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From:
Josh Davison
To:
Matthew Korfhage
Cc:
Date:
Wed, 28 Jun 2000 22:49:04 -0500 (CDT)
Subject:
Re: [idm] Loops of Lands of Loops and Slicker
Msg-Id:
<Pine.NEB.3.96.1000628224746.35675E-100000@shell-2.enteract.com>
In-Reply-To:
<20000628235911.37128.qmail@hotmail.com>
Mbox:
idm.0006.gz
funny thing: went out to dinner tonight and JH3 aka Slicker was in the restaurant with six (count 'em six) women all a giggling at his funny funny stories smooth bastid... -- String Theory : Digital Music for Humans http://www.enteract.com/~yoshi/index.cgi On Wed, 28 Jun 2000, Matthew Korfhage wrote:
quoted 59 lines Brian MacDonald <brianm@kuci.org> wrote:> > Brian MacDonald <brianm@kuci.org> wrote: > > >I think I finally encountered what sounds like The Album Of 2000 So > > >Far...Land Of The Loops "Puttering About A Small Land". Those of you > > >who picked up "Bundle Of Joy" within the past four years know Alan > > >Sutherland's craft of throwing together dope beats, children's >melodies > >incorporating guest female vocalists and dee-lish Peter Hook >style bass > >lines, Severed Heads style looping/delaying, and humorous >found-sound > >segues a la Coldcut. This new record should definitely >keep "Bundle Of > >Joy" fans happy, but it is far more spacey and dreamy >-- which shouldn't > >really come as a surprise if you also own and >enjoy the "Refried Treats" > >EP. > > Can't agree on the album of 2000 bit-- I like what Sutherland does, but he's > doing it on a treadmill. The new disc's aptly titled in that regard. I've > gotta give him some credit for churning out some nice no-effort answering > machine messages for those that don't like to hear their own voice on > recordings (even if David Berman thinks that's something you're supposed to > outgrow as you get older), but on a single listening I wasn't able to > discern much difference between Suth's work now and what he was doing in > '96. Although, BTW, anybody that's a fan of LoL should probably check out > Buckminster Fuzeboard's hyperactive cheese machine as well (album name > escapes me). Pleasant along the same vein, and features Alan on a few > tracks. > > Oh, and I know this album's been mentioned a couple times already, but I was > listening to Slicker's remix album today and was struck by something-- > Confidence in Duber sounds more like remixes than do the remixes. What I > mean is, the orig. album ALREADY sounds deconstructed (my guess is that the > original tape was an old alcoholic breathing moist static into a vocoder), > and the remixers sort of picked up the pieces and made more traditional, > cohering tracks, except that the resulting songs still couldn't avoid > sounding like Slicker songs. Hence the funny reversal. > Granted, it's not all that unusual that a remix might sound more traditional > or coherent than the original, but it IS rare the way it plays out here. > Hughes has this odd way of putting sounds together so that all the assorted > edges and pieces hang and jut against each other like an aural version of > cognitive dissonance, and it's as if the remixers brought the songs back to > the primitive state where the contradictions were never apparent and the > parts were allowed to juxtapose harmlessly. Hell, that even goes for Matmos' > three-platter pile-up. I think part of the reason might be that Slicker's > trademark stutter-step organic rhythms sound half the time like they're > trying not to trip over anything, and half the time like they ARE tripping > over something, and that's been ironed out a bit in the transition to the > remixes. > > Apologies for drivel. > > Matthew > ________________________________________________________________________ > Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org > For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > >
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