It's about time something like this happened. In the absence of any reissues or reassessments of past glories from the man himself, Bang On A Can have taken it upon themselves to produce an entirely new interpretation/homage of Brian Eno's Music For Airports. If you haven't heard of Music For Airports, it's hardly surprising. This gem of an LP basically kicked off the entire ambient music genre but has been laid to rest in dusty seventies progressive rock sections of second hand record shops for almost twenty years.
But BOAC have brought things right up to date with a complete re-recording of the original album with just one major change. All the synthesiser loops and effects have been sidelined in favour of cover versions using only acoustic instruments! That's cello, bass, piano, percussion, guitar and clarinet, fact fans, which brings to mind the other ambient masters of the acoustic stream, Channel Light Vessel.
To tackle covering an LP like Music For Airports, with all it's intricacies, atmosphere's and themes isn't daring, it's bordering on madness. But the results are staggeringly true to the original, so full marks to the four arrangers who all transcribed every movement of the original, each adding their own particular mood. And the beauty of a reinterpretation using 'real' instruments is that this LP can now be performed live - like at the recent premier staged at - where else? - Stansted Airport. 7/10
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Monday, April 27, 1998
Bang On A Can - Music for Airports (Point Music)
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Tuesday, April 14, 1998
Family of God - Family of God (Ochre)
Any private pressing that's described as intriguingly as "mystic disco" by the New York Times is definitely worth a listen in my book. Now that their debut LP gets a proper release on Ochre, I can try my own descriptions. 1) If The Doors had been lead by Beck, not Jim Morrison, tracks like the album's opener 'Goodnight Piccadilly' might have been released thirty years before Family of God had the idea. Or 2) Family of God sound just as if The Eels were an English sixties beat group.
Cool as these ideas are, there's no escaping the other key element on this LP: cheese, pure and unadulterated. When it works ('Moog Over Easy') it's easy to see why this duo have stormed New York clubs like the Elbow Room and the Luna Lounge. When it doesn't ('Moog River' and 'Teenage Beach Musical'), it's easy to see why the cheese craze in the UK transformed (fizzled out?!) so quickly. But with more serious tracks like 'Sabrina' it's easy to see why Family of God have become the darlings of both the NY club and gig scenes. I'll be stunned if this one doesn't turn up on the soundtrack to some US thriller movie in the very near future. Another wicked track is Black And White Universe, the sort of music we'd hear more of if just half the UK big beat artists could write lyrics. Then there's 'Babble' and 'Nirvana' the sort of tracks that only nuts in New York could record.
A strange, completely random double album which - dodgy religious connotations aside - is worth checking out for the two sublime tracks tucked away amongst 20-or-so others. 4/10
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Saturday, March 14, 1998
Skinny – Weekend (Cheeky)
The thought of the return of the concept album is certainly scary and brings to mind Pink Floyd, seventies prog-rock and sixty minute guitar solos. But what if the concept was the weekend - with all it's hang-ups, get-downs, highs and lows - and the album was on Rollo's Cheeky label? Bit of a different proposition? The weekend, probably the most important regular occurrence in any reader of this magazine's life, is explored in all it's complexities by Skinny in the most important debut album so far this year. From Friday night to the wind-down zone to the perils of nights out in the big bad city, this is one album that doesn't need track titles of its own, because all the emotions you know and love are dramatically and explicitly explored within. If you need documentary evidence - just take a spin of 'Failure', Skinny's promo sampler from the tail end of '97 that is still ripping it up as the summer of 98 burns in.
Weekend certainly skims a whole raft of styles, but every aspect packs the same production punch. 'Friday Part 1' is the natural follow-on from 'Failure', using a similar double bass groove. More laid back tracks come in the form of 'The Bus Song' and the ambient epic 'London Tonight' (complete with samples from your favourite news show). In fact the only problem with Weekend is nothing new to seventies-style concept albums and that's the unevenness of vocals and vocal styles across the set. But with that as the only complaint, Weekend is a pretty essential album. You had to be there. 9/10
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Various - Discompose, mixed by DJ Linus (Compose)
As bedroom DJs go, they don't come much better than DJ Linus, mixing some of the best tracks so far from the German house label, Compose live in his bedroom. This LP is a record of just such an event. And the music isn't at all what you'd expect from a faceless German dance label, this jazzy, garage mix is the logical antidote to Compose's darker industrial sister label Compost. The album is very much a platform for DJ Linus' own work, not least the brilliant 'Otranoje', but there are a host of other Germanic disco people in the mix. Like Moon Machine (a new name for the guys behind Beanfield) whose Compost LP of last year is well worth seeking out. As Moon Machine they present the souped-up garage theme 'Superglued', which revolves around a funky rhythm guitar twang. Pufo also stands out, she/he/it is a progressive house DJ, producer and soundtrack artist for Space Night, a German TV show of real-life space footage set to dance music! As such, 'Pufo's Bar-B-Q Late Night Reprise' sounds exactly as you might expect. Other highlights in the mix include a track from Strictly Rhythm artists Future Funk and 'Real Cool' from Kristo (part time muso, part time designer for BMW). Yep, all the artists here are as obscure as you like but together are well worth tracking down. Awful sleeve though. 7/10
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Sunday, March 01, 1998
Caspar Pound - House (Ascension)
For its third release, this track has been given the once over from Italian DJ Francesco Farfa. Farfa turns in an epic acid mix that is more like Star Wars on the dancefloor than anything from the Jedi Knights or Tuskan Raiders. Check out also the jittering, bouncy Baby Doc mix and the soaring world-flavoured Insomnia at Drum Club mix.
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Future Sound of London – Cascade (Virgin)
‘Cascade’ certainly represents a turning point in the career of Brian Dougans & Gary Cobain. In the years leading up to this 35-minute single they had experimented in numerous styles under a variety of pseudonyms. One of these, ‘Papua New Guinea’ released as Future Sound of London caught not only the imagination of the clubbing populous but also that of Virgin Records. So it was with some anticipation that ‘Cascade’ was released in 1993. Anticipation that is, mixed with a sizeable dose of bewilderment as other FSOL projects that year included remixes ranging from Inner City and the Shamen to the more extreme Bryan Ferry and Prefab Sprout.
When it finally appeared, ‘Cascade’ (parts 1-5) sounded nothing like what you might expect from a major-label follow-up to ‘Papua New Guinea’. The trancey backbeat, atmospheric ecstatic vocals and dub-thumpy basslines were pushed aside for Dougans and Cobain to present their most idiosyncratic, memorable and direction-defining work to date. All this and a tune you could hum! Heralding the arrival of the Lifeforms LP, five versions of the track made an album-length single (complete with longform video) that combined catchy, upbeat techno stabs with FSOL's trademark organic rumbling soundscapes. Listen to ‘Cascade’ to hear everything you need to know about Future Sound of London.
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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
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Various - Retrospective box set (Harthouse)
At last, a truly comprehensive guide to the influential German techno/trance label, Harthouse, as founded by one Sven Vath. With four double CDs each in excess of 75 minutes, this mammoth round-up of their early history is certainly exhaustive.
Speedy J and Hardfloor are the big name artists on offer here, with production coming from the equally seminal Luarent Garnier, David Holmes and of course Sven Vath. But what of the 35-or-so other tracks? These include the fat-and-frantic bass burblings of Arpegiators ('Freedom of Expression' and 'Discover Your Innerself' both stand out), the serene 'Plusation' by Trancepulsation (which turns out to be a secret guest-spot from European ambient guru Pete Namlook) and a seemingly infinite number of other magical moments, beats and breaks. In terms of new, less well-known names from the Harthouse vaults, check out Resistence D., Spicelab, Eternal Basment and Carl Lekebusch's mental Braincell project for some truly throbbing German techno and psychedelic trance.
All that from just Disc 1, so what of Disc 2? More of the same, which is either good news or bad depending on how into Harthaouse's hard house you are. But at the end of the day, this sound has always been more evolutionary than samey. Highlights on Discs 3 and 4 are Julika's brilliant hands-in-the-air epic 'MikeroBenics', Progressive Attack's 'Hypnoticharmony' and the dark soundtrack potential of 'Casablanca' by The Ambush. Retrospective is a rich, highly polished collection of the best of Europe's techno roots and is in many ways an essential archive release for your own personal vaults. 7/10
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Monday, February 16, 1998
Ultramarine - A User's Guide (New Electronica)
After looking set for big things at the start of the decade, Ultramarine have been mysteriously off the radar for the past two years. Thankfully the new A Users Guide puts them right back on the map with 10 felxible, mixable tracks. The whole album is based around colourful, bouncy analogue instrumentalism, which peaks in tracks such as 'Zombie', the more percussive 'Ambush' and the appropriately titled 'Surfacing'.
For a band that pioneered the real-intstruments-meets-808s and 303s scam, there's a human vibe that seems to be missing from most of this new offering. So I'm just thankful for squashiness and maluiabilty of the sounds and syniths from analogue heaven that are much in evidence. A User's Guide hovveres largely around 108bpm, but when the pace chills out we enter new territory and find tracks like 'On The Brink' (perfect jazz trip hop) and '4U Version', a second take on the more upbeat 'Sucker 4U'. Across the album you'll hear snatches and snippets of themes - some audible and others more hiddem - which leave you wandering "where did I hear that before?". Ultramarine certainly have a magpie-like approach to creating their soundscapes. But every influence taken on board is so processed and mashed up that a unique feel and style just pours out as a result. 7/10
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Various - Invisible Soundtracks Macro 2 (Leaf)
The last installment of Invisible Soundtracks was certainly a highllight of last year for fans of dark trip hop and minimalist beats. Like clockwork, a new compilation arrives oine year on but this time the IS series has a more international flavour. Artists from around the globe have been commissioned for soundtrack pieces for imaginary films which are stiched together here making a whole greater than the sum of its parts.
Connouisseaurs of mellow vibes and the slow 'n' low regions of techno will be aware of several of the artists included here. Laika, Si Begg, To Rococo Rot and Fridge all put in an apearence. The best offering from these four big fish from a closely guarded backwater is definitely To Rococo Rot, who's Die Dinge Des Lebens is the only track on the album to be actually picked up for use in a forthcoming film. From the less well-known artists, Max Brennan stands out. His 'From The Temple To The Nile' is pure escapism - and a refreshing accoustic interlude. It's tracks like this that remind you how film soundtracks are more about emotion than any oter style of music. The steel cathedrals of Ian Eccles Smith's 'Driftnet' and the mixed up confusion of A Small Good Thing (whose Block was an overlooked highlight of 1997) are both well worth hearing. The films are invisible. These soundtracks are as real as it gets. 9/10
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Wax Doctor - Selected Works (R&S)
Who is the Wax Doctor? I wish I knew. I do know that this album is straight-and-to-the-point atmospheric funk, with a european air and all the 'sensibilities' of easy listening. Track one is instantly reminiscent of Curdoruy (but with a more programmed dancefloor direction). Pounding beats intro'd and outro'd with a shrill, dusky trumpet and jazz samples. Elsewhere, All I Need has some much needed vocal input, albeit threaded through as atmosphere into a track that takes a worrying five minutes to actually get off the ground. Others dont have this problem - thrree tracks in and the srum & bass betas are introduced to softcore effect. Imagine how an instrumental drum & bass De La Soul track might sound and you're half-way near 'Step'. 'Spectrum', on the other hand, keeps the beats uptempo, but has a much realer feel. With 'Heat', the signature atmospheric funk returns. Offshore Drift - the album's closer - combines all of the Wa Doctor's best moods and ideas into one velvet smooth piece of jazz jungle. 7/10
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Decal - Lo Lite (Ultramack)
Decal kept popping onto the decks last year as ones-to-watch with releases both on the Language and Leaf labels. Having supported such big-beat big-names as the Chemical Brothers and Leftfield, this duo are at the forefront of the rapidly expanding Dublin elecronica scene. As you'd expect, this is a ruffed-up album of blunted beats, but has an urban air and an accomplished calm that sets it apart from the plethora of other such 'bands' that are currently apperaring.
Various areas of beat and bass are actually explored here. 'Self Storage' and 'Snakehips' are relentless (but varied) big beat epics. 'Malk' and 'Pigeyes Gets Whacked' on the other hand are pure nineties-style electro. Decal also attempt some BPM variation with a couple of slower tracks, one of which works ('Zerostar'), the other of which ('Camoflage') doesn't.
Finally, with the album in its closing stages, some good old fashioned atmosphere is added to the scathing near-industrial beats. Something which is sadly lacking in much big beat and a major chunk of this LP. So thank goodness for 'Phunk City' and the album's finale, the freaky 'Iona'. 7/10
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Monday, January 19, 1998
Pee Gonzalez - Whuz The P? (Sub Rosa)
On Whuz The P?, Belgian producer Smimooz reworks and restyles tracks by hip hop activist Pee Gonzalez into a largely instrumental album of deliberately aggressive beats pulled from graffiti-styled vocals. The opener '13.11.73' (Pee's DOB?) shatters any preconceptions and pulls the listener firmly onto the side of in-yer-face Euro-style rap aggression, with an overall feel not a million miles away from the ground-breaking La Haine soundtrack. The title-track is a less brain-draining assault, settling back into a dark, percussive groove. Move swiftly to 'Tripp'n Trankill' and the whole affair is mellowing down nicely into a continental jazz jungle affair. 'Sozy Kaizer' (surely not a refernce to The Usual Suspects?!) and 'L'Abstract-Autor Du Vice' stay true to the originals by pulling in some of Pee's original vocals, but using them more as rhythmic samples than standard rap sessions.
This album definitely peaks in the middle with the tracks 'De Puta Madre On The Wheelz Of Steel' and 'Le Nine En Main'. But the closer - 'Sychobooz' makes the trawl through the second half well worth it, with the jazzy vibes being enhanced by a nice muted trumpet sample (previously explored on the track 'Strictly Bario Sound'). This is apparently the first album in a series of collaborations between Sub Rosa and 9mm Records - so stay tuned for more... 9/10
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Kirlian - Pleasure Yourself (Disko B)
The head honcho behind three New York record labels and resident at NY's Limelight club, Kirlian IS Carlos Abraham Duque. In Pleasure Yourself he serves up a streetwise tranche of Hispanic space-jazz trip-hop, which excels in percussive perfection, proving that house beats and bleeps are built to last. Tracks such as 'Porzellangasse' and 'Follow' bounce away at 160BPMs, all highly mixable, but in need of some colourful remix treatment to make them full main courses, rather than smooth, sweet desserts. An oasis in the middle of this pulsating madness comes in the form of from an altogether more human, sensitive slice of laid back, scratched-up trip hop: 'Mission'. That's a track which makes this LP worth seeking out on its merits alone. With a bizarre syth theme tune, 'Dysonsphere' (aptly subtitled 'An Example Of A Dumb Way To End An Album'!) and a full four minutes of answer-phone messages from techno celebrities clipped on as an appendage, this is the cheekiest futurist disco album since Deee-Lite's World Clique. 8/10
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The High Llamas - Cold and Bouncy (Alpaca)
As the High Llama's return with the follow-up to last year’s Hawaii, this is just the sort of thing you might expect from a band that have recently returned from touring the other side of the Atlantic with Stereolab. Picture Monty Python buffoons performing cocktail jazz with an electronica technician pondering away in the background and you have ‘The Sun Beats Down’. This and tracks such as ‘Tilting Windmills’ have an English vocal air that removes it from the realms of dance music and is much more reminiscent (very reminiscent, in fact) of screwball English poets XTC from their pseudo-psychedelic Skylarking era! But there are two sides to every story and tracks such as ‘HiBall Nova Scoptia’ and ‘Time’ on the other hand offer classic sixties-style themery and romance. The former being the sort that Corduroy used to specialise in before they made a video with Barbera Windsor, with the latter being particularly reminiscent of Stereolab's recent Dots & Loops excursion. As this album progresses, more elements and angles are included like the strange electronique meanderings of ‘Bouncy Glimmer’ and ‘Evergreen Vampo’. Cold & Bouncy is - as it sounds - a strangely compelling mixture. 7/10
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Robin Rimbaud - The Garden is Full Of Metal (Sub Rosa)
After just two minutes of The Garden is Full Of Metal, you know you're listening to a album that's bound together by an overall cohesion and energy which makes it difficult to press FFWD, not to mention STOP. This album is a shimmering, precision-science 45 minute piece of ambient homage to the recently deceased, much-missed and superbly innovative film maker Derek Jarman. It also sees Robin Rimbaud put his Scanner pseudonym to one side and prove that there's more to his music than the quirky telephone conversation samples, which the mainstream media have raved about, often overlooking the music with which they were interwoven.
A close friend of Jarman, Rimbaud provided the soundtrack for his film 'The Last of England'. He also recorded many of their private conversations and draws from these with samples layered across the album. The vocal snippets are manipulated in such a way as to be intriguing, captivating and at times touching. But the album works best when Scanner's deeply honed ambient musicianship comes into play. The second track, 'Experience' is a perfect example. This private homage to Jarman is taken one stage further with a 7 minute film, hidden away on a CD-Rom section of the album. 10/10
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