Artficial Music Machine
The concept behind this album is straightforward: Merzbow rearrangesTamarin material into new songs and Tamarin does the same with Merzbow.Like a lot of Merzbow’s current output, this album is based more aroundbeats than an all out assault on the ears. I don’t have a problem withAkita’s forays into beats but he’s done it better before (the recentalbum Merzbuta being possibly the peak of this particular direction). The opening track “Processed 3” starts off with a good beat and some nice noises that sound like digitised cicadas. That’s about as interesting as it gets.
Merzbow should be wearing the listener down but I felt the music was being worn down; becoming meek and limp. The tones change on the beat slowly over the course of twelve minutes before fuzzing out into all out noise (quelle surprise!). It is a very poor track. The other two Merzbow tracks are equally dull. All three tracks just smack of sheer laziness; there has been absolutely no effort at making any sort of interesting compositions. I wouldn’t be at all surprised if Merzbow had a sweatshop somewhere with a hundred people forced to record generic Merzbowisms using various pieces of electronic equipment.
Tamarin’s half of the CD fares much better. It has a lot morecharacter than the Merzbow tracks. “Untitled 1” sounds like a glitchyrecording of solar flares in a wind tunnel. There is a lushness andspacious feeling to the sounds; it was a joy to listen to after theprevious half hour of crap. “Untitled 2” starts off with a menacing andextremely low drone, after a short while it is joined by a niceclarinet, sounding like a lonely sailor in a sea that is about turninto a heaving mass of waves. The build up to this crash iselectrifying. Static slowly erupts like the warning rattle of arattlesnake. The storm never fully arrives, it’s almost like a tantrictempest, the feeling of impending doom is far more exciting than theactual event.
Tamarin has demonstrated a far more skilful approach to remixing Merzbow’s work than Merzbow has managed with Tamarin. Too bad Merzbow Vs. Tamarin wasn’t made into two separate EPs, the last three tracks are really wonderful in their use of sound but the first half of the CD is so disgracefully amateur that it is painful to listen to and not in the usual way.
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While Berlinette was subtly flavored withreferences to tired, classic trance, techno, and industrial tracks, Thrills seemed at first to lack thetransformative effect that such borrowings underwent on the previousrecord. Subsequent listens taught me toview the record as an experimentation session whose frequent over-stylizations becamethe frills of an attempt to meld the monolithic and minimal sounds of herinfluences with the Bpitch aesthetic embracing rough-edges, the supercool ofGerman techno, and a sense of scatterbrained, urban fusion.
Though it does have some nice processed vocalnoises, “Down” is just too much of the button-pushing, brow-beating minimalelectro for my taste. The vocal refrain,“Break Me Down,” is likewise not complex enough to carry any weight. Of the three remixes on this 12”, the first,from Dinky, a female Chilean DJ is the most successful, stretching the trackinto a nine-minute cool, pulsing atmospheric, politely avoiding the deadeningthree-note, time-keeping phrase of the original as much as possible, or insteadharmonizing it to make the effect less stunted. To the slowed beat, Dinky adds a muted plucked guitar or piano, giving“Down” a needed coastal air that all but completely obscures its original’smood. Italians Drama Society’s mix turns“Down” archetypal cold, chiming electro slow-burner, way too unchanging andpredictable to excite me, until, for about the last minute, when they chop inthe “ahh-ahh” vocal, louder and more stretchy than the original, sounding reallynice. French hip-hop producers FuckAloopbasically recreate the entire track, using mostly a slowed version of thestuttered industrial shuffle of the rhythm track as template, layed over withsome flashy, fried synth noodling and a re-created vocoder version of the vocalwhich, predictably, sounds annoying. Ifthey’d incorporated some faster breaks into the monotonous static rhythm, thistrack may have come out sounding alright, but the goofy synths do not jive wellwith anything, Ellen Allien or not. Honestly,I’m a bit surprised Ellen endorsed these last two mixes, after some good oneson her last two singles.
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Prefuse 73 follows up his last, guest-filled full length with thisstripped-back instrumental "mini album" dedicated to the rigors oftraveling to promote and perform his music. This is cut up hip hop forthe short attention span set, and should satisfy the folks who criedfoul when he littered his last hip hop record with (gasp) rapping!
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Neil Campbell’s sixth volume of his solo efforts away from Vibracathedral Orchestra’s more democratic accommodating approach is an outstanding collection of different musical pieces. Volume 6 is probably the best yet, running the musical gamut between experimental, melody, drone and fun. The only way I can think to recommend this series anymore would be for me to go around selling it door to door.
self-released
I expected some drones, I expected a bit of feedback and I even thought there might be a barrage of noise. I didn’t expect "Untitled 3" to offer up heaven spilling otherworldly outpost noise and an elongated ‘lone piper on hilltop’ melody rising from a cloud of urban fumes. The rest of this CD-R is equally arresting and combines handheld percussion with sleepy lasers ("Untitled 5"), freeze frame songs of praise ("Untitled 5"), and squirreling wah-wah piece with eight or so different elements competing for my attention ("Untitled 4").
He starts proceedings with a rough and scuffed frantic rhythm with an underlying bleepage 33rpm record played three times as fast. But beneath this cranked murmur is a softer undercarriage of sound that ripples relaxingly. Membership of the Astral Social Club has also made me accept some artist’s propensity to cut their work short in mid zone-out. The sudden edits peppered throughout this release seem to make sense here. These cuts seem more like parts of the song rather than editing or space decisions. "Untitled 8" goes the other way and fades up in a back to front fashion seemingly full of organic crackles and steaming whooshes sounding very much like a passing party craft of some sort.
Closing the release in an unexpected—but very enjoyable—way is a live blow-out feedback drone-punk version of The Temptations "Get Ready". The guitar line that’s blasted here on an endless repeat is trapped within a chunk of flinted amber while a good time wallow in noise swirls around it. This meeting creates a kind of motionless funk as parts of the mix are lifted, through accident or design, in and out of the aural light making this ‘almost’ cover ripe for a nasty DJ set.
 
 
 
Arcolepsy
I figured that Baker's varied output would provide opportunity for each of these remixers to reconstruct his songs altogether and come up with something new and exciting. It'd be easy, I thought, to add all kinds of new material to his songs while retaining some elements of the originals. "Baker's musical palette is practically begging for reconstruction," I said, but evidently few people are sure of what to do with his music. According to the notes that come in this handmade package, each of the remixers used entire albums as sources for the music. Be that as it may, many of these songs are so boringly flat and dull that I can't imagine any one of them using more than just a few minutes of one song on each album. Both "Cloning (1 Blood Made 2 Remix)" and "Interweaver (Jazzy Mix)" attempt to add new beats to Baker's music, using his guitar drones and other electronic blurs to make music that adds up to nothing new or exciting at all. It's as though the remixers felt they could cover up their own lack of inspiration by disguising Baker's music as something deserving of washed up drum beats and club treatment. The Orb did this ten years ago, but I was excited about their albums. This is chill out music, something to ignore while doing the laundry or reading a book.
In some cases the remixers attempted to expand on themes that Baker had established in the source material. Building Castles Out of Matchsticks remixed music from Cicatrice, an album built around a theme of "mechanical/insectoid" guitar work. The drum breaks that the group added to the song certainly bring out a fluttering, nightmarish quality reminiscent of giant robot insects flying about, but there's just not enough flare and excitement in the music to make it stand out. It sounds, more or less, like a textbook example of how to make fast, inhuman beats fit in with any kind of music whatsoever. It sounds as though everyone must've thrown their hands up in the air in frustration because they weren't quite sure how to mold something interesting and musical out of music that is inherently shapeless, or at least constantly changing. In most cases it seems as though everyone said to themselves, "throw in some beats, that'll solve the problem!" Gruntsplatter and the Blameshifter both prove it is possible to play with Baker's music and leave the percussion at home.
Both used multiple sources as sound material for their remixes and both try to confront Baker's music without turning it into an electronic dance session. Their remixes are dense, layered songs breaking and popping with melodies, bending with inconsistencies, and constantly evolving. In other words, the good remixes on this disc don't mess with Baker's style so much as they attempt to shape it in new ways. Gruntsplatter's remix is especially involving, using five sources and mixing them expertly into a wave of sound pictures that slowly fall apart and fade away into a buzzing pulse that consumes the end of the track. It sounds more like a song unto itself than any of the other remixes on the disc because it is so imaginative and varied, not because it added some beats or rearranged a few sounds here and there so as to make a melody that didn't exist on the original album. When Gruntsplatter meshes two different pieces of sound together it is a convincing marriage that doesn't violate Baker's compositional style. Troum's remix, though using only one source, succeeds because it doesn't try to re-imagine the music entirely, placing it in a strange setting it could never belong in. Troum seem to let the original guide them on a new path, but they don't attempt to punch holes in the music and turn the whole affair into something it was never meant to be. They took caution and didn't attempt to relocate Baker's music altogether, they simply allowed it to move and play in new ways. It is no easy task remixing a drone-based work, but they do it and they do it well.
Despite the spattering of bad remixes on this CD, the three or four good tracks on here are stunningly good and represent what the possibilities of a remix still hold. The best material on the disc reshapes Baker's music and places it in a new setting, but without going overboard. The addition of beats and melodies doesn't make for a satisfying remix of Baker's music. It takes a little more imagination than that and the ability to play with sound as living thing and not just some source to add beats beneath. Beyond that, it takes the ability to imagine something new in something to inherently bare and it shows on this disc that such a task is much harder than it might seem. Of the eleven artists on this disc, only four passed the test with any degree of success.
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