Machine Drum has crafted one of the albums of the year, lifting freely from everything that is hip in the electronic world and combining with footwork undertones to create an exhilirating opus. Being Machine Drum, the attention to detail is faultless. Like Prefuse 73, he succeeds in blurring the distinction between rhythm and melody. The album centres around the surprisingly anthemic 'Gbye', with ingenious use of vocal samples harking back to his earliest work. If something as niche as electronica could have a zeitgeist, this would have captured it.
9/10
For fans of: Prefuse 73, Mount Kimbie
Tuesday, 7 February 2012
Lil B. - I'm Gay (review)
This is a really good hip-hop record. Lil B's rapping is languid as ever and the production is as good as it gets. Rap purists may disagree, but for me a great backing track is as important as the rapping itself, and Lil B and his collaborators have both parts of the formula in plentiful supply. 'Game' is possibly the highlight, although the feel good vibe of 'Get It While It's Good' is pretty darn infectious. By Lil B's standards, this is a very cohesive release, but that's not a criticism - it makes it a much easier listen than the madness (and genius) of, say, '6 Kiss'.
8/10
8/10
Lamb - 5 (review)
Lamb are one of my all-time favourite groups, and I'm not sure I'll ever understand why they aren't talked about in the same breath as Portishead and Massive Attack, aside from the fact that they shouldn't be talked about in the same breath, because they are so much more awesome. Opening track 'Another Language' sums up why I love them - breakbeats that any aspiring IDM producer should take a moment to check out, and Lou Rhodes's haunting vocals are as beautiful as ever. 'Build A Fire' takes their sound in a whole new direction, and from start to finish they barely put a foot wrong. Great comeback from a great band.
8.5/10
For fans of: Portishead, Massive Attac
8.5/10
For fans of: Portishead, Massive Attac
Monday, 6 February 2012
Hype Williams - One Nation (review)
Hazy, downtempo RnB meets Boards Of Canada meets 'hypnagogic pop', Hype Williams occupy a sonic space which is ultimately completely their own.Perhaps it is the languid beats, maybe the grainy textures, but the music sounds incredibly nonchalant, drifting along at its own pace, motifs coming and going as they please. The rough-around-the-edges feel is part of the appeal, but at times I wish there was more of the precision-programming of my IDM heroes. Only sometimes though; for the most part this is excellent.
8/10
For fans of: Boards of Canada, J Dilla, Prefuse 73, Oneohtrix Point Never
8/10
For fans of: Boards of Canada, J Dilla, Prefuse 73, Oneohtrix Point Never
Forma - Forma (review)
Layers upon layers of warm, fuzzy synths swirling around in a melancholy, yet uplifting way. Forma sounds like a softer Emeralds, and while this is hardly innovative, it does the whole 'hypnagogic pop' thing very well (this is what I wanted Oneohtrix Point Never to sound like this year...).
8/10
For fans of: Emeralds, Oneohtrix Point Never, Fennesz
8/10
For fans of: Emeralds, Oneohtrix Point Never, Fennesz
The Field - Looping State of Mind (reivew)
The Field confirms himself here as one of the vital techno artists of his generation with another utterly hypnotic album. Like Gas, he finds loops that you want to go on forever. The title track is the apex of the album, both in terms of position and in terms of being, well, a simply terrific achievement. Ten minutes of absorbing euphoric synths, with the occasional minor chord thrown in to give the music an edge. Trance music should always sound like this.
8.5/10
For fans of: Gas
8.5/10
For fans of: Gas
Explosions in the Sky - Take Care, Take Care. Take Care (review)
The melodies are pretty enough, but when I get to the end I can't really remember what happened. If you like EITS, you'll like this, but I doubt you'll love it.
6.5/10
For fans of: Mogwai, Sigur Ros
6.5/10
For fans of: Mogwai, Sigur Ros
Eleven Tigers - 111 (review)
Eleven Tigers's debut album last year is an early contender for album of the decade, so I was pretty excited about his sophomore effort. He set himself the challenge of creating an album in 111 days (hence the title), and it kinda feels like exactly that. There are lots of great ideas, but a complete lack of cohesion, sort of like Flying Lotus's Cosmogramma had the potential to be (but thankfully avoided). ET's debut flowed absolutely seemlessly through 15 tracks of dense beats and textures. 111 hops haphazzardly from one idea to the next and it all feels very rough around the edges, which is fine for lo-fi rock, but not in the world of intricate techno. Flashes of brilliance, but it could have been so much more...
7/10
For fans of: Burial, Aphex Twin, iTAL tEK
7/10
For fans of: Burial, Aphex Twin, iTAL tEK
Elbow - Build a Rocket Boys (review)
The opening track 'The Birds' made me very excited for the rest of the album, which then gradually declined into pretty unmemorable mediocrity. Bit of a shame really, as when played live the music was incredible. Stadium rock designed for the stadium rather than the headphones.
6/10
6/10
Sunday, 5 February 2012
Dro Carey - Journey With The Heavy (review)
This sounds like a bizarre mash up of early Black Dog, Machine Drum, and Mount Kimbie, and the results are outstanding. I feel like I could listen to this anywhere at any time. Lush melodies are perfect for daytime while the beats and bass could grace a bus journey at night. Highlight for me has to be 'Brite Lotion', which is absurdly funky. A very exciting early release from this fellow.
8.5/10
For fans of: Machine Drum, Mount Kimbie
8.5/10
For fans of: Machine Drum, Mount Kimbie
Dreissk - The Finding
Post-rock meets electronica, a bit like Bitcrush, but not as awesome. If you haven't heard Bitcrush, well, listen to Bitcrush rather than to this. If you already like Bitcrush, you'll probably be a tad disappointed by this. Worth a few listens, perhaps, but not one to come back to time and time again.
6/10
6/10
Dominik Eulberg - Diorama (review)
On ‘Diorama‘, Dominik Eulberg sounds like he is channelling the collective spirits of mid and late 90s Warp/Planet Mu techno artists, and I mean this in the best way possible. This is a varied album, with some wonderfully lush melodic techno (‘Der Tanz der Gluehwuermchen’), nostalgic IDM (‘Aeronaut’), and hypnotic minimalism (‘Islandmuschel 400’). Definitely worth a listen for any fan of electronic music.
8/10
For fans of: Aphex Twin, The Black Dog, Bola
8/10
For fans of: Aphex Twin, The Black Dog, Bola
The Decemberists - The King Is Dead (review)
Confirming them yet again as one of the greatest bands of the past 10 years, ‘The King Is Dead’ is another triumph of Americana from The Decemberists. Less theatrical than their previous releases (although still more so than most bands), Colin Meloy’s vocals still tell wonderful stories and I doubt this year will produce more poetic lyrics than the gorgeous and melancholy ‘June Hymn’. There are dark moments and uplifting ones and there’s no doubt you’ve been taken on a journey by the end of the album.
For those who were put off by their (in my opinion, brilliant) rock-opera, The Hazards of Love, this is a more accessible offering, shifting towards REM territory at times. For those who loved The Hazards of Love, well, you ought to like this as well, as it's a damn fine record.
8.5/10
For fans of: REM
For those who were put off by their (in my opinion, brilliant) rock-opera, The Hazards of Love, this is a more accessible offering, shifting towards REM territory at times. For those who loved The Hazards of Love, well, you ought to like this as well, as it's a damn fine record.
8.5/10
For fans of: REM
Daniel Thomas Freeman - The Beauty of Doubting Youself (review)
This is a truly epic ambient masterpiece, never more so than on the crushing drones of the 22 minute long 'Staring Into Black Water', slowly and majesticly mutating throughout as other elements rise and fall. For me, great ambient music is often defiend by its floating quality, but this is more like being at the bottom of the ocean, completely enveloped by the beautiful sounds. Unlike Eno's concept of ambient music, this draws the listener in and holds them rapt for its long duration, which is the only drawback to the album: it is a sprawling epic, so you need to set aside enough time to really appreciate its intricacies. That though, is perhaps the best complaint you could have about an album.
9/10
For fans of: Biosphere, Thomas Koner
9/10
For fans of: Biosphere, Thomas Koner
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)