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From:
ozymandias G desiderata
To:
blah blah Aphex Twin blah blah Squarepusher
Date:
Mon, 05 Aug 1996 01:04:55 -0700
Subject:
(idm) Spooky: New Wave Gamelan Music?
Msg-Id:
<199608050804.BAA11825@aoaioxxysz.organic.com>
Mbox:
idm.9608.gz
an irregular ::AOAIOXXYSZ:: communication Read on to hear what I think about a group that manages to remind me of Orbital, Autechre, BDP, Aphex Twin, Talk Talk, Michael Nyman, gamelan orchestras and the Cocteau Twins, often all at once. Hint: I like it. Reviewed Herein: idm Spooky - Clank (Generic / A&M) idm Spooky - Stereo (Generic / A&M) idm Spooky - Shunt (Generic / A&M) idm Spooky - Found Sound (Generic / A&M) Artist: Spooky Title : Clank Label : Generic / A&M Year : 1995 Cat No: GENRT001 Format: 12" / CDS Clank Oblong Thai Relief Artist: Spooky Title : Stereo Label : Generic / A&M Year : 1995 Cat No: GENRT002 Format: 12" / CDS Stereo Can't Remember Do Not Adjust Your Set Mono Artist: Spooky Title : Shunt Label : Generic / A&M Year : 1996 Cat No: GENRT003 Format: 12" / CDS Shunt Area 39 Concussion Falx Artist: Spooky Title : Found Sound Label : Generic / A&M Year : 1996 Cat No: GENRCD1 Format: 2xLP / CD 4:50 Central Heating 5:41 Miscellaneous 1:20 Onglon 5:21 Bamboo 4:42 Aphonia 5:10 Tungsten 2:54 Lowest Common Denominator 1:09 Relapse 6:09 Hypo-Allergenic 4:06 Fingerbobs 1:09 Plan B 5:50 Concussion 0:55 Interim 5:26 Consume 6:02 Silver 4:02 Seneschal It surprises me that more hasn't been said about recent Spooky output. I count my three Spooky EPs (and now, the new album) as some of my favorite records from the past two years. Their music is intelligently constructed to the point of almost being intractable, but is also infused with a warm pop sensibility that I often find missing in music hailed by the IDM crowd. By turns reminiscent of Autechre, the Black Dog, Orbital, and the Aphex Twin, overlaid with a thick New Wave melodic base, Spooky's music ultimately sounds only like itself. Most people who know Spooky's name remember them from their days as one of the flagship progressive house acts on William Orbit's now-dead Guerilla Records. Their story is that William Orbit found them either hanging out in or working at a record store (I forget which), liked something about their attitudes, and turned them loose in the Guerilla studios. The result was a handful of popular singles and their debut LP, _Gargantuan_. Although most of their early music was "merely" well- crafted, melodic house, _Gargantuan_ was notable for its experimentation and tight construction (I loved it, at least). Their early releases also showed a fondness for subtle melody ("Little Bullet [Dumdum Mix]") and a willingness to experiment with rhythm (the Steppin' Razor (Underworld) remix of "Schmoo") that has stayed with them ever since. Like most of the Guerilla roster, Spooky disappeared for awhile when Orbit shut Guerilla down, and I stopped thinking about them (although I'm still searching for copies of the "Little Bullet" and "Schmoo" singles -- anybody who wants to get rid of or trade them should get in touch with me). However, last autumn, a few people on this list mentioned that they were putting out new releases on their own label (distributed, oddly enough, by A&M) and that they were weird and IDM-relevant, so I decided to check them out. What I found blew me away. Not only is the new Spooky much improved over the old Spooky, each new release is a huge leap ahead of the previous ones (and indeed most dance music being produced, period). Endlessly listenable, intricate, heartbreakingly emotional at times, and certain to cause damage on the dance floor, Spooky have come to embody to me everything that IDM has the potential to be. I don't think I can pay them a higher compliment than that. "Clank" is the weakest release of the bunch, but I don't think that's saying much, because it's a solid release in its own right, and only suffers in comparison to later Spooky material. "Clank" and "Relief" are two different mixes of the same breakbeat track, but where "Clank" is chopped up, dissonant, and frequently uses backmasked beats, "Relief" is melodic and uses smooth, sampled female vocals to good effect. "Oblong" and "Thai" are the first of many Spooky tracks to show a prominent ethnic influence. "Oblong" sounds like nothing so much as an uptempo gamelan song over a breakbeat, and "Thai" is a haunted, downtempo counterpart. If you've never heard the most prominent cultural export of the Indonesian islands, you owe it to yourself to track down some good gamelan orchestra recordings. Gamelan orchestras are about as non-Western as music gets, with very different notions of tonality and rhythm than what most Westerners are accustomed to. They sound like rain in the jungle with their percussive metallic instruments. The gamelan's music almost manages to atone for what Indonesia has done to East Timor (namely, brutalized and tyrannized its people), but I guess that's neither here nor there. Spooky integrates their ethnic influences as tightly as the Black Dog, and to as good an effect. They obviously respect the artists who have influenced them, even when using that influence to craft something far more poppy than any gamelan recording I've ever heard (gamelan being widely regarded as the indigenous classical music of Indonesia). "Stereo" is one of my all-time favorite records, and the reason lies with the title track. "Stereo" is one of those rare songs that almost inevitably puts me in a happy, upbeat mood that makes me dance around my apartment. This track single-handedly brought me out of the deep depression I was in after I broke up with my last girlfriend. Relentlessly upbeat in all senses of the word, "Stereo" is a bouncy track with layers upon layers of organ riffs over a tight breakbeat loop. After introducing several themes, the track moves to a melodic climax that makes my chest tighten every time I listen to it. It's got a groovy beat and you can bug out to it. This track alone is reason enough to buy everything Spooky has ever recorded. "Mono," far from being a remix of "Stereo," is probably intended to be its spiritual complement. One of the few Spooky tracks to be built around a four-on-the-floor beat, "Mono" is hard-edged and droney, with an electric, feedback-driven edge to the synths and subtly percussive tones lurking under the surface. It's somewhat reminiscent of the more straight-ahead tracks from the D*Fusion stable (Mr. Ballistic, Anoesis, and the rest of that gang) but without the clubby overtones. "Can't Remember" and "Do Not Adjust Your Set" are relaxed tracks that introduce another recurring Spooky motif: metallic clangs used as instrumentation and percussion. If it weren't for the relentless melodicism of the tracks and the fact that nobody makes that stuff for real anymore, these two tracks would be called "industrial." But the presence of oboe-like synths, piano, and marimba on "Can't Remember" and the feedback-driven, distorted synth melodies of "Do Not Adjust Your Set" makes the two tracks difficult to classify. After the (at least marginal) accessibility of the first two of these EPs, "Shunt" came as a total surprise. If you want to talk about mind-melting releases, this should be high on your list. All the pieces are put together on this release: "Shunt," "Concussion," and "Falx" all feature distorted metallic clanging, unusual rhythms (even in the overtly four-on-the-floor "Concussion"), and taut, dissonant melodies. Sounding in parts like Autechre's "Anvil Vapre" (long may it wave), Aphex Twin's funkier remixes of Mescalinium United, and not much else, these tracks are a revelation that it took me a long time to fully comprehend. They're as amazing as anything that's come out on Warp, though. "Shunt" is the most noisy of the bunch. It's jerky, distorted, and angry-sounding, and doesn't possess anything really resembling a melody, for all its notes. For some odd reason crowds love it, though. "Concussion" returns to the gamelan sound, with metal banging sounds and the least straightforward four-on-the-floor I've heard in a while thrown in for good measure. "Falx" reminds me of the music from Donkey Kong Country, for some odd reason, but that's a good thing, because that game has the best video-game music I've heard in a long while, and because Spooky underpins it with a gorgeous New Wave-esque melody that hovers at the edge of hearing (plus it saves me from having to trot out my inevitable comparisons to the Myst soundtrack -- are the Millers ever going to realize that they could make a bundle of cash by releasing the soundtrack as a separate CD?). And, just to keep you from being too comfortable with Spooky as being clangorous noise freaks, "Area 39" is a brief, gorgeous interlude, which could have easily been tacked onto the end of Talk Talk's _Spirit of Eden_ (which is probably the single finest ambient jazz pop New Wave classical release EVER -- people who considers themselves music lovers and who don't own both _Spirit of Eden_ and _Laughing Stock_ should be flogged. Talk Talk have come a LONG way from "Talk Talk" and "Such a Shame", and like the mysterious and elusive My Bloody Valentine, had better get a new album out before I have to hunt them down and kill them). Which brings us, finally, to "Found Sound". Spooky bring everything together for this release, and the result bears comparison to such IDM masterpieces as BDP's _Bytes_ and Autechre's _Amber_. Spooky, like both BDP and Autechre, have found a sensibility all their own and made it shine, and used the result to produce a unified album that is much greater than the sum of its parts. Far from what I expected it to be (a collection of the three EPs onto one CD), this album spans the distance between Autechre ("Miscellaneous"), Orbital ("Tungsten" and "Fingerbobs" among others), Cocteau Twins ("Hypo-Allergenic", which was co-written with the Cocteaux) and Michael Nyman ("Lowest Common Denominator," which sounds like a much happier, more compressed version of bits of the "Drowning By Numbers" soundtrack). Musique concrete, techno, electro, and pop all have their moments on this 16-track album (astute readers will have noted the many shorter tracks on the albums, which should have been named "Phil x" for the role they play). This album is taut, dignified, and eclectic, and is my personal favorite for IDM album of the year (I still stand by my choice of Alec Empire's _Generation Star Wars_ as last year's best IDM release -- that album continues to grow on me). Spooky have grown to the point that they never do anything the way that you expect them to, and their songs are full of surprises. "Fingerbobs" manages to recapitulate Orbital's history (from the Green Album until now) in four minutes of song. "Lowest Common Denominator" is a beautiful piece of beatless, minimal piano work. The constant New Wave melodic references are almost always both unexpected and delightful (which is not a word that I thought _I_ would ever use in a record review, but it fits). Every one of the 16 tracks on this album belongs here. It's worth noting that Spooky have said that the initial three EPs are limited edition (in that they're only going to be pressed once, so once they're gone, they're gone), and that Spooky considers them to constitute a set together. Buy them now, while you still can. I'm almost willing to promise that you won't regret it, but I realize that the members of this list have widely varying tastes. If anything in this review piques your interest, though, do go to the effort of chasing this stuff to ground. At _least_ buy _Found Sound_. It needs to be heard by more people before it (and Spooky) will get the recognition it's due. It's the equal of any techno I've ever heard, and will continue to reward close listening for some time to come. yrz, ozymandias . . . the self-reflecting image of a narcotized mind . . . ozymandias G desiderata ogd@organic.com Desperate, Deathless (415)278-5674 http://www.organic.com/Staff/ogd/ ::AOAIOXXYSZ::