Sunday, April 26, 2015

DANCE MUSIC OVERLOAD:  Sonicnet column #1 
Sonicnet, 2000

by Simon Reynolds

There's a  record store in downtown Manhattan that always strikes me as some kind of metaphor for the state of dance music. The store is choked with vinyl, chock-a-block. The wall-racks are so densely layered with 12 inch singles, the records overlap so  you can only see a narrow strip of each sleeve's right side---the artist name and track titles are concealed,  you can't just scan the walls to find what you want, you have to peer up close at the price label, where the store has helpfully printed the information in tiny type. The record bins are so tightly crammed you can barely extract the discs from their sections, sleeves are torn and vinyl scuffed. Underneath the shelves, there's an overflow of back stock extending so far out into the aisles that customers have to put a foot up on top of the vinyl sprawl just to get near the bins or the listening decks. And at every deck, there's a tense-looking, sweaty kid in headphones with a fat stack of new tunes, skipping through the tracks with the stylus and trying to make judgement calls based on four seconds of intro/four seconds of groove/four seconds of breakdown, all in the desperate attempt to keep up with dance culture's Niagaran torrent of product.

This record  store is just about the only one  left in New York that still tries to stock every kind of
dance-floor oriented music, all the myriad subgenres of house, techno, trance, drum and bass, and breakbeat. (Its one concession to sanity: skimping on experimental electronica and CDs). Others Manhattan stores have narrowed their focus to just hard techno, or just deep house, or just jungle. But precisely because of  this particular store's  valiant attempt to encompass all the tributaries of the post-rave delta, it's getting harder to use the place, so overcrowded is it with records and customers trying to get at them. And that's where the metaphor bit comes in, because this mirrors the increasingly challenging nature of  attempting to navigate the electronic dance music universe, with its bewildering profusion of styles and its hyper-productivity.

Ten years ago, when rave first started to take off in North America, it was still physically possible to monitor the best output of every subgenre--a full time job, sure, but do-able if you were dedicated and determined. There weren't that many scenes to check, after all--everything was under the umbrella of house music back then, even techno. Today, it would take  all your time and energy to stay on top of  drum & bass, or minimal techno,  or garage, or any single genre---such is the high turnover of releases,  the vast number of independent labels and self-released records. This double whammy of stylistic splintering combined with ever-increasing volume of releases is the reason why people increasingly get on a  narrowcast track and become obsessed with just one kind of  music. Take trance, for instance.  Until a few years ago I'd always thought it was a homogenous and basically unified genre, but  all of sudden, that same Manhattan store  had an entire wall of trance divided up into a myriad micro-genres. Then I met this English psychedelic trance DJ and, curious whether she checked out stuff outside the psy-trance ghetto, asked what she thought of  hardtrance warrior Commander Tom, progressive trance god Paul Oakenfold, and others. She just looked blank.  Clearly, to be on top of your shit as a psy-trance DJ, you have to have tunnel vision focus.

Diagnosing the dance vinyl glut, it's tempting to bandy around phrases like "cultural overproduction" or "excess of access." But it's not like the do-it-yourself boom  is generating mountains of mediocrity that are snowcapped with one percent brilliance. No, the problem is there's too much good stuff out there-- well-made, intelligently conceived, tastefully executed, and pretty deserving of your attention. The same cheap music-making technology that causes the do-it-yourself phenomenon to  keep on mushrooming  is also allowing people to make studio-quality records at home.  An unexpected side effect of all this abundance, though, is a sort of optical illusion--the landmark records don't stand out so starkly against the plains of lameness. It also means it's harder for producers to make money, with average sales of a good (i.e. not a huge anthem) 12 inch in most genres hovering between 1000 and 2000 (and that's globally). Many producers only make tracks to boost their profile as DJs (which is where you can actually make some dough).
               
As  demanding as it is for consumers faced with dance music overload, there's no turning back the clock -- the DIY genie is out of the bottle.  Ultimately, do-it-yourself/release-it-yourself, both as  ideal  and as practice, has been fantastic for music. It just means that you have to abandon the notion of keeping tabs on all the good stuff from across the genrescape, accept that you're going to miss great records. One aspect of the DJ's job--and almost a justification for the fat fees these guys charge-- is their processing function: sifting through the pretty-decent stuff and finding the nuggets of genius, stringing the pearls together as a stellar set or slamming mix-CD. Well, that's how it's supposed to work anyway.


Meanwhile, the last time I went to that store, the over-stuffed-racks were almost falling of the walls. I'm waiting to read about the first record retail catastrophe: Aspiring Disc Jockey Crushed By Vinyl. 


[inspired by this oral history of Liquid Sky, NYC techno record store / rave-wear boutique, and sudden fit of nostalgia for the dance record stores I frequented in the 90s and early 2000s - Breakbeat Science, Sonic Groove, Satellite, and one on 14th between 3rd and 2nd whose name escapes me (Drop?).

The scene was so healthy that it could afford to specialise and fragment - there was even on dedicated just to psychedelic trance, run by a couple of Israeli expatriates

What was interesting to me about these stores was that they were cultural hubs - not just places to buy music, but to pick up flyers for raves and clubs, to buy clothing (especially early on most of the store also had a boutique section to ensure sufficient revenue stream), or just hang out. 

Satellite was the overcrowded store described in this piece - and funnily enough about a year after I wrote it, it moved to much larger premises further down Bowery, on the other side of Houston, where all the catering business equipment stores used to be. The new premises were dimly lit, roomy, great wide aisles, and lots and lots of turntables. Clearly the owners had realised it was at the point of utter dsyfunction in the old poky premises. Unfortunately the bottom fell out of the dance vinyl business, and they had closed down by the mid-2000s. But not before winning an "award" from Village Voice -

]

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

BoC

Boards of Canada
The Campfire Headphase
Warp Records
The Observer Music Monthly, September 17th 2005


by Simon Reynolds

Reach a certain age and you notice a peculiar thing happening: your thoughts frequently get interrupted by nonsequitur memory images, seemingly insignificant but disconcertingly vivid. It’s as if your overstuffed brain is calling up ancient files with a view to deleting for space. Boards of Canada offers a more benign version of this temps perdu recovery process. Somehow the Scottish duo’s signature sounds--those glistening melody-trails and misty-around-the-edges textures--trigger buried memories. I’d almost say that listening to Boards of Canada is a form of therapy, except that the emotions stirred up are too plangent--painful beauty, sweet sorrow--to deserve a term that now has such glib feel-good associations.

BoC have ploughed this “memory-work” terrain on their previous two albums, the home-listening electronica landmark Music Has A Right To Children (1998) and its only-slightly-less-fabulous sequel Geogaddi (2002). The Campfire Headphase pursues the same effect but with slightly different means. For the first time the group have incorporated acoustic and electric instruments, like guitars, alongside their customary array of vintage analog synths and digital samples. So they’re no longer making electronic music but an unclassifiable hybrid. Occasionally the new hues don’t seem as idiosyncratic as their patented faded-Super8-film synth tones, but then again, there’s a thin line between developing your own vocabulary and coining your own set of clichés, and we should probably applaud BoC's attempt to extend their palette. If the gorgeous mind-ripples of “Satellite Anthem” and the dewy-eyed dreamwalk of “’84 Pontiac Dream” represent classic BoC almost to the point of redundancy, “Dayvan Cowboy” steps off the group’s beaten path. The track risks bombast with its stirring strings and crashing cymbal rolls (which dazzle the ear, as if the sticks are splashing into a pool of mercury) but stays just the right side of overblown. 

Blurring the boundaries between rock and techno is a smart move,  because BoC have always made music that deserved to appeal beyond the electronic audience. You can imagine fans of My Bloody Valentine/Cocteau Twins-style dreampop falling head over heels for Headphase, or devotees of the Cure and Radiohead wallowing into its exquisitely textured melancholy. BoC can also be seen as heirs to the psychedelic tradition, grandchildren of Syd Barrett and the Incredible String Band. The connection comes through not just in the duo's obsession with childhood or their frankly goofy song titles, but also in the stereophonic delirium of their production. On the “Oscar See Through Red Eye” and “Slow This Bird,” sounds pan back and forth across the speakers, the drift and swirl making you melt into a voluptuous disorientation. 


Boards Of Canada
Geogaddi
(Warp)
Uncut, 2002

by Simon Reynolds


There's long been a strain of electronic music that's not fixated on the future but obsessed with the past--specifically, childhood.  You can hear it in the naive melodic refrains and spangly-tingly music-box/ice-cream van chimes of early Aphex and Mouse On Mars, or, more recently, on  recent albums by Fennesz, Tagaki Masakatsu, and Nobukazu Takemura, with their evocations of endless summer and bucolic bliss. Boards of Canada didn't invent this "idyllictronica" genre but they definitely codified it on their 1998 debut Music Has the Right To Children--from its title and  cover imagery of faded family holiday snaps to its quaint synth-tones (redolent of the perky-yet-wistful electronic interludes heard between mid-morning TV For Schools programmes). Even the group's name is a reference to the Canadian educational films they saw in secondary school.

"In A Beautiful Place Out In The Country"---the title track of the EP  they released in 2000 as a stop-gap stop for their devoted cult until the long-awaited second album--featured children's laughter and a rapturously  vocoderized entreaty to the listener:  "join a religious community and live out in a beautiful place out in the country."  Yet the music made by duo Marcus Eoin and Michael Sandison--who actually live in a kind of artist's commune in the  unspoilt wilds of Scotland--isn't actually that idyllic: at least, not in a pure unalloyed way. There's something unnerving, at times downright creepy,  about BOC's ability to unlock the listener's memories.

There's been times when I've had something close to out-of-body experiences while listening to BOC, carried away by an involuntary flood of images that are emotionally neutral yet charged with significance. A sort of mysticism of the mundane and municipal: reveries of concrete walkways and playgrounds with fresh rain on the swings, allotments and spinneys, canal-side recreation areas wreathed with morning fog, housing estates with identical backgardens and young mums pegging wet windflapped sheets on the clothing lines, clouds skidding across a cold blue winter sky. I'm never sure if these my own buried early childhood memories from the late Sixties, or just false memories--either dreamed or absorbed from 1970s episodes of Play For Today.  Sometiems an even more uncanny possibility suggests itself: what I'm seeing on the screen of my mind's eye are actually other people's memories, as if BOC could somehow tune into the memories of complete strangers the way Scanner samples mobile phone conversations.

Arriving almost four years after the debut, Geogaddi is basically more of the same only more so. The artwork offers kaleidoscope images of rosy-cheeked seven year old girls, and the teetering-off-pitch synths sound even more like washed-out Super-8 films. The only really new aspects this time round are the increased intricacy of the production (some of the tracks are so densely infolded they're like mille-feuille pastry) and a more pronounced fondness for the human voice. This can range from clearly decipherable soundbites (like the snippets of nature documentary voice-over on "Dandelion") to drastically treated vocals (on "Gyroscope", the sample's so distorted and compressed it's like the little girl trapped inside the TV in Poltergeist)  to vocoder-like FX (the ecstatic android plainsong on "Music Is Math"). There's even shades of  White Beatles in "a is to B as b is to c"'s collage of  shortwave and backwards-run vocals.

Ironically, the best stuff here--shatteringly poignant tracks like "1969", "The Beach At Redpoint", "Sunshine Recorder"--is  BOC sticking to their exquisite formula: crumbly smudges of textures and miasmic melody-lines  drifting like memory-gas over breakbeat rhythms that are like slowed-down jungle (processed to sound ultra-tactile, but stoically trudging like a elderly shire horse).  Geogaddi's few departures sometimes stray into gnarly Autechre-like abstruseness. Successful steps outside their own norm include  "Julie and Candy" (which  sounds like Loveless if Kevin Shields had tried to achieve the sound in his head armed only with a recorder and a toy piano) and "Alpha and Omega" (which recalls Holger Czukay's "Persian Love' with its Indian flute-motif, tinny ripples of tabla, and shortwave noises). Another unusual track is "The Devil Is In The Details," which sonically embodies the title with its ominous micro-sonic intricacies and hallucinatory texural vividness:  crinkly percussion possibly sampled from spashing water, a vocal noise like a muezzin miaouw, and a foreboding synth-motif I can only describe as "glinky".


Then again, the idea of development and progress may be not just irrelevant to Boards of Canada but somehow dissonant with their very essence. Recalling Proust and Nabokov's doomed project of retrieving "lost time", BOC's seem obsessed with uncovering "the past inside the present" (a sample on "Music Is Math"). As troubling as it is therapeutic, the music of Boards of Canada  seems to reach back into your own prehistory and part the mists of time. Somewhere inside that fog of frayed and faded memory lurks a beautiful and terrible secret.

Saturday, April 18, 2015

gloomcore and harshstep, 1998

Spin dance genre-watch column, June 1998

By Simon Reynolds

Once, there was just "hardcore"--rave music at its most flipped-out and
euphoric-aggressive fierce. Then, circa 1992, came the great parting of the
ways. English hardcore DJs mixed in hip hop breaks 'n' bass to create a
hyper-syncopated bedlam that eventually evolved into jungle. The rest of
the world stuck with techno's monolithic 4/4 stomp-beat and kept upping the
b.p.m's to ever more punishing extremes. For a while, the Dutch--in the
form of the Rotterdam sound called "gabba"--were harder than the rest. Then
other outposts--labels like Brooklyn's Industrial Strength, Milwaukee's
Drop Bass Network, France's Gangstar Toons IndustryAustralia's Bloody
Fist, and many more--took it further still.

By 1996, though, hardcore was banging its head against a brick wall
of  shlocky ultraviolence and 250-300 b.p.m. velocity. The more astute
producers took a step sideways from this braindead end. One escape route,
followed by Frankfurt's PCP and its sister-labels Dance Ecstasy 2001 and
Cold Rush, involved a style that just cries out for the absurd oxymoron
"ambient gabba": an atmospheric, slightly slower sound, heavy on cavernous
reverb, glacial textures and sorrowful melodies. Following awesomely
desolate dirges like Renegade Legion's "Torsion", the PCP crew have reached
something of an aesthetic pinnacle with Pilldriver's "Apocalypse Never",
the tenth Cold Rush release.



Pilldriver is one of many pseudonyms (see also The Mover,
Mescalinum United, Alien Christ) used by the mysterious Marc Acardipane,
probably hardcore's most visionary producer. "Apocalypse Never" harries the
listener with synth-stabs that sound like a swarm of bat-winged and
trident-wielding demons, while the unrelenting 4/4 kick-drum is so cleverly
inflected you never register it as monotony. For more glorious gloomcore,
check out the PCP compilation Bigger Bolder Better, plus Superpower,  a
six-track EP collaboration between PCP's Hypnotizer and New York's Oliver
Chesler, on the latter's Things To Come label.



Another increasingly popular "step sideways"  involves mixing
gabba's Teutonic terror-riffs with techstep jungle's paroxysmic breakbeats
and murky bombast.  From Drop Bass Network's sub-label Ghetto Safari and
Frankfurt's Chrome to the Paris imprint No-Tek and London's Ambush, this
new hybrid--known variously as  "splatterbreaks", "hardbreaks" or
"harsh-step"--is the emergent renegade sound at squat-raves.




Superficially, harsh-step seems to have much in common with Alec
Empire's Digital Hardcore, which also combines gabba's killer-bee drones,
sped-up breaks and fuzzguitar-like midfrequency noise. But unlike Digital
Hardcore's adrenalizingly one-dimensional scree, the Ambush producers
leaven their  assault with a superior sense of dynamics and space. Jackal &
Hide's Escape From South London EP is a lo-fi holocaust of industrial
effluent, eardrum-shredding snares and low-end turbulence. Aphasic & Scud's
Welcome To The Warren EP sounds like metal-bashers Einsturzende Neubauten
getting on the good foot. Best of the lot is the Give Up EP by David Hammer
(a.k.a DHR artist Shizuo), who interweaves different kinds of distortion
with a sensuous awareness of  audio-tactile texture.




Although Ambush's sound verges on outright avant-gardism, DJ
Scud--who recently played New York's Soundlab alongside DJ Spooky, Alec
Empire and Manhattan's own harsh-step crusader I-Sound--says his real
inspiration is the populist rave of 1991. Scud wants to bring back "the
madness and intensity" of early hardcore, "but not its happy-happy,
hands-in-the-air vibe". Hence the dystopian aura and abstract  militancy of
Ambush's four releases to date.




Sidestepping DHR's full-frontal approach
(sloganeering harangues), harsh-step's anarcho-politics are more subtle
--articulated in  techno-theory zines like Break/Flow, Datacide and Scud's
own Fallout, hinted at in the paramilitary imagery of track titles and band
names, and most of all, incarnated in the music itself. At once savage and
sophisticated, harsh-step is the sound of insubordination--not just against
sonic stagnation but against cultural lockdown too: the urban politics of
gentrification and ghettoization, the insidious normalization of
surveillance. If gabba was techno-as-heavy-metal, harsh-step is new
millennium punk-funk.



         

Friday, April 17, 2015

Extreme Music

A riff on 'Extreme Music and the appeal thereof' from 2007, which was written for someone else's book but not ever actually used, the time-wasting twat-head (said affectionately but with an under note of annoyance)

EXTREME MUSIC

What is the attraction of extreme music? What can "extreme" even mean nowadays, when the outer limits in every conceivable direction seem to have been probed? Besides, extremity depends on context and expectation.  If "extreme" has any meaning at all,shouldn't it be in reference to extremity of affect, the intensity of what the listener experiences? But then, as we can all surely attest, it's often the softest songs, the most gently seductive and caressing sounds, that cut you up most cruelly. Bursting into tears is a pretty extreme reaction to a piece of music, but I can't think of any noise record or avant-garde work that has done that to me. Whereas Al Green's "I'm Still In Love With You" or The Smiths' "There is A Light That Never Goes  Out" infallibly devastate. The most recent thing to make this grown man sob was Kraftwerk's "Autobahn", an innovative piece of music on many levels, but not really "extreme" or noisy, on the contrary, all euphony and Beach Boys-like honey to the ears. What  choked me up wasn't the poignant melody but the sheer aesthetic majesty of it, the spirit behind the work.

Conversely, I once fell asleep in a Galas concert (and I was a fan and admirer of her music!). The singer was aiming to conjure Old Testament levels of affliction, abjection and grief (the work was inspired by AIDS as a modern day plague). Yet the undifferentiated pitch of mind-rending anguish had the effect of lulling me into a doze. On the level of affect, Galas's work was on the same level as Mantovani. Or a  mug of Horlicks.

Nonetheless I remain obsessively drawn to the abstract and out-there in music, and I'm not exactly sure why. That's not unusual: often there seems to be a gap between the reasons we give for liking or validating certain kinds of music and what's really going. With noise, free jazz/improv, avant-classical, et al, there's a tendency to talk in terms of subversion or challenge, an assault on staid sensibilities. The music is envisioned as an edifying ordeal, a salutary and spiritually uplifting violation that will expand the listener's horizons. But in this scenario it's always some Other that is being tested and transformed; by definition, we are the the always already expanded. If you approach a work of art expecting to be challenged, you're no longer in a place where that can happen.  

Terms like "innovative", "groundbreaking", "pioneering", are equally problematic, because once you get past the first few listens, the music necessarily becomes familiar; what was abstract and amorphous starts to take on a shape, ceases to be disorientating. It's impossible to repeat the shock of the new.

This is even more the case when we listen to avant-garde music from a long time ago--Varese's pre-World War 2 compositions, the early musique concrete of Pierres Henry and Schaeffer, Stockhausen's elektronische works, or, in rock terms, Velvet Underground, early Throbbing Gristle, et al.  

So what is going on when we go back  as listeners to experience a past breakthrough? Is that sensation even recoverable, given that the present we inhabit is one where the breakthrough is taken for granted,  commonplace, perhaps even institutionally sanctioned to the point of seeming worthy. 

Clearly there's a large element of projection by the historically-informed listener, a kind of mental restaging of the moment of bursting through into the unknown. Curious and paradoxical this may be, but it's absolutely integral to my enjoyment of the music. Indeed it results in an arguably unreasonable bias against contemporary artists working in those fields, on the grounds that, however accomplished their work is,  they are settlers not pioneers; what Philip Sherburne calls an après-garde.


^^^^^^^^^^^^^

my assertion of being compulsively drawn to the extreme is somewhat in contradiction to the opinion that Extremity is passe as voiced in this Over-Rated of 1997 bit (but then consistency is the hobgoblin of etc etc)  which ran on the old Website Blissout aka A White Brit Raver Thinks Aloud. I wonder if you can guess who the unnamed opponent that is not-strawmanned-not-at-all-actually at the start of the piece?


EXTREMITY

There's a certain strain of argument being touted in which the extremities 
(global as well as musical) are where it's all happening--from freeform improv 
to Jap-core noise, from NZ drone-scapes to quirked out neo-Krautrock to 
Skullflower-style fuzzadelia. Apart from the insufferable cooler-than-thou 
attitude that often seems intrinsic to this stance, my aesthetic objection to 
all these initiatives is their tendency to end up as pure abstraction. And pure 
abstraction isn't really that interesting. You can't do anything with it, or to 
it--apart from just lie back and take it (in). 

"A scribble effacing all lines" is how Deleuze & Guattari put in A Thousand 
Plateaux, talking of the tendency of avant-garde artists to reterritorialise 
around "the child, the mad, noise"--the aesthetic equivalent to such "fascist or 
suicidal" lifestyle choices as heroin addiction, terrorism or joining a cult. 
Musically, the quest for chaos can easily end up as a black hole of 
undifferentiated, maelstromic miasma--as vast as the cosmos maybe, but in the 
absence of any figure-ground perspective, it's effectively as claustrophobic as 
a cubby-hole. 

I subscribe to the D&G/Manuel Delanda line that the most interesting work 
happens "on the edge of chaos". I'm interested in abstraction where it works as 
a component of a groove ('ardkore, darkside, techstep) or an element within an 
architectonics of audio-space (Chain Reaction). It's the thresholds, the 
intermediary zones, that are really magical -- melody bleeding into noise, 
songcraft struggling with psychedelics (My Bloody Valentine, Husker Du); 
distortion + raunch (Hendrix's "Crosstown Traffic", Royal Trux's Cats and Dogs); 
the Bataillean excess and surplus-to-requirements extravagance working within 
and against the funktional minimalism (Prince, swingbeat); space + groove + 
timbre (Can, Neu!, Miles Davis, Seventies dub). Punk to funk, the ethos is the 
same: "restriction is the mother of all invention" (Holger Czukay). 

Extremism? Well, on what scale are we measuring here? Very little out-rock, 
avant-jazz, left-field electronica, etc. being perpetrated today really ranks 
with, let alone exceeds, the outer limits probed by the Sixties freeform 
brigades, electro-acousticians, and so forth. There's also the question of ego: 
so much out-rock or avant-improv seems to partake of the Expressionistic Fallacy 
(e.g. Caspar Brotzmann's scrofulously self-preening theatre of pain). This 
interferes with the listener's ability to derive machinic use-value from it. You 
just have to sit there and gasp in awe. It's about marveling at the Artist's 
depth and intensity of feeling, rather than using the music to trigger 
sensations and intensities in yourself. The impersonal, "objective" approach to 
constructing rhythmic engines or kinaesthetic audio-sculptures can create just 
as powerful feelings in the listener as the "subjective" school of Romantic 
outpouring creativity. The idea that the former is mere artisanship whereas the 
latter is true Art is, like, half a century out of date, at least. This is the 
age of the engineer-poet, the imagineer. 

Although drum & bass can make some preposterous claims about its experimentalist 
reach, the truth is that its radicalism is always constrained with a quite rigid 
set of parameters: at any given season, certain kinds of bass-sound, certain 
kinds of breaks, and a specific tempo, are required by DJ's and dancers; 
invention takes place within and against those constraints. The resulting 
friction creates sparks. In hardcore dance scenes, constraints are a strength, 
not a liability. At the very least, these parameters are no less likely to 
produce strikingly listenable and intensity-productive results than the total 
absence of constraints. Extremism can be as fruitless as any musical stance; 
simply embarking with an experimental mindset does not guarantee results. 

Leaving the rhetoric of extremity for those still interested in playing the cool 
game (the fun wears off about a decade or so, lemme warn ya; there's always 
something more marginal and listener-unfriendly than whatever outer limit you 
set up shop upon) is a tremendous release. I can now confess that the 
song-oriented Faust IV is my favourite of their albums rather than the hipper 
Faust Tapes, that I prefer the boogie-fied crossover stab Clear Spot to Trout 
Mask Replica, that the almost-funky Strange Celestial Roads is my fave Sun Ra, 
that the Sly-and-Jimi influenced Seventies Miles pleasures me more than Ayler or 
AMM screeching to the converted. I can consign those Merzbow CD's to that 
cupboard marked "possibly someday, probably never".  


Thursday, April 16, 2015

808

808 STATE
interview, Melody Maker, November 18th 1989

by Simon Reynolds







808 STATE
cover feature, Melody Maker, July 30th 1990

by Simon Reynolds








808 STATE
Ex:el
(ZTT)
Melody Maker, May 1991

by Simon Reynolds




Monday, April 13, 2015

Tresor / PCP - 1992

VARIOUS ARTISTS
BERLIN 1992 TRESOR COMPILATION: DER KLANG DER FAMILIE
(Tresor/NovaMute)
VARIOUS ARTISTS
THE HOUSE OF TECHNO: FRANKFURT TRAX VOLUME 2
(PCP)
Melody Maker, autumn 1992

by Simon Reynolds


Tresor is a famous Berlin club located in a vault that was once the safe of a department store. Maybe because the temperatures inside this strobe-blitzed sauna reach tropical levels, the techno made by DJ's and groups associated with the club (and gathered on Der Klang Der Familie) is sweat-less and cold-as-ice.



The Berlin sound as represented here has a similar clinical-but-crazed vibe to the stuff coming out of Detroit on the Plus 8 label, like F.U.S.E.'s "F.U.": basslines that pulsate in sinister wave-forms like radioactive ore, rigorous programmed beats, synth-twitches that instil a strange ectastic dread. Unlike UK hardcore's epileptic basslines and sped-up vocals exploding like fireworks, this music doesn't speed-rush forwards in blind propulsion; the repetition seems to take you deeper and deeper towards something primal and not a little threatening. 



Voodoo possession is the model here, rather than the hyper-hyper exhiliration-whizz of breakbeat house. "Drugs Work" by System 01 is like venturing into a cyberdelic jungle, parting wave after wave of foliage towards some secret, pagan grove. Maurizio's "Ploy" is a cloud of oscillations and wave-forms that's almost beyond dance. 



Voov's "It's Anything You Want It To be And It's A Gas" assembles programmed rhythms and grids of sequencer pulses into a percussive lattice of near-symphonic complexity. Mind Gear's "Don't Panic" is simply symphonic, rivalling the poignant grandeur of Orbital's "Belfast". A brilliant compilation.




Planet Core Productions's Frankfurt Trax offers more German vanguard techno. Abbreviate the label's name to PCP and you get a good idea of the vibe of the Frankfurt sound: mad-as-hell, mental-as-fuck, apoplectic/apocalyptic frenzy, all stomping 4/4 beats and gut-busting bass-blasts. 




Mescalinum United's "We Have Arrived" is a storm-trooper stampede with a smeared, blaring riff that'll rip your entrails out. With its infernal bass and down-swooping drones, "Nightflight (nonstop to kaos)" by The Mover presents Frontal Sickness is like a cybernetic version of Black Sabbath's "Iron Man".



 But it's not all mayhem. Six Mullahs' "Persian Lover" is an Islam-otronic mood piece. Project AE's "Whales Alive" is an extraordinary, undulating soundscape: stereo-panning slow beats, brief arias of whale song, tidal synths, a terra-technic bass that glows like the Earth's core. Imagine "Once In A Lifetime" if Talking Heads had been ripping off Kraftwerk rather than Can. 

Another brilliant compilation.




Thursday, April 9, 2015

awakenings

Ten Records that Changed Me 

(thing done for a German magazine in the mid-2000s if I recall right)

1/ Sex Pistols, Never Mind the Bollocks, 1977
Awoke me to belief in rock as a revolutionary, world-historical force - a faith I've still not yet fully shaken off.

2/ Ian Dury and the Blockheads, New Boots and Panties, 1978
Awoke me to the possibilities of rock as poetic language (Dury) and awoke in me a feeling for funk and disco (Blockheads).

3/ Public Image Ltd, Metal Box, 1979
Awoke me to the power of bass weight and dub space,  something that would keep on reverberating across an entire continuum of Jamaica-into-England music, from ska to UK garage.

4/ The Byrds, Younger Than Yesterday, heard 1982/released 1967
Awoke me to Sixties psychedelia and its mystical dreams of self-surrender and recovery of the lost child within.

5/ The Smiths, "This Charming Man", 1983
Awoke me to Morrissey, the most charismatic frontman and fascinating pop intellect since Bowie, and to the poignant glory of his refusal of the 1980s.

6/ Schoolly D, self-titled, 1986
Awoke me to the fact that rap was the major new pop music art form of the Eighties, avant-garde in form and almost Marxist in its coldhearted dissection/dramatisation of the capitalist psyche.

7/ Beltram, "Energy Flash", 1990
Awoke me to the dark Dionysian delirium of rave -- to the fact that techno was the new punk, or new heavy metal - either way,  the rock of the future, and the future of rock.

8/ Omni Trio, "Renegade Snares (Foul Play Remix)" , 1994
Awoke me to the fact that jungle's breakbeat science was the major new pop artform of the Nineties - regardless of whether it would ever become pop music in the Top Ten hit sense (it wouldn't, but it would get around).

9/ Dem 2, "Destiny ", 1997
Awoke me to the fact that jungle's spirit of playful invention had migrated into UK garage and especially its subgenre 2step, which this track defined and blueprinted.

10/ Dizzee Rascal, "I Luv U", 2002

Awoke me to the fact that grime (the UK finally coming up with its own ferociously original counterpart to rap) was the major new pop artform of the first decade of the 21st Century.