shapes.
Some of Tilliander's recent work shifts toward glossier, more driving 4/4
propulsion that embraces the "digital disco" ethos Force Inc. was pushing a
few years ago, while also dabbling in schaffel techno. A distressing
fondness for cloying, cheesy vocals mars this new output; Tilliander
operates best sans singers and affected sheen. The deeper he goes, the
better he sounds.
Geist has built a vast discography out of the fertile nexus where soulful,
night-cruisin' Detroit techno and limber-limbed electro meet. "I Want To..."
off the Freezone 4 comp exemplifies this approach, with levitational synth
pads and rugged yet sensual whip-crack funk rhythms. The Vaseline-lensed
electro of "Lullaby" (on Erlend ?ye's DJ-Kicks album) reveals Geist's
romantic side. And Fabric Club DJ Craig Richards chose "Food and Fuel" to
enhance his dark, psychedelic electro mix Fabric 15: Tyrant, which makes
paranoia sound delectable. The latter track comes from Geist's out-of-print
1997 LP The Driving Memoirs, which is regarded as the finest release by cult
British electronic label Clear.
Geist also plays in Metro Area with Darshan Jesrani. Their self-titled 2002
album stands as one of the decade's most impeccably produced and puissant
electro-disco albums. Album highlight "Miura" possesses a potently
mesmerizing quality, weaving a stoned reverbed bass line, clipped,
clap-enhanced beats, Laurie Anderson-esque "oh oh"s, and seductively
frazzled synth tones into a definitive dance jam. The whole disc oozes
class, and when it's playing it makes you feel about five times richer than
you actually are. The zeit is right for Geist. DAVE SEGAL
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