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Reviews 10-29-2006 |
Music Reviews |
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Black Magic
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Sometimes reviewers such as the present writer may get all
enthusiastic and say, “great album! It’s going straight in my record box / Case
Logic / Memory Stick / etc”. Sadly this is seldom true: with Black Magic
however, that’s exactly what happened and I subsequently forgot to review it. Apologies then to you lot, to the label, and most of all to
the artist for my missing out on hyping up one of my genuinely favourite albums
in recent years. Distort & Discord does just what it promises to do, a
huge lumbering scaremonger of a track with noises so fat they should join
Weight Watchers, and Tango De Colour Mango throws in a bit of Finnish, a bit of
acid house, and a bit of spaghetti western. Black Magic and C41 are bustling,
tight techno from the future, with the latter making wonderful use of discord.
The tracks change and shift at every given opportunity – you’re never listening
to the same frequencies twice. Frog On The Run is a wonderful, loveable bit of
tribal spookcore, with just about the right amount of derangedness balancing
against a psychedelic bambaata lead. Recharge sounds like the inside of a computer on its last
legs, Shezabitch is a fine stab at that
electro-house-with-bloke-speaking-in-an-accent-over-the-top, both are as deep
as they are fun. Next up, things start to get very very special indeed: Yellow
Mellow has a certain mid-period-Orbital-ness to it, as though the melodies are
bursting to get out from underneath a duvet of noise. It’s staggering and has
that air of a timeless bit of electronic music about it. As does Starfall, a sublime lesson in how simple patterns
and melodies can be combined, healthily, into one of the singularly most
honest, respectful and fluid wordless love songs ever recorded in the history
of anything. This should be number one in the charts, and for so many, many
reasons. Little Girl has echoes of the same melodic sensibility, pushed through
a blender of progressive house and post-party warehouse techno. And again, is a
gorgeous piece of electronic music. One cheeky remix later (White Rabbit by Jefferson Airplane,
and it’s good) we’re back into the album proper with Sound Surface – a desolate
landscape of sound that would be highly unnerving, if not for the staggering
little production tricks he throws in. Finally ICU is a mesmerising little
psychedelic gnome to round things off nicely. Artist albums should be this good: the flow runs from
experimental, to shadowy, through to soaringly happy then back out the other
side to experimental. This is bloody, bloody good and will appeal to way more
people than the sinister packaging might lead you to believe. Put simply:
psyreviews wants Fuzzion’s babies. |
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Neo::caine by Various Artists
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Crikey. I’d heard this was good, but nothing quite prepared
me for quite how good it actually is. Slow again on this review, as it was sent
to my old address on the other side of the planet (and yes i did tell
everyone.) Fullon is still alive and breathing folks, and while there are some
pretty duff moments, and one downright awful one, overall the quality is high
enough to pique anyone’s interest. Likewise Allaby’s Aurorae: reminds me a little of Blue
Planet Corp in the progression stakes. There’s an awful lot going on here, the
escalation is enough to get even me excited, and the melodic fluffy tickles
happening over the top are just dazzling. Zen Mechanics’ New Propulsion
Technology has a sturdy backbone, plenty of acid, a sharp progression and a
subtle little melody for the final run that’s quality all the way. Jaia does
surprisingly well with Electricity, a glistening piece of morning fullon that
also captures the wonder and energy of his more recent progressive output. The
production here really does wonders, with the topend melodies not being far off
the sound of endorphins being released into the brain. Utterly love it. Silicon Sound’s remix of Wrecked Machines & Pixel’s
RPNGC is another goodun – although I anticipate being shut down by SOMEone out
there because it’s fluffy, it’s melodic, and it’s a bit gay. This aside, the
production and movement will stagger you – it’s a slow-paced bit of dream
house, at the end of the day, but fuck me it’s good, well-executed, dream
house. Wrecked Machines & Pixel have another bash with Tea Time, which is
chunkier than their other material and sounds limp and predictable compared to
what’s just come before it. Likewise Orion’s Welcome To Reality Remix is characteristically
decent-but-missable. Polaris’ 25 sees the quality come back. It’s all about the
groove here, and bloody nice it is as well. The sounds are varied here, the
acid sounds wonderful, and everything about it is cause for some sort of
celebration. Finally, Altom pick it up again with Viper, very in keeping with their polished French style but nice use of acidlines keep it buoyant: it may not be the most original tune in the world, but it’ll get a dancefloor moving. The high points, then, are extremely high – which sort of balances the low ones out. Neo::caine is the closest thing to an essential fullon album you’ll hear at the moment. Reviewed by Damion courtesy of the Psyreviews website. |