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From:
CiM
To:
uk-dance , IDM
Date:
Mon, 14 Nov 1994 12:39:05 +0000 (GMT)
Subject:
REVIEW : Black Dog @ Noriwch, UK
Msg-Id:
<Pine.3.89.9411141211.B17266-0100000@oxygen.sys.uea.ac.uk>
Mbox:
idm.9411.gz
REVIEW : Black Dog Evolver + DJ Mark Broom & Off-Yer-Face DJs @ University of East Anglia, Norwich, England 12.11.1994 Black Dog! Fuck me! Their only English live PA! In _Norwich_ of all places! I thought I was dreaming when I saw the flyers... Initial efforts to secure a ticket proved pretty tricky though; mainly due to the fact that the original venue (the Norwich Arts Centre) was forced to close. Pretty damn luckily though, the venue changed to the University LCR and the gig itself changed to a fund-raiser to keep the Arts Centre open (which it now is). 'kin A. Initial impressions were pretty poor as we entered the LCR. Crap Megadog rejected flurescent drapes adorned the walls and the music was some happy club stuff. All very well of course but we were expecting full-on techno right from the start, what with the promise of a Broom set and Black Dog later. Having winced through an hour of piano breakdowns, Evolver then made their entrance. Initially, it looked quite promising; a few synths, a mixing desk and most interestingly, some 'natural' percussion (bongos, bells, maracas, etc). A shame then that the new Planet Dog signees turned out to be the biggest load of cack imaginable. The natural percussion was played awkwardly over the top of their lame trancey melodies and uninspired 4/4 beats. One of the keyboard 'players' also had the most horrendous hairstyle yet seen in the world of techno (after Kris Needs'). Truly abysmal. It wasn't helped by the fire swallower and robot dancer either. More Off-Yer-Face club malarky then followed but soon eased into a more minimal techno set. Mark Broom (Fat Cat records, A13, ...) then picked it up with a (slightly too) hard Basic Channel-esque sound. My knee joints had sealed together as a result of sitting around during Ev*lver and began to unglue just as Mark Broom finished his set, so I was all nice and ready for the Dog. As it turned out, it was a wasted effort. I didn't dance once during Black Dog. This was not because I didn't want to, it was exactly the opposite; I _really_ wanted to dance. Seriously. The only problem was that I was too busy listening. Oh, and trying to stop my jaw from continually dropping to the floor. You see, Black Dog were fucking amazing. I've never heard anything like it before in my life. You could tell it was Black Dog all-right; the fractured rhythms and dischordant sounds were in abundance, but it was a _tighter_ Black Dog sound. It was also bloody acidic. One 303/808 workout lasted 15 minutes and was comprised of the same loop over and over (with filter tweakery, naturally). But it never seemed to get boring; how the hell can they do that? I wasn't even dancing and it blew me away. The other tracks? Well, there were none that I recognised, although there were one or two that could easily have been on _Bytes_ or from their ART releases. Suffice to say that they were amazing too; gorgeous chords and sublime melodies, all dipped in their trademark hip-hop/ techno offspring rhythms. Only Black Dog can make melodies sound like hi-hats one minute and then morph a booming percussion sound into a bass-line the next. On paper, their seemingly random technique of fusing different melodies and drum patterns together shouldn't meld so well. In practice however, it just seems to _work_. I can't explain it; you're probably aware of how Black Dog tracks seem to mutate from chaos one minute into ordered beauty the next. If you're not, buy _Bytes_ or _Temple..._ and witness it for yourself; it's amazing. An example of this at the gig was a track that meshed a light, fuzzy rhythm with random notes played by some analogue synths. It must have gone on for about eight minutes; just these bizarre random notes. Sounds shit, doesn't it? Bzzzt, incorrect answer; it was phenomenal. It was also indescribable; I've got absolutely no idea how they did it :-( There were also a variety of mind-shagging acid tracks, all of them giving a fresh feel to this tired (IMHO) genre. They worked excellently alongside the more 'traditional' (is there such a thing?) Black Dog tracks. The gig ended on one of these acid monsters; a stretched out bastard of a track. It finished and I was finally able to connect my jaw just below my mouth, where it rightfully belongs. This was the only problem I had with the gig; it would have worked so much better if they had finished with one of their more thoughtful, placid tracks. But then again what do I know? I think I'll let them get away with this one, then ;-) Quote of the Week: "If people are impotent, they've been listening to FSOL" - FSOL (on the Rave New World program) [CiM] s.walley@sys.uea.ac.uk http://www.sys.uea.ac.uk/~u9323899/