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From:
eric
To:
,
Date:
Mon, 13 Nov 1995 21:23:29 GMT
Subject:
(idm) REVIEW: Cybernet Systems "The Borg EP"
Msg-Id:
<199511132123.VAA06733@shellx.best.com>
Mbox:
idm.9511.gz
Cybernet Systems "The Borg EP" (Panic Trax #001 12") This: 1. We are Borg 2. Elektrotek That: 1. Extreme Force 2. Will I Dream? There is a standard Jeff Mills quote floating around that says that if a song sounds like you've heard it before, then it isn't Techno (with a capital 'T'). This can be taken to a logical extreme to say that in the best of all techno worlds, the #1 album on the charts would be some aimless experiment by Stockhausen or the Aphex Twin. The absurdity of this notion is obvious on its face - especially in light of the Detroit pioneers' output over the past few years - but is a valuable motivator for those who like their techno to actually have something new going for it. Herein lies a dilemma: How to blaze a new trail without getting lost in the forest and separated from your friends? The most recent cause nostalgee in dance music is electro. The early techno form has inspired many to take their favorite trance and acid-house elements and slop them onto a standard minitruck beat, flattening a once-madly dynamic style for the emperor's new props, while ignoring the atmosphere of radical innovation that birthed their progenitors more than a decade ago. One of these ancestors was Dynamix II, best known for the Hot Classic bass anthem, "Give the DJ a Break." Coming back out from the shadows to help out "P. Klein" on a blazing cut of electro-tronik mayhem called "We are Borg," they forge a zipper-synth bass jammy that will keep your woofers happy and perhaps give you a chuckle at the same time with vocal samples ironically reminiscent of Frank Zappa's "Sy Borg." This record is a great example of learning from the decade that electro has been away. Perhaps through the influence of people that were there way back when, Mr.(?) Klein has broken through the stagnant tropes of re-creation and appropriation to provide us with an up to date cross section of his interpretation of the Idea of Techno. Dirt-funk sounds dripping with resonance and galloping Q-tips quote the foundations laid by others, a la "Tour de France" and "Pack Jam," hanging back while the interplay of the sounds and rhythms take center-stage. Though the breaks you find on this and other present-day electro are not nearly as radical as those found on, say, "Yes, Yes, Yes" by Uncle Jamm's Army, the textures tend to be a bit more mature and complex. Not switching direction as they break, but steering as they meander. BTW, "Elektrotek" has the most extreme tweak on a vocoder that I've ever heard. 9 eh