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From:
Martin Glaubitz
To:
Idm (E-mail)
Date:
Wed, 8 Dec 1999 15:26:02 -0700
Subject:
(idm) IDM oldies III - Feed Me Weird Things
Msg-Id:
<000f01bf41cb$3681b560$947db2a8@martin>
Mbox:
idm.9912.gz
Artist - Squarepusher Album "Feed Me Weird Things" This is one of my favorite albums. These songs really go somewhere; they progress. Moods change. Themes evolve. It is a very dynamic album. Plus it's worth getting just for the PRichard.D.Jams back cover notes alone. This was the first Squarepusher album and his first material to be released on CD, I believe. It epitomizes the dense, sophisticated, lightning fast sampler/computer/drum machine programming that became all the rage of IDM posterboys Aphex Twin, Plug, MuZiq, etc about three or four years back. The album is also rich with a jazz sensibility. What do I mean by that? Not jazz in the sense of samples of someone playing a sax or a trumpet or vibes (like Throbbing Pouch or Tribe Called Quest), but jazz in a conceptual sense. There's a sort of improvised feel on a lot of the songs. Plus he plays his electric bass a good bit on this album. Also there's lots of jazztype chords that I bet would have those complex names, like "Emin7/11 extended", stuff like that. Since that time, Squarepusher largely discarded this style and moved into more noodley, less structured jazz territory. His most recent release Selection Sixteen seems to be a return of sorts to his earlier more spirited d'n'b style. I have to listen to Selection 16 a little bit more though. Sidebar 1: A preliminary listen to Selection 16 reveals the extensive use of those high pitched shaky hi-hatty cymbals, like the same as what Luke Vibert has used relentlessly on his stuff the last couple of years. You know, like "Chika chika chika..." through the whole song. I don't know, I don't like them that much. Sidebar 2: I think I read a couple months ago on the IDM list a description of the Aphex Twin remix of "Spotlight" as the first drill and bass song. Hmm. And now Feed Me Weird Things track by track: Squarepusher Theme - I hate to be overly dramatic, but if you 1. Haven't heard this album (or the corresponding 12" single of this opening song) and 2. Have an appreciation for jazzy d'n'b type programming, then I suggest you buy this album and listen to it the first time, comfortably seated, loud, with headphones. Of course, a lot of music is best listened to loud with headphones on. Still, I recommend it especially for this song. This song is a zenith in Tom J's catalog. Approachable, smooth, jazzy, percussively dense as hell, quirky but strong-footed. To me it summarizes how his early stuff was so innovative. Tundra - Classic Tom J programming, beautiful lush reverby pads. I love how that one drum machiney beat comes in all simple and bouncy the first time, then comes in the second time at like half tempo, then quickly builds and complicates. Nice basic jungley bass line toward the end. The Swifty - Off-kilter. A stumblebum has gotten hold of the drum machine and keeps hitting the snare drum pad at random. Well, we can work around that. Some wonderful restrained bass guitar work. Then the unrestrained beat comes back. The Ritalin is not working! Who will win? You will be on the edge of your seat. Dimotane Co - Let's get down to some thumping. Staticky, filtered beats. Phase the music. Try to tap your feet about a minute from the end. Synth chirping like a baby bird. Smedleys Melody - Welcome to Easy 103.787, nothing but shmoove jazz - what the - who left that door o - aargh! Windscale 2 - I wish I could tell you what break this song starts with, because I know I've heard it before in some hip hop song. I love that stutter percussion effect, where you just get a quick stab snippet of the snare or kick drum or what have you. A real quick envelope you know, cut off with no delay. Plug stuff used that technique well too. North Circular - A dense programming exercise. Very few tonal elements. The percussive stutter technique is in full effect. Goodnight Jade - A lovely beatless ambient tune reminescent of Aphex's SAWII. Theme from Ernest Borgnine - Echoey harmonies repeat and build. Breakbeat starts on a dime. Break it down. Harmonies remain. The kick drum from Dimotane Co is invited back to the party. This song is the most repetitive on the album, in terms of structure. Tom J plays with subtle changes of percussive and tonal texture, a deviation from his technique on most other songs on this album. And he shows off what I guess is his TB-303 in a most gratuitously squelchy acid fashion. UFO's Over Leytonstone - Ripping down-tempo melancholy hip hop beat. This track is also a departure from the norm, in that it lacks both the trademark (at that time) Tom J programming flourishes and a breakneck pace. Magestic and foreboding. Kodack - A simple repeating jazz chord phrase with quick-tempoed driving flammy drum machine programming. An Amen-derived (I think) break, 70s theme song type funkyass wah-wah. Future Gibbon - Drill 'n' squirt. Heavy cymbal use, foreshadowing the ludicrously obnoxious cymbals on subsequent Vic Acid and Big Loada EPs. I got a Squarepusher mix tape (really mixed on turntables) called "The Shining" once from an IDM listmember. I forget who. It was like half songs from this album and half older stuff. That tape is great; mixed real smooth. I gotta find where I put it. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org