179,854Messages
9,130Senders
30Years
342mboxes

← back to listing · view thread

From:
Sean Cooper
To:
Date:
Fri, 7 Jun 1996 20:07:10 -0800
Subject:
(idm) pot shots at sacred cows, opus 24
Msg-Id:
<v01510100addea5571ed4@[204.156.134.105]>
Mbox:
idm.9606.gz
like many on this list, i've been watching with some interest the growing infatuation with yer Squarepusher, noting with fascination and not a little anticipation the use of descriptors like "Mr. Future Of Music" and cute little sigs like "octahedral puller," etc. stumbling across his "feed me weird things" at the record store today, i was thus delighted to finally have opportunity to experience for myself the growing phenomenon that this individual is rapidly becoming...i will say i had chance to hear the rephlex 12-inch that preceded this long-player some weeks back, and, i must admit, was not all that impressed. some good ideas, i thought (particularly the live soloing and his mutation of jazz and blues-based music phrasing in the context of drum'n'bass), but for the most part flooded with business, flat delivery, hurried production, and a general lack of dynamics...rome, i reminded myself humbly, was not built in a day, and i allowed the fellow a hollow introduction with the agreement to listen closely to his full-length upon its release and decide then as to his value... ...so, i did. and i must say my mind hasn't changed. granted, i listened somewhat quickly, on headphones, in the record store, giving only a minute to a minute-and-a-half to each track (although i listened to "theme" in its entirety)...my criticisms will be brief: although not untalented (indeed, it could be argued that Mr. Pusher is one of few junglists attempting to extract drum'n'bass from the conceptual rut its been lying in for some months now), Squarepusher's "feed me weird things" seemed to me to be something of the drum'n'bass equivelent of the worst of late-era hard-bop or (yikes!) early '70s jazz-rock fusion. like middle period jazz messengers or the latter incarnations of the mahavishnu orchestra, Squarepusher assembles a euphoric, dizzying array of technique and stylistic facility before the listener, and one which is, at least where these ears are concerned, entirely devoid of emotional content and compositional dynamics. now, i don't mean to say i don't like the album 'cuz it's not Serious and Involved and other things like that--i've got as much zappa as berio in my collection. but, as in the case of the ep, the music seems to be operating from the principle that, if fucked-up sounds good ev'ry coupla bars, why...it'll sound even better for eight bars solid, or indeed, all the way through! but after the upteenth flanged high-hat sixteenth note is arranged and the fourth or fifth layer of reverse time-stretched drum shot applied, i'm left with the criticism of grotus' first album vocalist lars fox offered me when i asked him what he thought of it: "it's all highs and no lows. which means its effectively no highs at all." ...i bought "hidden camera" instead. sc onnow: the melvins : stag (atlantic; now _this_ i like...)