Following tracks on Leaf's 'Invisible Soundtracks Volume II' compilation and appearances on Swim~ records' 'Last Hand' and 'Macro-Scopic' EPs, we finally get our hands on Ronnie & Clyde's debut CD. From spooky chilled-out basement eccentricities to glorious breakbeat and drum & bass, this is what I call a real album - not just a collection of ten tracks. It builds up, breaks down and burns with an underlying coherence throughout.
Ronnie & Clyde (a/k/a John Ross and Rob Fitzpatrick) are in a world of their own with the wooba wooba bass and dub atmospheres of 'Natural One' though to the near-junglist beats of 'Macro-Scopic'. But when the pace calms for beatless chill out sessions, the duo are on thin ice. 'Twice Removed', for example lacks the soul of highly-studied ambience, or the depth of their bass- and beat-oriented tracks. But when the drums return and are mixed up with these more atmospheric leanings, Ronnie & Clyde create a perfect harmony. And this chemical reaction makes for one of the albums highlights, 'Last Hand'.
As this album is only being released on CD, the most important tracks here are 'Natural One', 'From A Great Height' (probably the most accomplished, frontier-embracing drum & bass cut on the album) and 'Theme From A Lazy Life' (awesome science-lab jazz jungle), which are all set to appear on DJ-friendly vinyl. 7/10
This review also published in: DJ magazine
Tuesday, September 16, 1997
Ronnie & Clyde - In Glorious Black And Blue (swim~)
Posted by Ian Peel
Labels: DJ
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