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New muZiq "Grush" is out

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2024-06-14 16:57kent williams New muZiq "Grush" is out
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2024-06-14 16:57kent williamshttps://mikeparadinas.bandcamp.com/album/grush muziq has always been a producer with a dis
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Fri, 14 Jun 2024 11:57:27 -0500
Subject:
New muZiq "Grush" is out
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https://mikeparadinas.bandcamp.com/album/grush muziq has always been a producer with a distinctive musical style, the mark of an artist. A minute of any song and you know it's him. He loves a good manic ostinato playing with mournful synth pads, and he loves the classic breakbeats. He can make the Clyde Stubblefield "Think" break sound like square dance music for millepedes. But compared to some of the many, many artists he's released on his label Planet Mu, he's almost conservative. He loves his melodies, one reason Lara Rixtin Paradinas singing with him (in Heterotic) is a natural extension of what's already there in his music. He COULD be making pop records, but he has stranger fish to fry. In one respect he's still doing stuff that's very like his early Rephlex releases. But those records, made in his early 20s, were made without the mushrooming context of the UKs mad electronic music scene, something he was instrumental in bringing about with his hugely influential record label. The innocent goofiness and utopian optimism of the UK rave scene he grew up with is tempered by maturity, but the playfulness and whimsy remains. Of all the classic Warp/Rephlex artists, Paradinas is the least concerned with sound design. His old records made the best possible use of Roland D50 presets. Nothing in "Grush" will make you say "wow how did he make that sound?" But it doesn't matter because he's mastered tricksy drum programming and putting it in service of soaring melodies. Someone might listen and think there's nothing new here, but if you do, you're not hearing what he's doing. This is the last 35 years of electronic distilled by a person who, a hundred years ago, would be writing traditional dancehall ballads. Because the song's the thing.