Michael Hann’s work as Marreck has always kept one foot on the dance floor, and the other in uglier, noisier realms. Computerized beats and programmed synthesizer leads abound, but always under a distinctly dissonant, corroded cloud of production that makes his work stand out distinctly. For his new vinyl EP, Yuda, he shifts that balance more towards the aforementioned ugly side of his work, but never fully abandons his techno inclinations on these five increasingly chaotic compositions.
The descent into dissonance begins from the most conventional piece on here:the muffled, but thumping "Uco."The components are nothing unique:deep bassy kick drums and synth lead melodies. Hann, however, muffles and filters them to generate an oppressive, distant quality to the music.It does not sound like the music is being piped in from a few buildings over, but it does have a similar sense of space to it.The ambiance of "Bagun" is similar, but a few steps further into the noisy descent.A sold thudding rhythm again acts as the backbone, as Hann weaves in slowly surging, white noise drenched electronics, slowly pushing things further and further into entropy.
By the journey’s midpoint, "Prakoso," the bass rhythm becomes an unrelenting molten wall of noise, as spiny FM percussion skitters atop.It adds a harsh and metallic quality to the sound, which continues to surge as the piece becomes thicker with added layers of sound, but retaining the same structure.The expansion in sonic depth paired with the taut and restrained construction results in an unrelenting bit of tension throughout the piece."Eka" has Hann working with a traditional synthetic kick drum beat again, but programmed so rapidly and distorted to more accurately resemble a submachine gun than something to dance to.Crashing, junky noises are abruptly mixed in to jarring effect, as less abrasive synth drones only slightly offset the noise.
Things intentionally fall apart at the concluding "Rama."Propelled by a decaying, gurgling keyboard lead, expansive electronics resonate over a jerky, wet rhythm.Again Hann keeps the structure simple, based on only a few repeating bars, but his blending of additional layers, as well as adding more and more to the mix as the piece goes on, keeps it from becoming too stagnant.Instead it is a tense, but constantly evolving piece of destructive electronics.
From the first to the last piece, Yuda is an excellent encapsulation of Michael Hann's deconstruction (and idiosyncratic reconstruction) of contemporary dance music.Its beginning minutes may seem somewhat conventional and unsurprising, but it does not take long before things are dissolved in unexpected ways, then put back together into erratic structures and unconventional textures that bare no resemblance to where it began.It is this pulling apart into bizarre realms that make this such a unique and fascinating record.
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