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The first is a remix of "Glue of the World" by Hebden. It stretches the anticipation of the original and tosses a humorously dance-laden drum break into the mix. Think Madonna's "Music" without the shameful Credence rip-off. The second remix is from new-comer Koushik, who recently signed to Hebden's Text Records in the UK. It's a bright, playful number with Koushik's charming vocals propelling the song into genuine indie-pop territory. Manitoba's remix of the same song should come as no surprise if you're familiar with his brilliant Start Breaking My Heart album. He lightens the mood a little bit and keeps the groove as sturdy as the original. The final remix is Boom Bip's version of "No More Mosquitoes." It's much darker than the original, with a chiming interpretation of the vocal melody that bears a weird resemblance to the X-Files theme. Overall this EP is far superior to the "No More Mosquitoes" single from a few months back. The single had an obvious B-sides quality to it that this EP thankfully doesn't have. It stands on its own as a solid addition to the Four Tet catalog. -
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Ocosi is Paul Molyneux with former member Simon Smerdon (aka Mothboy)also present on the title track of this limited edition of 100 CD-Rsfrom Manifold. Divided up into 7 tracks totaling 44 minutes, "Guided"is exactly how I like this sort of music: gritty, dark and aggressive.The beats are raw, the bass is booming, the drift is eerie, the pace isslow and everything just jells the way it should. Though the rhythmsare like locked grooves there are occasional staggers, change ups andbreaks to help keep it all interesting. Except maybe "Go Away" whichlanguishes in a cymbal like loop. The tense, near 15 minute finale "AtEnds" is perhaps the most intriguing, strangely enough considering it'ssimply a slowly revolving industrial soundscape devoid of beats.
For this 62-minute disc, Ocosi team up with 'dark ambient soundscape'artist Horchata (Mike Palace) and leave the production up to him for acleaner, more digital take on the sound. And, ultimately, a much morelaid back and boring sound. The 11 tracks are comprised of the usualbeats, bass and backing recipe, but are really lacking in grit and thusflavor. The sounds are pretty dull, the programming rather drab and theatmospheres more faint than they are dark. And 3 tracks are far toolong at 7 to 9 minutes apiece. In this batch "Transfiguration" is likethe cookie that somehow got all of the chocolate chips. It hasglimmering metallic bells, a funky groove, a pretty melody viaHorchata's own arp-01 midi file generating software and impressiveinterplay between bass/beats and backdrop. At least I can savor thatone. A second volume of Horchata / Ocosi is planned, also via Zero 1Media.
NOS is Swiss duo Giuseppe Di Benedetto and Jean-Claude Codoni and thisis their self titled debut for Economy Records, a sub division ofManifold. Nine tracks make up 53 minutes of murkiness. And I don't meanthat as a compliment. The mix is awful. Every sound is consumed by abass heavy, atmospheric gunk. That, combined with the wimpy anddownright dull rhythm programming, makes for music with very littleedge. "Unknown" starts off promising but doesn't know where to go fromthere. "Ultimatum" tries to get nasty but ends up being a big mess ofpercussion. Yuck. Forget this one. -
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