Sunday, March 01, 1998

Ui - Lifelike (Southern)

This is far too loose and far too damn funky to be called fusion. But Ui do present a melting pot of real instruments, electronica vibes in a mixdown of phat beat-driven sound-lumps. Fresh from a collaboration with Stereoloab (the appropriately titled Uilab) and an essential re-release of their early EPs ('The Two Sided Sharpie'), Lifelike contains studio versions of new and live tracks going back over several years.

Ever wondered where the bass in drum & bass is? Most of it is lurking here - Ui are a trio, two of whom play bass. And that's the live, four string variety. Yes, despite bashing real drum skins and plucking four string doghouses, the production on Lifelike is so tight (claustrophobic even, in places), compressed and full of club sensibilities that many tracks could be mixed into a leftfield DJ set. 'Drive Until He Sleeps' and 'Blood In The Air' are prime examples. On the other hand, 'Undersided', 'Spilling' and 'The Fortunate One Knows No Anxiety' are garage of a more Beavis & Butthead rather than house nature.

But back to the good parts. Imagine the Red Hot Chillis demoing a track with Luke Vibert, or the Beastie Boys playing around with Fridge and you're half way there. Ui certainly prove that guitars and bass have a place in the warped outer reaches of 90s DJ culture. 6/10


This review also published in: DJ magazine

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