MUSIC IN BRIEF
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MEAT BEAT MANIFESTO, "ECCENTRIC OBJECTS"
Fucking incredible! Jack Dangers has a clever way of teasing his fans. Once an album has soaked into the culture, imitators spring up and fade away, only shortly after people stop listening to his album, unexpectedly something pops out of nowhere that reminds us all how incredible he really is. "Eccentric Objects" is no exception. The record comes as a 12" single with flexi-disc, orderable through Sputnik7.com only, all four tracks on the 12 are some of his finest stuff, bringing in the crashing breakbeats, organic sounds, thunderous effects and driving basslines that are so damn signature Jack Dangers material. This is the stuff many people dream of while sitting in their rooms, watching mind-numbing television shows and getting fat on cheese. "Hey wouldn't it be great to do music like this...?" Little do they know it's been happening for many many years. The strength of these tracks stand well completely on their own, while making any fan salivate just thinking of a future full-lengther. For a limited time, a flexi-disc with two bonus soundscapes is included. The ever entertaining "Peristaltic Wave" and "My Shorty" use collected sound samples from strange archives of the 50s and 60s. Get this while you still can, while these songs may be compiled onto a future release, the versions will probably be altered while the flexi-disc tracks will probably never resurface... - Jon Whitney
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TINO'S BREAKS VOL. 5 - "DUB"
For the last three years, Tino has been serving up two slabs of hot wax with breakbeats galore and sample tracks collected at the end. It was looking like this year was going to squeak by with only getting one slab, but fear not, Tino's Breaks volume 5 is a two-record set full of dub gems led by one of the best drummers in the world, Tino. Following last year's release of Mambo and Christmas, Dub carries on the style of some fat cuts and breaks, familiar samples, and beats amusing and exciting to listen to and mix in with your favorite breakbeat needs. I don't smoke pot, but if I did, boy would this be a great slab of wax to chill out with. For those not in the know, the core of Tino Corp is Ben Stokes (from DHS and H-Gun), Jack Dangers (see previous review) and Mike Powell (former Meat Beat Manifesto member). Learning the drums is easy and when you like the dub it's fun too! These vinyl-only releases are essential for any MBM fan as well as any fan of dub and latin-influenced breakbeats. - Jon Whitney
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THE LIVING JARBOE "DISBURDEN DISCIPLE"
Jarboe returns with her second self-released album, the fifth to date of
her solo career. In the past two years she has continued to develop as
a person and artist through world travel and numerous new collaborations
and projects, such as a live performances with the new The Living Jarboe
band and an in depth, interactive web site. This disc is actually
volume 1 of an eventual 4 under the "Disburden Disciple" title. Jarboe
considers the first post SWANS album "Anhedoniac" her 'disease' album
and this one the 'healing' album. Both seem to me to be part of the
cathartic, exploratory process of re-birth and growth, a further moving
away from the music, image and love/hate issues of her past. Most songs
have a guitar/bass/drums band based core interjected with bits of Middle
Eastern flavored percussion, loops, piano and strings. And, of course,
the voice. The many poetic voices and moody personas that Jarboe
conjures and unleashes from within ... from the starkly beautiful to the
downright frightening. Overall the album is fairly quiet and restrained,
in a good way, save for a raucous rock and roll outro for "Bound" and a
blood curdling scream finale for "Scarification". The mid-section of the
album (most notably "Kiss of Life", "Under" and "The Seance") veers off
into more 'artsy' areas with theatrical lyrical/vocal passages and sound
effects - the relative low points in my opinion. "Consume Me",
"Scorpion", "Forbid" and "Forgive" provide the more gentle moments with
pretty voices and lush guitar atmospheres. "Dear 666" features a
slightly acidic voice set against the intriguing slow motion interplay of
rough around the edges guitar and bass lines. "Scarification" and "Pure
War" are both primal in feel with the vocals and percussion groove at the
forefront, the latter also embedded with field recordings from Israel.
"Disburden Disciple" is everything you'd expect from Jarboe: a genuinely
unique and richly varied listening experience that will take much time to
fully digest. This is the result of someone successfully carving their
own path and thankfully sharing those results with others ... - Mark Weddle
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BLIXA BARGELD "RECYCLED"
Blixa Bargeld is frontman for Einstürzende Neubauten, member of Nick
Cave's Bad Seeds, occasional actor and contributor to various plays and
soundtracks. For Maria von Heland's German suspense thriller "Recycled",
Bargeld composes nearly all of the soundtrack, as arranged and
orchestrated by the Tim Isfort Orchestra. Unlike Bargeld's previous solo
work "Commissioned Music" this music is not as minimal and emotionally
sparse. Isfort's large orchestra, undoubtedly influenced by classic
composers such as Morricone, provides a rich classical palette to paint
Bargeld's various moods. "Küss mich wach" ("Kiss Me Awake") begins the
disc vocally as Bargeld and Amanda Ooms solo and duet German lyrics over
sweeping strings and a light piano and beat rhythm. Ooms also speaks
German text on another brief track. The remaining 19 tracks are
instrumental pieces, ranging 9 seconds to 4 minutes, obviously meant to
correspond with the events and moods of the film. "Mr. Aloha" by Carnival
of Souls is unexpectedly tacked on to the end but it's charming waves of
pedal steel work well. What's important here for me, as a fan of Bargeld
and someone who will likely never see the film, is that the soundtrack
holds up on it's own. And that it does, very well. The sound is full
and varied and the flow is very comfortable. "Recycled" is a beautiful
work completely on it's own and well worth the $15 import price ... - Mark Weddle
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N.U. UNRUH "EUPHORIE IM ZEITALTER DER DIGITALEN INFORMATIONSUBERTRAGUNG"
N.U. Unruh is percussionist for Einstürzende Neubauten and "Euphoria in
the Age of Digital Information Transfer" is, surprisingly, his first solo
album. Unruh's idea was to compose sequences entirely from the sampled
sounds of various digital devices to give musical life to everyday items
not normally heard in that context. The audio library is extensive:
motors, oscillators, alarms, beepers, phones, toys, video games, door
bells, office machines, etc. provide all sorts of beeps, blips, tones,
drones, lo-fi animal calls and human voices. Each of the 26 tracks, most
in the less than 1 minute to 3 minute range, are a whirring din of these
audio bits arranged into multi tracked mini symphonies. Cheesy sounds and
playful melodies are plentiful and the most promising tracks tend to be
the shortest and least developed. The final "Appendix" sample track
provides most if not all of the samples one a time in succession. By
this point it all seems rather silly, tedious and pointless ... much like
a room full of toddlers feverishly banging away at the sound triggering
buttons on their toys while others simultaneously play video games. And
considering that I'm pretty bored with and/or annoyed by most of these
sounds in my day to day life, they don't do much more for me organized
into less than interesting 'songs'. "Euphorie.." will be filed away and
most likely never listened to again ... - Mark Weddle
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ADD N TO FÜ(X)A
An unlikely combination pairs the British analogue whore, Barry 7 with the blissful Michigan-based soundscapist, Randall Nielman for a 20 minute two-track EP. While it's more endearing than the recent release from Add N to (X), the Füxa contribution can't save it enough to justify the price of admission. Track one starts out promising, even Christmas-sounding, but very little changes throughout the entire piece. It sounds completely out of tune and too repetitious. Once again, the mundane repetition kicks in with track 2. "And Another Thing!" is far too dull and at 13 minutes it carries on for what seems like an eternity. Ow, this is giving me a headache!!! Sorry, I really did have hope. - Jon Whitney
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KIT CLAYTON, "REPETITION AND NONSENSE" / "NEK SANALET"
One of the most accomplished electronic musicians to emerge from the American
underground in the last couple of years, Joshua Kit Clayton has honed his deft
skills on a series of singles touching on a variety of musical styles, but these two
album length releases focus mainly on the minimal, dub-influenced sounds that
seem to have become his forte of late.
On Repetition and Nonsense, most of the material rides on a nervous tech-house
groove, with tracks like "A Choice of Words" and "M-Shape" having an edge of
off-kilter funkiness. Overlaying it all is a murky dub filter that inspires mild
comparisons to the sounds of Pole and the Chain Reaction crew.
These influences are even more prevalent on nek sanalet (which is fitting since
the ~scape label is run by Pole's Stefan Betke). While Repetition is painted with a
thin coating of watery dub production, this album is completely submerged in a
sea of slightly sinister loops and echoes. Subtle beats flow from side to side as
minimal bleeps and stomach-churning bass wrestle in a venue drenched with
reverb and washes of ambient sound. If any record deserves the Betke-coined
tag of "modern urban dub", this enveloping and addictive disc is it. - Greg Clow
MOUSE ON MARS, "INSTRÜMENTALS"
Two of my favorite Mouse On Mars releases were initially released through Thrill Jockey in the USA on vinyl only, this one and 'Glam.' For years now, Glam has been available on CD as an overpriced Japanese import, but it contains some of their best recorded stuff ever along with a few bonus cuts for good measure. Now, after a couple years, 'Instrumentals' is available on CD. With only 7 tracks, this disc clocks in just comfortably over 50 minutes. The tracks are closer to a 4/4 electronic style the group pursued years ago, slick and smooth, serene and delicate, with superb glitchy sounds coloring the beats. At this time, Mouse on Mars was working delicately with songcraft along with developing their own sounds to sparkle the spectrum. These recordings are collected between 1995 and 1997 but are virtually timeless. When the 'intelligent dance music' moves onwards to the next trend, this album will still be one that's excellent every time you pull it from the shelf. If you absolutely must have everything, the Japanese edition has one bonus track. - Jon Whitney
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We know that sometimes these CDs are somewhat challenging to find, which is why we have a RECOMMENDED STORES section which can be used to obtain nearly everything available on the site.
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NEW RELEASES
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MONDAY
Boards of Canada - In A Beautiful Place Out In The Country 12"/CDEP (Warp, UK)
Covenant - Synergy CD [live] (Dependent, Germany)
Rob Ellis - Music For The Home CD (Leaf, UK)
Fizzarum - Monochrome Plural CD/LP (Domino, UK)
Knifehandchop - Taking the Soul out of Music 7" (Irritant, UK)
Plus One - Bare Necessities CD/2xLP (deFocus, UK)
Poets Of Rhythm - t.b.a. CD/LP (Quannum/Ninja Tune, US/Canada/UK)
Salt Tank - Eugina 2000 two 12"s/CDEP (Lost Language, UK)
Janek Schaefer - Above Buildings CD (Fat Cat, UK)
Jake Subtropic vs. Ben Burns - Never Drink Again 12" (Fused & Bruised, UK)
Sierra Romeo - Distbra 12" (FWD, The Netherlands)
Various - Lo-Fi Electronic Pop Music 10" [with Frederik Schikowski, Knifehandchop, Plusminusnull, Skanfrom, Printed Circuit and Autoskooter] (Irritant, UK)
TUEDAY
* Boards of Canada - In A Beautiful Place Out In The Country 12"/CDEP (Warp, US)
* Kinder Atom - Mmm! 2xCD [original album plus extra remix disc] (Hypnotic, US)
* Jamie Lidell - Muddlin' Gear CD (Warp, US)
M.R.I. - Rhythmogenesis CD/2xLP (Force Tracks, Germany/US)
Stephen Philips/Ben Summers - Behind The Mirror CD (Dark Duck, US)
Terre Thaemlitz - Interstices CD/2xLP (Mille Plateaux, Germany/US)
THURSDAY
Anodyne/Napalm - Pocket Monster Remixes (Gotta Catch Them All) 7" (Lux Nigra, Germany)
For a more comprehensive release schedule stretching far into the future, please check out the NEW RELEASES brought to you by Greg and Feedback Monitor.
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