Why some bands will always be heralded for the appropriation of their influences and others forever doomed to jeers and insults is well beyond me. If there were any consistency to the praise or defamation perhaps I could discover the math necessary for choosing who should get my approval and who my censure. Such calculation and consistency constitute a phantom, however, one that unjustly haunts records according to this or that writer's whim. In 2005, Heat was just such a victim. Some publications caught on to its dance-oriented rhythms and stark melodies, but more often than not Tan caught flack for liking New Order and Joy Division a little too much. Nevermind that Colder is probably more indebted to Gary Numan, David Bowie, and Brian Eno, Joy Division and New Order are two unanimously loved bands with plenty of lauded followers, derivative or otherwise. Mentioning either one in a review only to hold them over a band's head like a threat isn't just ridiculous, it's lazy.
Besides, Heat is where Marc steps out of their shadow and into his own shoes. Dub and post-punk still figure heavily into his brew, but to them Marc adds a darker attitude ("On My Mind"), jazzy flourishes ("Your Face" and "Fade Away"), a more band-oriented sound (especially "To the Music"), and an even more distinctive sense of rhythm than is found on Again. As to the latter, it might be Colder's most distinctive feature. Tan's rhythmic sense is at once funky and awkward. Even when a song is thumping forward in standard time, Marc manages to make the rhythm sway and stagger like it's ready to fall apart. In some cases, he'll use every one of the instruments in a song to help create a kind of dizzying effect, as on "Wrong Baby" and "Losing Myself." In both cases, the entire ensemble throbs and reverberates together, creating a mechanical effect that's as hypnotic as it is cold and robotic. To that extent, perhaps Neu! and Kraftwerk are better points of reference than anyone else mentioned in this review. In any case, before hearing him sing, or even before one of his already distinctive and simple melodies pop up, I can tell Colder apart from almost any other band thanks to Tan's rhythms.
But, Heat isn't beyond criticism. Its lyrics are thin in places, though they match their songs well enough and are way more forgivable than the junk certain other media darlings pass off as lyrics. If Interpol can get away with singing about couches and... whatever the hell they're talking about... then certainly Colder can get a pass for being a little repetitive. It's a happy coincidence that Heat's biggest and most obvious flaw is also one of its more endearing qualities. Marc obviously tried very hard to make Heat more diverse than Again, but in some places it shows too much. The second half of the record is mostly successful in its blending of different styles, but "Downtown" stands out like a sore thumb and the start of "Tonight" is just too bright to fit comfortably anywhere in Colder's discography. Everything eventually falls back into place, however, and the album ends with some sinister organ-laden arrangements and a beautifully melancholic closer.
Heat deserves better than the grief it was given. Without a doubt it is a layered and complex record, but it's also very catchy and concise. The melodies are as solid as they come and the songs are sharp and memorable. That's his greatest virtue: Marc Tan writes excellent songs. This alone puts him head and shoulders above other bands playing the same game.
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Picking through songs both old and new, Oldham and his band take the most country-ish elements of Oldham’s songs and amplify them. Mandolins, banjos and fiddles are backed with a double bass, bringing the music back in time to an era where artists like Johnny Cash and Merle Haggard were clearing the path for whippersnappers like Oldham. Already acknowledged by Cash (who covered Oldham’s “I See a Darkness”), Oldham in turn tips his (pink baseball) cap to Haggard with a cover of “Ramblin’ Fever.” Elsewhere, a cover of The Stanley Brothers’ “Hemlocks and Primroses” brings attention to the influence of bluegrass on Oldham’s writing. Taken together, these covers show how wide-ranging Oldham’s writing is; he amalgamates so many different styles of songwriting into his own idiosyncratic style, cherry picking the best of each style for his songs.
With the Picket Line backing him, “Wolf Among Wolves” loses all its sinister undertones and instead sounds like something that Patsy Cline would have sung (although maybe she would have drawn the line at howling but who knows). The transformation reinforces the wolf in man’s clothing imagery in the song, the bite of the words hidden beneath all the prettiness. Cheyenne Mize’s backing vocals on “Lay and Love” may be less dramatic than Dawn McCarthy’s original vocals on the studio version but Mize imbues the song with an equal amount of tenderness and a quiet beauty. Mize’s vocal contributions throughout the album act as a suitable foil to Oldham’s own cracked singing.
Although Funtown Comedown can be viewed as a stopgap release before Oldham unleashes his next album (The Wonder Show of the World coming out in March according to a saucy internet viral video), it would be erroneous to discount it as being just for completists. Just as his last live album Is it the Sea? stood proudly beside his classic studio output, Funtown Comedown also rubs shoulders with his best work. Granted the songs are all familiar (even if I’ve never heard Oldham sing them before) but the spin the band give on the songs make them sound new again.
This review was made from the vinyl version of the album, so unfortunately there are no sound samples at this point in time, apologies!
Before Red Mecca, the full-length releases from the Cabs had been a bit less than cohesive. Mix Up and Voice of America were both great albums, but had a lot of abstract tracks that felt more like experiments than fully fleshed out songs. The band’s singles were great, but showed a band unsure of what they wanted to do. For every chilling "Eddie’s Out" there was a snotty, punk-ish "Nag Nag Nag". Three Mantras, with its two side-long tracks, was just as experimental on its own, but heralded some of the sounds that would gel here. The amalgamation of rock tendencies in "Western Mantra" and use of tape manipulation in "Eastern Mantra" set the stage for this sinister, bleak album.
Titled due to the band’s interest in the growing issues in Afghanistan and Iran at the time (1981), it was the culmination of American Christian fundamentalism and Muslim extremism taken to its possibly apocalyptic end. The material doesn’t overtly reference any of this though: the Christian preacher samples that would characterize their later work are nowhere to be found. The mood, however, is one of corrupt spirituality: murky sounds that are symbolic of murder for the sake of religion. Given how little things have changed politically in the near 30 years since this album's release though, I just wonder how the situation hasn’t inspired the same level of brilliance in other artists.
Opening and closing with faithful covers of Henry Mancini’s "A Touch of Evil," the Hollywood bombast and grandeur of the original theme is reduced to sparse bongo drums and reptilian synths and horns slithering over a rudimentary bass line. The chilling tone of the track foreshadows what’s to come: unidentifiable bits of sound hiding amongst the familiar instrumentation.
The "lighter" moments, or more appropriately the less dark ones are scattered throughout the album’s all too brief running time. "Sly Doubt" ranks up there with the funkiest tracks the band ever recorded, with its up-front bass line and treated drums from Nik Allday casting an alien shadow. Richard H. Kirk’s nauseous guitar stays low in the mix, as does Chris Watson’s organ drone, leaving the focus on Stephen Mallinder’s bass and vocals, the latter delivered heavily treated and with a hiss to render the words nearly indecipherable. For all its obtuseness, there is enough overt sleazy funk that would make it playable in a strip club…but more appropriately one run by the Order of the Solar Temple where all the girls try and hide the significant scars of ritualized abuse.
"Red Mask" opts more for the rock side of the band’s sound, with Kirk’s mangled guitar and Watson’s electronic organ leads functioning as some dark, mutated take on 1960s psychedelic rock, bolstered by the buzzing spring-reverbed metronome drums. "Black Mask" on the other hand, pushes the sound more into modern dub territory, with Mal’s bass and the drums leading the charge, with electronics and voice samples acting as minor accents to the sound. The swirling effects and damaged horns of "Spread The Virus" resemble a more song-based take on the "Eddie’s Out" single, though here it uses the same proto-techno drum machine beat from that single’s flip side, "Walls of Jericho." Rather than the pure demented tape manipulations of "Eddie’s Out," the sound here is one of schizophrenic mania, with the treated drums and rhythmic bass clashing with the spastic horns and Mal’s hateful ranting.
The remaining tracks are more restrained; yet still ooze that same red-lit murky darkness of the rest of the album, perhaps even more so. The short instrumental "Landslide" showcases Kirk’s vaguely Middle Eastern surf guitar playing over heavily treated drums and Watson’s organ set on "horror movie" that comes off as wonderfully sinister, but not ham-handed or forced. So many bands try and be "scary" with their sound, but it always sounds so cliché or trite. Here it just IS dark.
"Split Second Feeling" matches the same guitar sound with more conventional organ and Mal’s heavily echoed and delayed vocals that actually sound far less agitated than on the rest of the album, but still have a sense of unease and sickness about them that puts it squarely in league with the remainder of the disc. Rather than the lurking menace, there is more of a sense of despair and fear conveyed.
The album’s centerpiece, and highlight, is the ten minute dirge "A Thousand Ways" that slowly begins with funeral church organ tones rising out of dark reverberated passageways. Mal’s bass keeps the track moving, as does the simple, whip-lashed rhythm. The vocals, which mostly consist of angered ranting a bit too far behind the microphone, are met with Kirk’s positively anemic guitar sound, sounding like the audio equivalent of malaria, pushing the track even further into the bowels of hell.
Even the full package of album art furthers this image: the multicolored, melting abstract image on the front is coupled with stoic looking portraits of the band inside, posing with large, ritualistic cymbals in front of them as if preparing for some blasphemous incantation. The fez-wearing statue head in the final page of the CD booklet is far beyond creepy, to say the least.
After this album the Cabs would go on to create the also-brilliant 2x45, which added a healthy dose of jazz to this formula, which I feel diluted some of the force and darkness that’s here. After that, Watson departed for the Hafler Trio and the remaining duo of Mal and Kirk began mining their own paranoid, survivalist form of funk influenced synth pop, and quite successfully so. I’d be remiss to not consider the trio of Virgin albums (The Crackdown, Microphonies, and The Covenant, the Sword and the Arm of the Lord) amongst the most brilliant electronic pop recordings ever, but the band was never as dark and frightening as they were here. While the greedy side of me is of course upset that there were no other albums like this, the rational side knows that such a situation would have diluted the impact of Red Mecca.
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The single improvised track begins with overt reverberated scrapes from a rake and other found sounds, (courtesy of the Sons of God) baked in reverb and far too jarring to be rhythmic. The scrapes are eventually paired with a distant electronic tone that haunts in the distance. The constant study of the metallic grind of the rakes surprisingly doesn’t get dull or tedious, as both Leif Elggren and Kent Tankred use the humble tool as an instrument more than just a sound effect.
Subtle synth punctuations by the Skull Defekts guys slowly enter and make their presence known. The constant dull pulse of the keyboards contrasts the otherwise dynamic improvised sounds. Eventually the synths win this battle of sounds, dominating the mix with massive sheets of low end swell that casts the scrapes into an entirely different light: the darker feel of the track sounds more like chains being dragged through a dungeon than electro-acoustic improvisation.
The synthetic sounds become the focus even more as the track goes on, waving a dronescape that stays static while the improvised sounds skitter across. The sound is definitely abrasive, but the textures are not harsh. Instead, the track continues to lurk around in the shadows. The electronic sounds become more varied, but always remain cautiously guarded among the chaotic noises.
The final third of the track allows the noise to flow, with the overdriven synths matched with violent crashes and bangs from the gardening implements. It reaches that fuzzy grind that rivals some of the best noise artists working today. After this violent outburst, the sounds retreat into an echo chamber of synth waves, random clattering and bashing around to conclude the performance as it began.
As best as I can tell, the proceedings are exactly as they occurred in Studio Dental a few months ago, which exemplifies the skill and nuance of these two projects. There are other artists out there who seek to create similar sounds through the use of constant sound manipulation and digital treatments, but this the result is one of purely organic collaboration. Kudos also to Utech, for releasing this and delving into even more abstract realms than the drone metal and noise the label is known for.
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There’s no pretense or interludes here: disc one, track one, "Shivering Aurora" immediately cuts in with shirll guitar feedback and swells of noise, undulations building into rhythms via delays. There’s a slight hint of Lou Reed’s Metal Machine Music to be found, but in a more organic, natural sense rather than a "fuck you" to a record label one. "Gateway to Blasphemous Light" is similar: all midrange painful noise that doesn’t relent, but there is still obviously a guitar buried amongst the distortion and reverb. Over on disc two, "Star Konstellation" is a similar piece of pure guitar squall.
Bower and company aren’t afraid to inject some heavier sound treatments and electronic effects into the six string revelry: "City of Dis" sounds like someone vacuuming over a guitar solo while a broken synthesizer and emergency sirens wail away in the background. "Basement of an Impure Universe" is feedback, heavy undulating static and shrill electronic squeals far more than any traditional guitar sounds.
The remainder of the tracks combine both elements to some extent. "Starlit Mire" focuses on deep droning buzzes and massive, infinite expanding guitar squeal as opposed to the aggression that comprises the other tracks. "Enochian Tapestries" meld swelling waves of noise and distorted guitar notes that are left out to decay, the sound positively rotting. "Blackened Angelwings Scythe the Billowing Void" sounds like a tortured guitar solo blasting inside an empty parking garage, simple but effective.
"Nibelungen" and "Rheingold" both rely heavily on guitar noise and feedback, but on both tracks there’s a vibe that they’re going to launch headlong into the blasted stoner rock that characterized the older Skullflower, but neither ever does. For that reason alone it’s the noise equivalent of blueballs….the whole time I was hoping for some massive drums and detuned bass to crash in, but they never do.
In the sense of a spectacle, this disc definitely fits the bill. There’s something to be said for over an hour and a half of unabashed guitar squall, but "Nibelungen" and "Reingold" both leave me wishing for some of Bower’s rock stuff to show up amongst the feedback and noise. There’s no reason both can’t co-exist, so how about something more like Xaman here?
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Above all else, Liminoid/Lifeforms is a definitive statement. Baker clearly states his objective with the first few notes of “Liminoid Part I,” never wavering from his desire to capture the elements of classical and romantic composition with modern techniques. The result is an album that is warm; thick with texture and sonic craftsmanship. Albums with this much attention to detail often crumble under the weight of expectation but Baker has nothing to atone for once the final note of “Lifeforms” fades into the abyss.
The greatest accomplishment of Baker’s foray into the classical is in its simplicity. Much like the great masters of composition, Baker is never afraid to do too much by doing too little. Each of the four parts that comprise “Liminoid” joins seamlessly. Not until the soaring vocals of “Liminoid (Part IV)” can we begin to notice how Baker has carefully flirted with the grandiose by indulging it so completely. The subtle hints of cello and violin coupled with the restrained guitars and percussion are slow to reveal themselves as something more than Baker’s usual fare. “Liminoid (Part IV)” becomes the unveiling of Baker’s masterpiece; when the quiet decoration that has been painstakingly built for 22-minutes engulfs the classical philosophy in a fiery pillar of modern ingenuity. In spite of its ambitious nature, the whole of “Liminoid” does not falter for even a single note. This is proof that experimental music can be manipulated using the principles of Romanticism without compromising the chaos theory and fringe accessibility that has found deep roots in various genres.
After the breathtaking beauty of “Liminoid,” Baker risks toppling his opus with the sedentary drone of “Lifeforms.” Yet the risk is well worth it, providing the perfect counterpoint to elegance of “Liminoid” while also proving to be its mirror—albeit of the warped, funhouse variety. Where “Liminoid” was poised and polite, “Lifeforms” is a test of patience and will. It maintains the grace of its segmented lead-in but the restraint of “Liminoid” is replaced with rambunctiousness. “Lifeforms” isn’t abrasive but a piece built on dissonance and misplacement. Its parts, unlike “Liminoid,” are those of worn jigsaw puzzles; connections don’t fit as they should, the tabs are frayed beyond recognition, and there are holes from missing pieces. In this there is a majesty that admirers of “The Ugly Duckling” (and its ilk) will appreciate. “Lifeforms,” when held against “Liminoid,” will seem the tremorring visage; but as a mirror and a companion, it divulges the secrets of success found within “Liminoid,” while annihilating the measuring stick of beauty used for far too long.
The labeling of Liminoid/Lifeforms as a high form of art may be a bit of hyperbole but within Aidan Baker’s classical excursion, there are far too many gems of old and new to call it anything else. Over the course of one hour, Baker builds a sturdy bridge over a crevice that once relied on the likes of John Cage and Terry Riley as its architects. Old world beauty and futuristic tones can work as one, creating music that is as challenging as it is universal.
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The A side, titled "Wedding," opens with "Greek Catholic Stork Boy Choir of Ozerki Village," a rapid fire pulsing slab of cut up jittery notes. There’s obviously underlying musical elements there, but sped up, flanged, and covered in a digital noise sheen so as to not completely give up its source. The second piece, "Molomotki Ocarina Orchestra," keeps the same tone but locks it into a rhythmic loop that exhibits the smallest changes.
While the "Wedding" side was rapid, spastic and joyous; the "Funeral" side is appropriately slow and meditative. "School Girl Band of Gromovaya Balka" takes up the entire side B. It's a piece that uses the same type of source sounds as the A side but instead sequences them into a slow orchestral dirge. Here, knocking percussive elements, heavy sub-bass, and open, shimmery notes create an expansive drone.
The sound is one that’s a bit too harsh for the musique concrete crowd, yet not speaker-damaging enough for the noise kids. Thus, it exists in its own purgatory, waiting for listeners who are willing to step outside their comfort zone and embrace something different.
Great ideas rarely spring from nowhere and the genesis of IBM 1401: A User's Manual is no exception. The lengthy evolution of this piece began in 2001 when Jóhannsson's father told him about the "funeral" that he and his IBM coworkers arranged for the 1401 when it was discontinued in 1971. While he was obviously deeply attached to the computer because he was the primary maintenance engineer for the project (the 1401 was first mass-produced, reasonably priced business computer), the connection between Jóhann's father and his work actually extended into much deeper territory. Like his son, Jóhann Gunnarsson was an ingenious and musically savvy fellow, and he managed to figure out a convoluted way to make his computer "sing." In fact, the 1401 sang its own elegy at the ceremony, a brief theme from an old Icelandic hymn. It is a 30 year old reel-to-reel recording of this improbably sad ceremony that provides the central melody of the album's opening piece as well as the cornerstone of the entire endeavor.
Shortly after beginning work the piece, Jóhannsson shared his father's story with a new acquaintance (choreographer Erna Ómarsdottir) whose father had also been an IBM employee. Together, they embarked upon a lengthy and enthusiastic exchange of literary and cinematic inspirations and philosophical and creative ideas that gradually cohered into a touring dance piece built around his father's tape. At the time, the modest accompanying music was written for a string quartet. However, when Jóhann began editing the score for release as an album, he realized that something new needed to be added to compensate for the now missing human/visual element provided by the dancers. Realizing that the heart of the work lay in the juxtaposition of human warmth and cold machinery, he expanded to a 60-piece orchestra to intensify the sweeping melancholy of the music. More importantly, he also added another section: the heartbreaking coda of "The Sun's Gone Dim and The Sky's Turned Black." It is this final section that completes IBM 1401: A User's Manual and elevates it toward the realm of great art (incidentally, the title is intentionally borrowed from another work of great art, Georges Perec's Life: A User's Manual).
Jóhannsson is somewhat unusual in the field of modern composition, as he incorporates avant-garde influences and embraces unconventional sounds, yet remains unwaveringly focused on the distinctly un-edgy idea of crafting simple and beautiful melodies. As such, he has much more in common with populist film score composers than the more cerebral, theory-based works of the current serious classical music scene. While that aesthetic certainly gives Jóhannsson’s work more immediate appeal than that of his peers, it is not without its perils. IBM 1401 is packed full of heavenly, swelling strings that would not at all be out of place in a cinematic adaptation of a Jane Austen novel but for the omnipresent old computer recordings that buzz, hum, and swoop in the background. Sometimes he hits the perfect balance; sometimes he becomes a bit too saccharine for my taste. This tendency may just have stemmed from being relatively new to working on such a scale, as it seems to have vanished completely by Fordlândia.
While it is quite pleasant on a purely musical level, IBM 1401 actually requires some thought and reflection from the listener to be fully appreciated. Taken solely on its musical content, for example, "Part Two: IBM 1403 Printer" can seem kind of boring, as it is largely built around a recording of Jóhannsson's dad dryly describing the proper maintenance of his machine. Obviously, a 30-year-old recording of his father holds more emotional power for Jóhann than it does for me, but when it is contextualized as a man describing the care of a beloved friend that is now long dead, it becomes imbued with a strong sense of loss and nostalgia.
Despite the strength and beauty of the album's arrangements, it is the non-orchestral elements of album's bookends that I find most striking. The four simple repeating notes of the computer's death song in the opening piece are sublime and bittersweetly evocative, while the digitized voice endlessly intoning a gender-switched variation of Dorothy Parker's "Two-Volume Novel" in the album's closer is absolutely devastating. The depth of heartbreak and longing that can be conveyed by a mournful robot voice lamenting "the sun's gone dim and the sky's turned black, cause I loved her and she didn't love back" is both wholly unexpected and wrenching (though Jóhannsson ultimately derails the piece into a somewhat cloyingly triumphant finale). IBM 1401 may sometimes tread a bit too close to mainstream film scores and might be too overly sentimental in places to herald as an unqualified triumph, but it certainly hits some very stunning highs and is the most moving tribute that a computer (or a father) could ever hope for.
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Gil Scott-Heron is perhaps best known for an astute analysis of US politics, race relations, and the role of the media. His voice personified hip intelligence and detached anger. The layers of detail and meaning in several of his songs have probably spawned PhD theses. Consequently, while most commentators were, for example, fawning over Ronald Reagan, some of us had Scott-Heron’s voice of alternate reason in our heads reminding us: “quick as Kodak your leaders duplicate with the accent being on the dupe - cause all of a sudden we have fallen prey to selective amnesia - remembering what we want to remember and forgetting what we choose to forget. All of a sudden, the man who called for a blood bath on our college campuses is supposed to be Dudley 'God-damn' Do-Right?”
The death, this weekend, of former Secretary of State Alexander Haig gave me a timely reminder of the enduring power of those songs from the 1970s and early 1980s. Even if President Obama came to my house and spent a week reciting the words “a public servant who exemplified our finest warrior-diplomat tradition of those who dedicate their lives to public service” that would never erase Gil Scott-Heron’s indelible image of “Attila the Haig / running around frantically declaring himself in control and in charge / The ultimate realization of the inmates taking over at the asylum / The screenplay will be adapted from the book called Voodoo Economics by George 'Papa Doc' Bush. Music by the Village People, the very military 'Macho Man.'”
Back then, such wide-ranging multi-faceted critiques were given added credence by Scott-Heron’s ability and willingness to look unflinchingly upon his own milieu. In that respect his work compares with Sam Selvon’s nuanced descriptions of his fellow London-based Caribbean immigrants in The Lonely Londoners and Moses Ascending. By using insider knowledge, honesty, wit and irreverence both avoid applying any sentimental or romantic gloss to their subjects, and do so without being seen as a traitor. That same craft makes I’m New Here such a believable and modest self-portrait. The record is an incomplete jigsaw made up of oblique admissions, recollections, and acknowledgements; pieces of a puzzle of a man. And by turning his unflinching gaze upon himself, Scott-Heron has created an album as strong as any he has recorded.
Part of the success comes from the uber stripped-down sound which allows us to concentrate on the voice. On the title track, for example, a plucked acoustic guitar adds to the sense of isolation as the voice speaks alone and then breaks into song. Elsewhere, as producer Richard Russell mentions, programmed electronics are used in lieu of strings. One obvious sample apart, there seems to be less of a collage approach going on, and more a natural transmission of what might be termed “musical DNA” for an abstract merging of rural blues, spoken word, urban soul, and the rhythms of scratching, skipping and playground handclaps with a fractured (almost Burial-like) post-hip hop bass-heavy sound. The latter, of course, owing a good measure of its existence to the rhythms and poetry in Scott-Heron’s earlier work.
Just as the music is drawn from disparate decades, so snatches of lyrics and spoken interludes illuminate points in the artist’s life, with gratitude for a joyful early childhood and respect for the effort and sacrifice of others counter-balanced by flashes of personal flaws. At times, Scott-Heron’s voice sounds weathered and a little blurry, but often it booms with honesty and a craving to communicate. The tracks “Running” and “The Crutch” are perhaps the bleakest here, but no self-pity or preaching slows the flow. "Me and The Devil" is a thudding take on one of Robert Johnson's most quoted recordings. Although, this being GSH, first time he sings the line "You may bury my body, down by the highway side" he quickly adds "I don't really care where you bury me, once I'm gone."
So I’m New Here is not an alternate State of The Union update for those hungry to hear the ultimate dissection of W’s two terms, 9/11, Clinton, Hurricane Katrina or, say, the rise of media bigmouths and their moron retinue. There’s no evidence that Gil Scott-Heron spent his time in prison with a set of Bush Cards devising odes to a litany of religious loonies, feeble yes men and unrepentant pirates. We may never get to hear his thoughts about John Bolton, Kenneth “Kenny Boy” Lay, Colin Powell, Ahmed Chalabi, Condeleezza Rice, Jeb Bush, John Negroponte, Dick “Big Time” Cheney, Lewis “Scooter” Libby, Robert Zoellick, Don Evans, Thomas White, Marc Racicot, Christie Todd Whitman, Ann Veneman, John “Crisco Oil” Ashcroft, Michael “FCC” Powell, Alberto Gonzales, Tom Scully, Paul “Wolfowitz of Arabia” Wolfowitz, William H. Haynes II, Karl Rove, Donald Rumsfeld, Robert McCallum Jr., George W. Bush, Gale Norton, Elliot Abrams, Elaine Chao, Larry Lindsey, Stephen “Mini-Nukes” Cambone, George Tenet, Viet “Spin” Dihn, Richard “The Prince of Darkness” Perle, William G. Myers III, John D. Graham, Robert Mueller, Mitch “The Blade” Daniels, Andrew “Yoda” Marshall, Lt. General Jay Garner, Karen Hughes, Andrew Natsios, Mercer Reynolds, Spencer “S.U.V” Abraham, Andrew Card, Douglas J. Feith, J. Steven Griles, Richard Armitage, Vice Adm. Dr. John Poindexter, Tom “Duct Tape” Ridge, Ari Fleischer, Paul O’Neil, or John Snow. Indeed, at this point that is about as likely as a project about his father: who legend has it was the first black player to feature for Glasgow Celtic F.C.
This album runs for only about half an hour but the beautiful combination of intellect, humility, sincerity and soul left me feeling reborn rather than short-changed. I’m New Here shows the benefit of being confident enough to use clarity and simplicity when writing and recording. It also demonstrates the value of saying what you have to say and then shutting up. We hear what now seems to be most important for Gil Scott-Heron: coming to terms with his mortality, with his life and the people who have helped shape him. In the process, he gives us a glimpse of the woman who raised him, a figure as vivid as any he has depicted in song or verse. I’m stunned by the pain, hope, and the love and enduring self-belief in these grooves. Thank God he’s recording again. As he says: “I’m the closest thing I have to a voice of reason.”
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It is telling that “Tasty Fish” was recorded and released on Factory in the heady days before its fall and that the rest of the album was assembled during its decline and death. It’s an infectiously fun, exuberant, and hooky pop gem from top to bottom and even features the characteristically inscrutable Factory sense of humor, taking its title from a fish and chip shop. Notably (but not surprisingly), its release spawned several dance mixes, landed Stephen and Gillian on the covers of some big music magazines, and was simultaneously hailed as the “single of the week” in both NME and Melody Maker. Given that the rest of the album was written and recorded amidst panicked meetings about the fate of Factory and The Hacienda and the stressful birth of New Order’s Republic, it is easy to see why that sparkling, wide-eyed vitality noticeably dissipated. Much of The Other Two and You seems palpably half-hearted.
That said, The Other Two and You is not a sloppy or inept album—it is merely a non-descript, formulaic, and toothless one. Everything sounds like it is in the right place and there are generally no obvious flaws, except for perhaps the lyrics (it is probably for the best that Ian Curtis did not live to see his former drummer write songs containing lines like “love is the greatest thing and there’s nothing else to live for”). There aren’t any painfully insipid lyrics in “Tasty Fish,” but that is probably because Jeremy Kerr from A Certain Ratio contributed them. The other problems with this album are a bit more nebulous: the songs have hooks (but they’re not hooky enough), Gillian’s vocals are pleasant (but not particularly charismatic), and the songs are energetic (but one-dimensional and instantly dated). Interestingly, the duo nearly landed Kim Wilde as their vocalist, which might have made quite a bit of difference in the fortunes of everyone involved.
Much like its vastly superior successor, The Other Two and You is front-loaded with the poppiest material (including the second single “Selfish” and the aborted single “Moving On”). However, unlike Super Highways, the remainder does not become more substantial and likeable—it just becomes more thumping and clubby. There is no hint of darkness or depth here at all, just frothy, featherweight pop. The six remixes included here are perhaps a bit stronger than the original material, but they are still for the most part pretty generic. As expected, “Tasty Fish” still sounds pretty great when remixed, but I was pretty surprised that Moby managed to turn “Moving On” into a somewhat better track by adding a slinky, propulsive bass line and downplaying the vocals. It is quite damning when Moby remixes a song and makes it more soulful than the original. Categorically, The Other Two and You is a lackluster and disappointing album. Anyone interested in O2 would be much better served by checking out Super Highways instead.
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On his third full-length release Soriah is joined by the ever prolific Ashkelon Sain, memorable from his many years heading Trance to the Sun. Sain’s fondness for oversaturated hallucinatory soundscapes and drizzly shoegaze guitar is perfectly complimented by Soriah’s multi-timbred throat singing. While certainly not imitators, comparisons to Dead Can Dance would not be inappropriate. Both groups paint their psychoacoustic masterpieces from a similar palette using voice, tribal percussion, keyboards and stringed instruments from around the world. Furthermore Soriah’s ability to hold multiple pitches simultaneously adds new depth and freshness to a musical formula already tried and true. Singing in the ancient Aztec language of Nahuatl his voice is resonant with a beauty that pays homage to his ancestral homeland of Mexico. All of these factors blend together quite naturally and make for a unique listening experience.
The pacing of the 11 songs on this disc is perfect. I feel like a drunken sailor on a boat drifting amongst starry archipelagos when I listen. Lulled into a benevolent somnolence I gently rise and fall with waves of sound that continuously crash and crest. The first song, “Yoallicuicatl,” establishes the general mood with thickly bowed strings buzzing a sonorous melody over the top of an undulating keyboard. It serves to create a sacred listening space by cleansing any obstructive energy left lingering from previous stereo sessions. The second track kicks off with the bells and hand drums that are present throughout the disc in various rhythmic combinations. The meditative percussion forms a backbone of sonic entrainment that Soriah weaves his vocal sorcery around. Deeply emotive, his voice lets out long wavering cries and deep bellows that are both transcendent and ominous. I would be curious to know what his lyrics translate into, but without that knowledge I am free to listen more closely to the subtleties within his often multi-tracked voice.
“Morguul” is exemplary of the albums overall ekstasis. The percussion reminds me of a hard spring rain pattering on a rooftop, while Soriah’s voice rings and vibrates in long ululating drones. The violin adds bright touches of gaiety and fills me with optimism. “Borbak” however is darker, earthy and chthonic. A high pitched insect like whistle whirrs and murmurs in the background, slightly rising and falling, mimicking within the microstructure of the song what the album does a whole. The closing “Amo Cahuit” is similarly foreboding. With crunchy strains of distorted guitar echoing as if out of a cave, a sibilant hiss that howls like the wind, and a menacing swell of deep bass amidst the softly tinkling bells it easily raises the hairs on the back of my neck. Soriah and Sain show high caliber and precision in their artistry and Atlan, full of grace and nuance, will be a keynote in my ever evolving musical rotation for quite some time.
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