"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
Wednesday, January 30, 2019
spasm #2
not dance music, but some kind of postpostmetal blast beat hyperspasmus
sounds like it could be programmed or drum machined into existence
but who knows eh? it's a one-man band at any rate.
wouldn't it be funny if metal - which one tends to think of as supremely physical music, strenuous in excelsis, muscled, sweaty - became a subset of electronic music? all the "effort" vaporized into sets of digital decisions, blocs of information dragged and tweaked
perhaps some of it already is
(via andrew parker)
Monday, January 28, 2019
spasm #1
well that is pretty mad
a recommendation from my boy Kieran
he also likes this, which is not as manic but pretty peculiar, droopy, tone-smeary stuff
all unfamiliar stuff to me really, games music - i must have played a video game perhaps a dozen times in me life. completely bypassed me.
Thursday, January 24, 2019
watch ya bass bins
sometimes i think this crazy archival (ardkival, even) culture of ours has gone a bit far, stripping the mystery a little as the frontiers of non-knowledge get pushed back further and further, everything documented and annotated and mapped - tidied up
but then on t'other hand, it is kinda cool that someone at The Ransom Note has dug up the story behind the voice that goes "watch ya bass bins i'm tellin ya" on Altern-8's "Infiltrate 202"
Turns out they they it sampled from a Sheffield pirate radio station - not necessarily this particular show, but this station - SRC aka Sheffield community Radio, which then became Fantasy FM - and this deejay duo, Astrix & Space
i went a-lookin' on account of this wikkid UKG tune that Cardrossmaniac2 dropped earlier this week
which doesn't as far as i can tell actually feature the vocal bit from Chris Duckenfield (aka Astrix - he also worked for Warp in the shop and various other functions)
just a folk memory allusion, maybe, or simply a perennially applicable warning! (you got bass bins, you better watch 'em)
the oil-slick noxious B-line on the G.O.D. tune made me think of another Sheffield connection - a later temple of bass boom - Niche
see, it's all connected... there's these threads... there's a word for it, it's on the tip of my tongue...
Astrix & Space i.e. Duckenfield and partner Richard Benson pop up here actually remixing "Infiltrate 202" !
other remixes, one by an illustrious name but not really lustrous
Ah Duckenfield and Benson it seems were RAC, a Warp act whose name rings a faint bell (stands for Richard And Chris)
That would qualify as late bleep maybe - from 92
And this is arguably very late bleep - from 1994
The sound getting a bit clean and fiddly by this point - not a great need to be keeping a watchful eye on those bass bins anymore
Yeah bleep to bassline via UKG - that would be the better line to follow
but then on t'other hand, it is kinda cool that someone at The Ransom Note has dug up the story behind the voice that goes "watch ya bass bins i'm tellin ya" on Altern-8's "Infiltrate 202"
Turns out they they it sampled from a Sheffield pirate radio station - not necessarily this particular show, but this station - SRC aka Sheffield community Radio, which then became Fantasy FM - and this deejay duo, Astrix & Space
i went a-lookin' on account of this wikkid UKG tune that Cardrossmaniac2 dropped earlier this week
which doesn't as far as i can tell actually feature the vocal bit from Chris Duckenfield (aka Astrix - he also worked for Warp in the shop and various other functions)
just a folk memory allusion, maybe, or simply a perennially applicable warning! (you got bass bins, you better watch 'em)
the oil-slick noxious B-line on the G.O.D. tune made me think of another Sheffield connection - a later temple of bass boom - Niche
see, it's all connected... there's these threads... there's a word for it, it's on the tip of my tongue...
Astrix & Space i.e. Duckenfield and partner Richard Benson pop up here actually remixing "Infiltrate 202" !
other remixes, one by an illustrious name but not really lustrous
Ah Duckenfield and Benson it seems were RAC, a Warp act whose name rings a faint bell (stands for Richard And Chris)
That would qualify as late bleep maybe - from 92
And this is arguably very late bleep - from 1994
The sound getting a bit clean and fiddly by this point - not a great need to be keeping a watchful eye on those bass bins anymore
Yeah bleep to bassline via UKG - that would be the better line to follow
Monday, January 21, 2019
Never Lost His Dreams
23 years old!
god bless whomsoever playeth that synth lick that come in at about 3.48 - sublime wisp of wistful melody cycling sensuously around and around and around
and god bless Lyn Eden
this selection triggered by the tunes Cardrossmaniac2 be dropping
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
well, how nuum nuum nummy is that - 50 percent of Smokin Beats = Neil Rumney, aka N.R.G., as in "I Need Your Lovin'" and "He Never Lost His Hardcore".
i did not know that when i started this little post - just now idly checked discogs - you learn something every day, even an accredited historian of the subject such as moi
Rumney's pedigree goes back to the bleep era, his first tunes are on Chill Records
Although this debut from 1991 is more like breaks 'n' bleeps
and hark ye! it's got one of the same samples as the more famous later "Terminator", as well as near enough the same title
it's Rufige Cru who'll do a much better job with the samples from the movie and sonically live up to the lethal promise of the title
flipside to "Never Lost His Hardcore" - but it's not that ruff in all honesty
back to Smokin Beats
he / they seem to have switched back over to house 'n' g as early as 1994
a LOT of releases
bit daunting, i don't have the heart for a proper delve - perhaps someone else can tell me if there's anything as magic as "Dreams" in there?
odd, the proximity of N.R.G. to N'n'G, another UK garage outfit helmed by an old hardcore vet (Grant Nelson)
if Neil R had stuck with N.R.G. as his UKG alias, then the scene would have had an N.R.G. and an N'n'G - causing all kinds of name confusion
these are the thought-phantoms that beguile the brain of a nuumologist late at night
Saturday, January 19, 2019
Wednesday, January 16, 2019
Tuesday, January 15, 2019
Nightcores on Edm street
Shitecore, more like!
"Most nightcore artists traffic in distorted edits of tracks—mostly Top 40, J-pop, and K-pop—sped up to 160+ BPM, with vocals so cartoonishly high-pitched they could easily come from a starry-eyed anime idol"
"a healthy dose of parodic absurdity", zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
this one is at least overloaded and diabetic-coma-y -
"a frenetic cacophony of jittering vocals and accelerating rhythms that spiral into shimmering, fragmented chaos"
but really, isn't it just Rustie x PC Music = hearditbefore?
with some glitchcore, and The Speedfreak, thrown in?
quite enjoyable in its way, but leaves you with a sinking feeling: will we never leave - get past, go further than - the Nineties?
adding to that sense of terminal entropy, ever decreasing (re)cycles.... c.f. 'wave' a couple years ago
Labels:
CANDY GABBA,
ENTROPY,
HARDCORE,
NIGHTCORE,
PARODY,
THE NINETIES
Friday, January 11, 2019
nudark
i don't get what they're trying to put across with the video though
in a way reminded me of this quote from Marc Acardipane about his Eighties attempts to make hip hop, inspired by Public Enemy and NWA (from my Voice profile)
“But there came a time when I had to look in the mirror and realise, ‘You don’t come from Compton!’ We had to look for the street sound of Europe.”
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