bretter daze / better days
this tune, which i heard for the first time only the other day, sums up pop music in 2011
the king of crunk hooks up with the kings of party-rocking
result: in a track that brings out the latent gabber i always heard in crunk
damn near just drums and that bugle-like sax parp calling the assembled to attention
Lil Jon mad-barking like a drill sergeant of reckless getting-wreckedness
an anthem of concussive hedonism
kickdrum beat like a battery of shots to the dome
bretter was what the Germans called the hardtekno that became gabber - bretter meaning literally boards, planks, and thence banging, slamming, and thence hammered, sledgied, monged
have a wicked NY's Eve, keep it tidy, and here's to much better days in 2012!
"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
Saturday, December 31, 2011
Friday, December 30, 2011
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Friday, December 23, 2011
michaelangelo matos in the guardian investigating the phenomenon of hipster house aka chillrave
http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/dec/22/portland-miracles-club-indie-goes-dance
they do seem awfully sincere and respectful
perhaps overly so
the question remains for me though is:
if you wanted to dance, what's wrong with the existing, ongoing dance culture (in which house has undergone a resurgence across the board)
why is it based around dance / house as it was 20 to 25 years ago?
and so again it seems to fit that retro / vintage chic mentality of getting the period sounds right, the period styling (the record covers, the fonts, the flyers, the allusions) just right
there is this parallel thing going on with ex-noise/drone types getting into early techno and EBM /Cold Wave/ ate 80s dance-floor oriented industrial -- people like Prurient and Pete Swanson
in that case i suspect it's wanting somewhere to "go", musically -- noise-abstraction being a diminishing returns zone and also absolutely blanketed, choked with output
http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/dec/22/portland-miracles-club-indie-goes-dance
they do seem awfully sincere and respectful
perhaps overly so
the question remains for me though is:
if you wanted to dance, what's wrong with the existing, ongoing dance culture (in which house has undergone a resurgence across the board)
why is it based around dance / house as it was 20 to 25 years ago?
and so again it seems to fit that retro / vintage chic mentality of getting the period sounds right, the period styling (the record covers, the fonts, the flyers, the allusions) just right
there is this parallel thing going on with ex-noise/drone types getting into early techno and EBM /Cold Wave/ ate 80s dance-floor oriented industrial -- people like Prurient and Pete Swanson
in that case i suspect it's wanting somewhere to "go", musically -- noise-abstraction being a diminishing returns zone and also absolutely blanketed, choked with output
Monday, December 19, 2011
Clonk's Coming (Again)
an ideal stocking stuffer -- this pretty package RetroActivity: basically the Best of Sweet Exorcist on two discs.
almost the All of Sweet Exorcist, actually... well, there was this later album Spirit Guide To Low Tech on Touch(when Kirk & Parrot had moved into post-Artificial Intelligence zones and accordingly sounds closer to R.H.K's work as Sandoz, also for Touch) but RetroActivity scoops up the bleep/clonk era material for Warp
here's a fave Sweet Exorcist tune, minimalism getting maximal - the title track of the C.C. EP and C.C.C.D.
an ideal stocking stuffer -- this pretty package RetroActivity: basically the Best of Sweet Exorcist on two discs.
almost the All of Sweet Exorcist, actually... well, there was this later album Spirit Guide To Low Tech on Touch(when Kirk & Parrot had moved into post-Artificial Intelligence zones and accordingly sounds closer to R.H.K's work as Sandoz, also for Touch) but RetroActivity scoops up the bleep/clonk era material for Warp
here's a fave Sweet Exorcist tune, minimalism getting maximal - the title track of the C.C. EP and C.C.C.D.
Sunday, December 18, 2011
Saturday, December 17, 2011
bought this record at the time
don't remember this "Plunky" though -- pretty sure it got put out in the U.K. as just Oneness of Juju
it was almost a hit in the U.K.
back then i thought they were this one-off group but in recent years realised that
Oneness of Juju have this extensive history going back into jazz-funk-fusion and Afrocentric mystical what-not
"Kazi", "Poo Too"? these titles would have raised a snigger from scato-puerile Brits i fear
they remind me a tiny bit of this outfit, whose fab hit "The Message" i had on one of those great Soul Gold comps, the ones with the graffiti wall covers
that last one is said to have been ripped off by Stone Roses for "Fool's Gold"
then there was this lot -- mixed African and Caribbean band, often described as "African Rock", pitched to the prog market
produced by Tony Visconti
in some ways not a million miles from War
"Low Rider" at one point i thought was the ultimate song
love the Beastie Boys but can't help but empathise with War's indignation that the Beasties got into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame before they did
Howard Scott (vocalist and founding member of War) griped: “We were cranking out gold records when they were still in diapers. How could the Beastie Boys get in before us when they sampled War's music on their first album?! I'll eat their platinum records!"
don't remember this "Plunky" though -- pretty sure it got put out in the U.K. as just Oneness of Juju
it was almost a hit in the U.K.
back then i thought they were this one-off group but in recent years realised that
Oneness of Juju have this extensive history going back into jazz-funk-fusion and Afrocentric mystical what-not
"Kazi", "Poo Too"? these titles would have raised a snigger from scato-puerile Brits i fear
they remind me a tiny bit of this outfit, whose fab hit "The Message" i had on one of those great Soul Gold comps, the ones with the graffiti wall covers
that last one is said to have been ripped off by Stone Roses for "Fool's Gold"
then there was this lot -- mixed African and Caribbean band, often described as "African Rock", pitched to the prog market
produced by Tony Visconti
in some ways not a million miles from War
"Low Rider" at one point i thought was the ultimate song
love the Beastie Boys but can't help but empathise with War's indignation that the Beasties got into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame before they did
Howard Scott (vocalist and founding member of War) griped: “We were cranking out gold records when they were still in diapers. How could the Beastie Boys get in before us when they sampled War's music on their first album?! I'll eat their platinum records!"
Thursday, December 15, 2011
amen to that
superb archaeology of the most famous break in jungle by Tom Nuttall for The Economist (although in Economist style he's not given a byline)
at the Economist blog T.N. has further thoughts on classic instances of Amentalism + soundclips
here's my vote for the mightiest of the mighty - Renegade, a/k/a Ray Keith, "Terrorist" - an army of amens
superb archaeology of the most famous break in jungle by Tom Nuttall for The Economist (although in Economist style he's not given a byline)
at the Economist blog T.N. has further thoughts on classic instances of Amentalism + soundclips
here's my vote for the mightiest of the mighty - Renegade, a/k/a Ray Keith, "Terrorist" - an army of amens
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Thursday, December 8, 2011
now tell me people, who was it invented this kind of disco-funk (with the emphasis on funk) heavy on the downstroke crunchy-thwacking snare rhythm?
as a postpunker-turned-funkateer, i used to be obsessed with records with that kind of beat, which at one point was almost all dance records
this is a particularly thwacking example, as was most of Steve Arrington's stuff, and probably Slave's too
that really strident downstroke snarecrunch, you don't really hear it in James Brown or Ohio Players
you can hear it coming a little bit with this things like this 1975 tune
was it Hamilton B who done it first?
at one point this next one would have seemed like the ultimate music to me
Gap Band probably took it as far as it could go
then probably as postdisco/boogie got to be less a band-oriented sound, more about producers + players + machines, the thwack-snare probably start to fade out
oh now i think of it, probably Parliament-Funkadelic had something to do with it, right?
this is a primo later example where the downstroke really dominates the record in a super-imposing way, like a great slash across the sound-stage
and then there was Cameo
pre-codpieces and "Single Life"/"Word Up" crossing-over-to-pop Cameo
i remember a DJ at Oxford in 1983 earnestly telling me that Cameo made the hardest toughest street funk around
as a postpunker-turned-funkateer, i used to be obsessed with records with that kind of beat, which at one point was almost all dance records
this is a particularly thwacking example, as was most of Steve Arrington's stuff, and probably Slave's too
that really strident downstroke snarecrunch, you don't really hear it in James Brown or Ohio Players
you can hear it coming a little bit with this things like this 1975 tune
was it Hamilton B who done it first?
at one point this next one would have seemed like the ultimate music to me
Gap Band probably took it as far as it could go
then probably as postdisco/boogie got to be less a band-oriented sound, more about producers + players + machines, the thwack-snare probably start to fade out
oh now i think of it, probably Parliament-Funkadelic had something to do with it, right?
this is a primo later example where the downstroke really dominates the record in a super-imposing way, like a great slash across the sound-stage
and then there was Cameo
pre-codpieces and "Single Life"/"Word Up" crossing-over-to-pop Cameo
i remember a DJ at Oxford in 1983 earnestly telling me that Cameo made the hardest toughest street funk around
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
maxi
people have been pointing out some earlier examples of maximalist dance - in the original baggier (maxi-er) version of the piece I had a reference to "psy-trance's Mandelbrot-mandala curlicues"
but in terms of 90s examples I clean forgot about Sven Vath
not just the critically acclaimed Accident In Paradise LP
but the critically not-acclaimed (un-acclaimed? anti-acclaimed??) The Harlequin, the Robot, and the Ballet Dancer which was bloody awful by all accounts
Jam & Spoon's big album whose album i title forget also veered prog-wards
there was also a house/trance hybrid in the mid-90s called "epic house" which if i recall meant BT
then while jungle and drum'n'bass generally was minimalist and tracky or anthemic, and even when bombastic it was bare-bones bombast (No U Turn), you did have quite a few exceptions
Hyper On Experience had a fussy, busy-busy orchestrated sound that was thrilling on their classic run of singles
obviously Goldie with Timeless and then, jeepers, the prog'n'bass orchestral epic "Mother" on Saturnz Return
this is just the radio edit i guess! the full length is 40 minutes or so
christ on a bike i've never seen that video!
IDM by the late 90s had maximalist tendencies, through its misunderstanding of drum'n'bass actually i.e. drill'n'bass. Squarepusher had some Jaco Pastorius style bass noodle in there
also Max Tundra was pursuing a sound that was pretty max at the turn of the millenium, albeit on the very outer edges of electronica in the dance/post-dance sense
when dance producers decide to do an album, they do quite often go for an ALBUM in the big sweeping overblown/prove my versatility sense and it does tend to head towards that proggy maximal zone
you could probably collate a list of these vanity projects, ranked according to utter uselessness, with the effort by Paul Oakenfold seeing off most if not all comers
people have been pointing out some earlier examples of maximalist dance - in the original baggier (maxi-er) version of the piece I had a reference to "psy-trance's Mandelbrot-mandala curlicues"
but in terms of 90s examples I clean forgot about Sven Vath
not just the critically acclaimed Accident In Paradise LP
but the critically not-acclaimed (un-acclaimed? anti-acclaimed??) The Harlequin, the Robot, and the Ballet Dancer which was bloody awful by all accounts
Jam & Spoon's big album whose album i title forget also veered prog-wards
there was also a house/trance hybrid in the mid-90s called "epic house" which if i recall meant BT
then while jungle and drum'n'bass generally was minimalist and tracky or anthemic, and even when bombastic it was bare-bones bombast (No U Turn), you did have quite a few exceptions
Hyper On Experience had a fussy, busy-busy orchestrated sound that was thrilling on their classic run of singles
obviously Goldie with Timeless and then, jeepers, the prog'n'bass orchestral epic "Mother" on Saturnz Return
this is just the radio edit i guess! the full length is 40 minutes or so
christ on a bike i've never seen that video!
IDM by the late 90s had maximalist tendencies, through its misunderstanding of drum'n'bass actually i.e. drill'n'bass. Squarepusher had some Jaco Pastorius style bass noodle in there
also Max Tundra was pursuing a sound that was pretty max at the turn of the millenium, albeit on the very outer edges of electronica in the dance/post-dance sense
when dance producers decide to do an album, they do quite often go for an ALBUM in the big sweeping overblown/prove my versatility sense and it does tend to head towards that proggy maximal zone
you could probably collate a list of these vanity projects, ranked according to utter uselessness, with the effort by Paul Oakenfold seeing off most if not all comers
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
looking-back-at-2011 piece by me on Digital Maximalism - Rustie, James Ferraro, Grimes and others - for Pitchfork
slike Terror Danjah turned into a bouncy castle
more and more I think James Ferraro is our Jeff Koons
Grimes against Nature
yer a dirrty wee radge Russ - a dirrrty dirrty wee radge
slike Terror Danjah turned into a bouncy castle
more and more I think James Ferraro is our Jeff Koons
Grimes against Nature
yer a dirrty wee radge Russ - a dirrrty dirrty wee radge