"My purpose was simple: to catch the feel, the pulse of rock, as I had lived through it. What I was after was guts, and flash, and energy, and speed" - NIK COHN -
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "When the music was new and had no rules" -LUNA C
Showing posts with label ANGUS FINLAYSON. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ANGUS FINLAYSON. Show all posts
"If the effect is eerily close to the lo-res drift of a pirate
station as heard through a roving car stereo, then that’s intentional.
[Paul]Woolford has explained that he achieves his [Special Request] sound by actually broadcasting audio via an FM transmitter and sampling the signal as it waxes and wanes" -- Angus Finlayson on the spate of retro-jungle and hardcore-homage tunes, - which includes Demdike Stare, Mordant Music, and Four Tet alongside Special Request - at Pitchork's new blog The Pitch.
Four Tet's forthcoming album is apparently titled Beautiful Rewind.
Don't really hear the junglizm in that one, it's industrial music innit. Meat Beat Manifesto-y, maybe. Good stuff though as always from Baron Mordant.
"Recently,
though, it feels like this habit of retrospection has gone into
overdrive. House music, in particular, seems to ache for its past –
although precisely which bit of it isn’t quite clear. Re-pressings of
long-coveted twelves, extensive reissues of label and artist
discographies, and selectors carving an identity out of the bricolage of
lost classics ensure that youngsters are more clued-up than ever about
every obscure corner of their lofty inheritance. The internet is central
to this: the fact that a forgotten Roy Davis Jr. production is no
longer consigned solely to dusty bargain bins in necrotic record stores –
that it is, in fact, just one “related videos” click away – makes
cultural archeology a more viable and accessible pastime than ever
before.
"The effects of this shift on the creative output of the present are,
frankly, mixed. Of course, the ways in which old records are revived and
recontextualised can feasibly cause fresh sparks to fly, and an
aesthetic focussed on the past isn’t necessarily moribund... It feels
like the scales have tipped somewhat. And while I love early 90s New
York house, jacking acid tracks, primitivist 808 workouts and the rest
as much as the next dance music anorak, the proliferation of homages to,
and watery imitations of, these styles made by young producers today is
both fatiguing and depressing.
"It’s almost as if, confronted with the genius of their forefathers at
every turn, young artists are struggling to imagine novel forms for
house music beyond the boundaries already drawn. Instead, intuiting the
house music mantra that not every stylistic break needs to be a radical
one, they settle for variations on a shrinking pool of themes, trying on
past genre-configurations like so much costumery, reinforcing old, safe
values rather than attempting to forge new ones....
"My gut feeling is that house music,
in the broadest sense, could do with a sturdy voltage to the chest
right now."
Angus then goes on to praise Mark Fell and Vessel for going against this retro-reverential tendency.
Certainly on the reissue front it's striking that you have had in just the last month or two:
curatorial repackaging and re-presentation of the unjustly forgotten: Strut's This Ain’t Chicago anthology of early UK house(check out compiler Richard Sen's oral history over at Neufutur magazine, an in-aptly titled publication in the case of this particular story!)
individual artists giving themselves the Legacy Treatment as regards even relatively recent output: DJ Q's The Archive, Pinch's MIA 2006-2010(both great, by the way)
while hipstahouse seems to be going from "strength to strength"