Thursday, May 18, 2023

toytown tekno 5 of ?


 


Cheeky-dodgy E-as-candy puns in both the group name and the track name 


The mixes








Chris Howell  - 1/3 of Smart E's - went on to record as Luna-C and a score more aliases and also to found Kniteforce Records  - later known as Kniteforce Again. He remains a stalwart with reissues, box sets, first-time issues of vintage unreleased stuff, and veterans coaxed back into the new-old fray. He's also written a tract entitled The Rave Commandments, as Christopher Howell (perhaps authors need to have more formal names?). 

Give it up to Kodwo Eshun for seeing something in "Sesame's Treet" when no one else did

  (from his Club Licks column in the Wire September 1992)
























Context 

The full Club Licks column 


Here's a post-Treet tune I really like by The Luna C Project 



Actually, there's a more exciting euphoria-soaked remix of it on one of those 93 comps with 'dark' in the title 

Ah, it is in fact this one by the mighty Sublove (one of those groups who have been reissued etc etc by Kniteforce in recent years)


It's on a cusp between darkside and happy hardcore. The vocal sample is  cheesy and jaunty in style 'n' mood, but the lyrics are designed to comment on the fact everyone in the room is "under the influence". It preys on and amplifies the suppressed anxiety of dancers who maybe feel a little out of control, or like they're being controlled:  

"There's an invisible intruder / That's got inside your mind / Invading your sense of right and wrong / Making your conscience blind"

Something about the voice makes me think of The Buggles, or Bruce Woolley and the Camera Club. 

The sample was also used earlier in this Smart E's track


The sample is from a song called "Spectator Sport" by a super-obscure '80s pop group called New Beginnings. Who do have that proggers trying to go bouncy-pop vibe of Buggles. But they also appear to be some kind of Christian rock group. Which would explain the "invading your sense of right and wrong" line. Plus, I have always heard the words "an invisible intruder" as "an invisible Judas" !







But back to the first Luna-C Project EP - the whole thing is themed around insanity






A Thirdform recommendation from the comments: Luna-C alias Trip with "The Snowball", named after a super-intense pill in circulation in darkside days


Flipside maintains the druggy theme














Now that's something I'd like to get my hands on (although all the promos on YouTube I'm sure)
















Crikey there was a Smart E's album - I guess if you've had a number 2 single, it's obligatory

I feel like in the Great Rave LPs discussion, someone spoke up for this record as pretty good

"A Most Excellent Choon", tee hee



Closing thoughts from John Harris in 2006

"Remember, though: in the dark days of 1991-93, it looked like the guitar really was extinct, but rock bit back and eventually won. Who now listens to such rave milestones as the Prodigy's 1992 hit Charly, the entire oeuvre of Altern 8 (two blokes who essentially released the same record over and over again - what cards!) and Shaft's 1992 smash Roobarb and Custard? Only very strange people." 

4 comments:

  1. best tune luna-c was involved in was the Trip - Snowball imo. I'd filed it away in my head as pretty regular darkside for 93 (well, regular makes it sound like 93 was a regular year) but its sheer mind fuck hit me a few years ago. Having gotten into an altercation the night before, my heart still alive with the fight and flight responses, I had to make a road trip. Driving down the motor way to susurluk, having turned my brain into mush with Masayuki Takayanagi's proto-no wave free jazz noise guitar (seriously, check the La Grima concert) I put on a darkside tape in my headphones to smoothen out the flow, and breakbeats at 160+ are autobahn music, anyway.

    The samples from the Shining and the extreme time stretching on the breaks, like insectoid crawls really hit me and freaked me the hell out. the grainy 8bit riff sounds just added to that sort of disorientation. pure guttertronics. Can def see why it was named after an MDEA pill, say no more!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Adding that to the post

    There was another darkcore tune called "Snowball" right? Or that came in a Snowball Mix.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Snowballs were MDA

    ReplyDelete
  4. @anon you're right, they were MDA, I'm getting my md compounds mixed up.

    ReplyDelete