Author: Tom Nys (Page 4 of 7)

Review: V.A. – “Black Series 004”; Reeko w/ Architectural – “The Blue Album”

The holidays are over and as the music industry follows a cyclical movement, we can rely on the fact that a torrent of new releases is coming out in the current aftermath of Summer. After having survived all festivals, gigs, parties and concerts, it’s time again to focus your attention and spend your money on records and digital music files! I realize it’s been a while since I reviewed some new techno material, so here are some suggestions and more will follow before long.

First I would like to mention the fourth instalment in the ‘Black Series’ of the label Authentic Pew.  This modest record company was initiated at the beginning of 2012 in Chemnitz, Germany by Perthil & Aerts. The duo has been playing extensively in their home country and is getting more and more attention abroad as well, which I believe is completely justified. The ep consists of three original tracks of different artists (in fact all but one are collective efforts) and one remix by Perthil & Aerts themselves. Two producers from Paris working under the name of As Patria are responsible for ‘Arcan’ which is based on a singular, atmospheric groove that never gets boring thanks to the addition of several deep and haunting sounds.

Tomohiko Sagae’s ‘Chloroform’ on the other hand is not your typical sensation blocker.  Au contraire, it’s an industrial assembly of pounding beats, synchronised screeches and abrasive noises, generating a bodily response without fail.  On the A-side you’ll find a piece by Attac, a collaboration of Mallorca-based Angel Costa and Spanish twosome Attemporal, which is simply named ‘01’ and can be described as very decent though rather archetypal techno. Authentic Pew’s honchos reworked it into a metallic monster, all shiny chrome with well-polished details. ‘Black Series 004’ might not consist of the work of the most familiar names in the scene but it is nonetheless an outstanding ep.

Now that I’ve mentioned Spain, I should also bring up the large amount of quality releases that has come from the Iberian state during this year. A key in this tendency is the label PoleGroup which was set up by Oscar Mulero, Christian Wünsch, Exium and Reeko. Earlier in 2013, PoleGroup released an interesting album by Exium, a duo that normally produces and plays uplifting techno. For their ‘A Sensible Alternative to Emotion’ they experimented with slow tempos, dub inspired sounds and ambient-like backdrops. A short while ago the label issued another long-player from one of its founders: Juan Rico.

Rico produces under the guises of Reeko and Architectural and this record is taken as a collaboration of these alter egos. I believe this is quite a peculiar concept and since I loved Reeko’s ep ‘Passage #17’ that came out in February on his own Mental Disorder, I was curious to hear what ‘The Blue Album’ as it is called, would be like. All in all it is a very solid record, indeed combining slow-burning and atmospheric parts with traditional techno structures and feats. It may not contain the most original or stunning tracks in the genre, it still serves as an example of the merging of functionality sonorous beauty that techno at its best can achieve.

One could certainly say that ‘The Blue Album’ is tied together by a narrative structure while alternating between pumping dance-floor material, most often dark and even brutal such as ‘Force Carrier’ or ‘Startling Idea’, and cuts that expose a tendency towards refinement and ambience, like ‘Sex on Kepler-22b’ or the end-track ‘The Universal dream’.  The successful juxtaposition of these elements, which can be reduced to the musical essences of Reeko and Architectural, in this unifying arrangement of a kind of concept album, is exactly the record’s strength.

V.A. – “Black Series 004” is out since September 2nd

Track list:
1. Attac – 01
2. Attac – 01 (PertHil & Aerts Remix)
3. As Patria – Arcan
4. Tomohiko Sagae – Chloroform

Reeko w/ Architectural – “The Blue Album” is out since September 16th

Track list:
1. Blue
2. Melted
3. Dualities
4. Sex on Kepler-22b
5. Force Carriers
6. String Theory
7. Startling Idea
8. The Universal Dream

Sunny LaVista artist residency at the Frans Masereelcentrum, Kasterlee (B)

I quickly wanted to point out that at this moment I am doing a residency of two weeks at the Frans Masereelcentrum in Kasterlee (B) together with graphic artist Steebz Khuan (Steve Reggers) and musician/ music producer Le Chef Tournel (Dimitri Vossen) as a collective that goes by the name of Sunny LaVista.

While Chef will cook up fresh music, Steebz will draw and print – as the Masereelcentrum is a center specifically aimed at the graphic arts – and I will write. Our output will surefully be influenced by the splendid surroundings of the woods and fields of the area as well as by the talks, discussions, random remarks, deep cultural analyses, debates and chatter we will have by the three of us.

The purpose is to produce a limited edition 12inch vinyl record with a huge poster as a sleeve. Enclosed will be a silkscreen print of an image taken from the larger design. Meanwhile, sound fragments, reports, stories and loose drawings will be published on a blog set up for this purpose. If you’d like to check it out, you can find it here.

Music: Popperola’s Disco Didn’t Disappear (Not In My 37 Years) Mix

Nowadays it is quite difficult to avoid the “Random Access Memories” craze. Daft Punk’s latest album was launched by means of a precise marketing campaign, leading to top sales in the digital as well as physical market. Of course the music itself has a part in that as well.

I am not intending to review the record since that has been done by numerous other people who are, or consider themselves to be, in a position to knowledgeably do this. Moreover, you have probably formed your own opinion by now and that is indeed the one that matters most. Instead, I’d like to focus my attention to what certain so-called well-informed journalists and bloggers wrote, as a way of meta-critique.

For I was struck by the number of times the claim was made that Daft Punk’s youngest effort heralded the revival, the rebirth, the second coming or the revitalization of the disco genre. If you happen to know the musical origins of the Parisian duo, in essence French disco house, this is no wonder. Suppose they had a budget at hand comparable to the one in their current situation, they‘d surely asked Moroder and Nile Rodgers already in the mid 1990s. More generally, they emerged from the dance music scene, which has always relied heavily on predecessors such as disco.

But as said, this is not about Daft Punk, but about a part of the troupe of music journalists. Anyway, the aforementioned argument hasn’t been brought up very often. In addition, it really makes my heart bleed that the impression is being created that disco disappeared, or was dead even, and that the men-with-the-trademark-masks are solely responsible for bringing it back to live.

This simply isn’t true. I was born in 1976, at the height of the genre’s success and as I thought of it, disco has always been there in one form or the other. It is without doubt a pivotal element in the history of dance music which found a way out of the underground, where it was celebrated mainly by gay blacks (actually a minority of a minority group), to the mainstream. Later, it was crushed by rock fans as well as by debilitating surrogate tracks churned out to make a quick buck. But I never saw it go.

When carefully listening to the classic disco material from around 1972 to 1982, it is evident that other genres left their mark on it – for instance funk, soul, world music and later also electronics. Disco itself had (and still has) a huge impact on pop and has lead to house, hi-NRG and other dance subgenres. I like to emphasize that this is not a question of progress or even evolution since I personally think this is a false premise: these terms imply a teleological endpoint whereby each next step is one closer to the ultimate goal. In my opinion that’s not the right concept to base an evaluation of music (or art in general) on. I reckon it’s more about particular parameters that are adapted to time and context.

So considering disco a corpse which has been kissed to life again by Daft Punk was a something I could and would not endorse. To prove my point, I started collecting disco songs and tracks wherein disco’s influence is apparent; selecting one for each year I lived. Evidently it grew as a personal collection, which is why it for instance includes lots of house tracks in the years after 1985. It’s also the reason why obvious choices by some people’s account are not in it, such as work by Donna Summer or, in a later period, Jamiroquai. In any case I tried to stick to the release date of the single or 12inch, hoping that all are correct.

Afterwards I endeavored to blend all those pieces of music in a mix. Mind you, I am not a DJ, but I absolutely enjoyed putting this together, as a reminder to those lazy commentators who deemed disco out while it was still in the game, be it as reissues, edits, minor influences, twisted new versions or full-blown copies. And that surely is not Daft Punk’s accomplishment.

Popperola’s Disco Didn’t Disappear (Not In My 37 Years) Mix by Popperola – Tom Nys on Mixcloud

Track List:
1976: The Salsoul Orchestra  “Nice ‘n’ Naasty”
1977: First Choice  “Doctor Love”
1978: Dee D. Jackson – “Galaxy Police”
1979: GQ – “Disco Nights”
1980: A Taste Of Honey – “Rescue Me”
1981: Gwen Mcrae – “Funky Sensation”
1982: Sharon Brown – I Specialize In Love”
1983: Gwen Guthrie – “Peanut Butter”
1984: Chaka Khan – “I Feel For You”
1985: Colonel Abrams – “Trapped”
1986: Mel & Kim – “Showing Out (Get Fresh At The Weekend)
1987: Ralphi Rosario Featuring Xavier Gold – “You Used To Hold Me”
1988: Whitney Houston – “Love Will Save The Day”
1989: Ceejay – “He’s So Divine”
1990: Sir James – “Special”
1991: Incognito Featuring Jocelyn Brown – “Always There”
1992: Martha Wash  “Carry On”
1993: Robin S.  “Show Me Love”
1994: Disco Elements – “Goodthing”
1995: The Bucketheads – “Got Myself Together”
1996: Daniel Wang – “Free Lovin’ (Housedream)”
1997: Marcel Krieg – “Take A Ride (True Disco Mix)”
1998: Joey Negro Presents The Sunburst Band – “Garden of Love”
1999: Roy Davis Jr. – “Michael”
2000: Kenny Bobien – “Father”
2001: Sun Orchestra  “Driftin'”
2002: Bangkok Impact – “Aspirin”
2003: Trentemøller – “Le Champagne”
2004: Bobby & Steve Featuring Barbara Tucker & Bryan Chambers – “Deeper”
2005: Lindstrøm & Prins Thomas – “Turkish Delight”
2006: Ashley Beedle Presents The London Heavy Disco Revue – “Move It Girl!!!”
2007: Aeroplane – “Aeroplane”
2008: Faze Action – “Hypnotic (Disco Mix)”
2009: Permanent Vacation Featuring Kathy Diamond – “Tic Toc”
2010: Tensnake – “Comacat”
2011: Dimitri From Paris & DJ Rocca Present Erodiscotique – “Downtown”
2012: I:Cube – “In Alpha”
2013: Ackin’ featuring M. Akamatsu  “Tembezi”

Music/ Art: “Filip Gheysen. Tabletop Guitar”

A short while ago I was asked by Belgian musician and visual artist Filip Gheysen (born 1979) to write a text about his work. This piece has now been published in a small book that accompanies a cd and a dvd, containing music and short films of Gheysen. It is well designed and is brought out by the Ghent-based label Silken Tofu (you can buy the package for €20,00 at the label’s website).

Gheysen’s music is conceived by using an electric guitar placed on top of a table and a wide array of effect boxes as well as a laptop. With this setup, he wonderfully manipulates guitar drones to create mesmerising soundscapes. In his visual work he most often makes use of graphic techniques. In the washed out fields of toned-down colours which he puts on paper or canvas, blots and lines appear as subjects in a dream-state. Recently, the artist began combining his two preferred art disciplines into slow moving videos with a typical soundtrack of Gheysen.

You can check out more of Gheysen’s work at: filipgheysen.tumblr.com
You’ll find Silken Tofu’s website at: www.silkentofu.org
You can read my integral text here: filipgheysen.tumblr.com/about

Music: Popperola’s Death Metal Album Intro Mix

I have always been intrigued by the intros that death metal bands use on their albums. Throughout the history of the genre, beginning in the late 1980s, an album intro has become an almost standard feature to introduce the listener to the brutal, horrific atmosphere of the forty-or-so minutes that are about to follow. They pull you into a musical narrative of pain, fear and suffering. Lots of suffering. Hence the screams, the rattling of chains, the death bells, the low-toned and deep drones, the satanic voices, the sound of wind and of raging storms, the pompous synths and the samples out of old horror movies.

Sometimes there’s a relationship with the album’s content or with its title. A clear example of this is Bolt Thrower’s intro to “Realm of Chaos” which serves as the beginning of a tale of a total war between worlds. For “Necroticism – Descanting the Insalubrious”, Carcass put in an intro that is part of an array of short fragments that also function as intermezzos, thereby creating a certain coherence on that album. Often, bands also created instrumentals as intros like Unleashed did for their “Where No Life Ends”.

So I started assembling quite a few death metal intros and ultimately made a mix of them, as a kind of homage. You can find the result here.

Popperola’s Death Metal Album Intro Mix featuring:

1. Bolt Thrower: “Realm of Chaos” (Earache 1989)
2. Marduk: “Panzer Division Marduk” (Osmose Productions 1999)
3. Sentenced: “Amok” (Century Media 1995)
4. Disharmonic Orchestra: “Expositionsprophylaxe” (Nuclear Blast 1990)
5. Grave: “Back From The Grave” (Century Media 2002)
6. Sentenced: “Down” (Century Media 1996)
7. Nocturnus: “The Key” (Earache 1990)
8. Obituary: “Cause Of Death” (R/C Records 1990)
9. Darkthrone: “A Blaze In The Northern Sky” (Peaceville 1992)
10. Gorefest: “Mindloss” (Foundation 2000 1991)
11. Sinister: “Cross The Styx” (Nuclear Blast 1992)
12. Grave: “As Rapture Comes” (Century Media 2006)
13. Morbid Angel: “Blessed Are The Sick” (Earache 1991)
14. Benediction: “Subconscious Terror” (Nuclear Blast 1990)
15. Xasthur: “A Gate Through Bloodstained Mirrors” (Profane Productions 2001)
16. Edge Of Sanity: “Nothing But Death Remains” (Black Mark Production 1991)
17. Sinister: “Aggressive Measures” (Nuclear Blast 1998)
18. Morgoth: “Cursed” (Century Media 1991)
19. Suffocation: “Suffocation” (Relapse 2006)
20. Carcass: “Necroticism – Descanting The Insalubrious” (Earache 1991)
21. Shining: “VII – Född Förlorare” (Spinefarm Records 2011)
22. Unleashed: “Where No Life Dwells” (Century Media 1991)
23. Skitliv: “Skandinavisk Misantropi” (Season Of Mist 2009)
24. Shining: “V – Halmstad” (Osmose Productions 2007)
25. Immolation: “Majesty And Decay” (Nuclear Blast 2010)
26. Deicide: “Legion” (R/C Records 1992)
27. Possessed: “Beyond The Gates” (Combat 1986)
28. Xasthur: “To Violate The Oblivious” (Total Holocaust Records 2004)
29. Sinister: “Creative Killings” (Hammerheart Records 2001)
30. Entombed: “When In Sodom” (Threeman Recordings 2006)

Book Review: “Ives Maes. The Future of Yesterday”

“Ives Maes. The Future of Yesterday”, book cover.

Last weekend the book “The Future of Yesterday”, an account of an artistic project by Belgian Ives Maes (born 1976, Hasselt), was presented at Ghent’s city museum STAM. “The Future of Yesterday” was started by Maes around four years ago as an extensive registration of former World Fair sites. Since the ambitiously titled Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations of 1851 in London’s Hyde Park, several of these world exhibitions have been organised whereby a distinction is made between major and minor fairs. Their purpose has always been to show human progress mainly understood as technological and cultural advancement embedded in a consciously utopian as well as nationalist framework. Although large studies about a number of individual World Fairs have been published, hardly ever has the task been taken up to publish an all-encompassing overview of this phenomenon.

Thus Maes’s enterprise is of real value as such, though it is obvious that this is an artistic research project rather than a scholarly one. Over a long period of time the artist has visited numerous sites where once a World Fair had been taken place and photographed these places. Other photos he took are from pavilions that were replaced to another location after the actual fair. In almost all cases, the images lack the joyous, hopeful and enthusiastic atmosphere that normally radiates from postcards and such of these grand exhibitions. Also, Maes has depicted his subject matter invariably in its broader context, including their present surroundings, often in relatively gloomy weather. But what is most striking is the detachment of the photographer from its subject.

All this could be directly experienced by the attendants of the presentation: STAM had a show running with a selection of Maes’s photo series and it was the exposition’s last weekend. Notably, several shots were shown in a concave frame, either attached on a wall or freestanding on the tiled floor. A few had frames that were made of cardboard, driftwood or refuse. These artistic gestures clearly emphasise the fact that Maes is not primarily a photographer but an artist who is trained as sculptor.

However, it was a well-known painter who gave a speech about Maes that afternoon, namely Luc Tuymans. For years, Ives Maes worked as Tuymans’s assistant and has accompanied him on his travels abroad. This enabled him to make excursions in relation to his own work and in this sense Tuymans plays a role in this project. Moreover, the Belgian painter features in an earlier picture in the series, dressed as a Jedi (not included in the book since it was part of a transitional body of work which combined locations of World Fairs with sci-fi characters).

After the introduction of Peter Ruyffelaere who spoke on behalf of the publishing company Ludion, Tuymans correctly pointed out in his talk, amongst other issues, that though different in outlook, “The Future of Yesterday” shares major themes with Maes’s previous large project, the “Recyclable Refugee Camp” (2004-2008; see for instance here and here). For both undertakings deal with humankind’s unrelenting hope for a better future and the ability to pertinently shape that future. Furthermore they both reveal the hubris and the eventual failure this entails which Maes easily dares to highlight in a boldly ironic, even sarcastic manner. Equally they take as a formal starting point an enclosed space – a camp and a temporary pseudo-village – where the architecture is rigidly defined and hyperfunctional.

After Tuymans’s address there was a conversation between the artist and Chantal Pattyn, head of Klara, a national radio station focused on culture. It was an illuminating chat about the origin of the project and the intensive research and labour it had required as well as about the history of World’s Fairs themselves. For instance, one remarkable fact that was brought up in the conversation between Pattyn and the artist was of a technical nature: Maes again made clear he always started to create art from a sculptural point of view and declared he wasn’t the best photographer. It surely is a quite humble statement since all pictures in this series, taken with an analogue camera, are of a high quality in composition as well as in technicality.

Furthermore, Maes stressed the temporary character of the pavilions that were built for the fairs, a feature that invariably led to their deconstruction afterwards and their possible reconstruction on another site. Complete structures, architectural elements and attributes are thus dispersed over Belgium, where more than a few World Exhibitions have been organised and of which Expo ’58 was the biggest and most influential (for that matter, the initiative for the exhibition at STAM was taken because of the hundredth anniversary of Ghent’s own World Expo).

As an anecdote, Maes told the public about a big sport’s shop in Zonhoven, the village where he grew up, that he often visited as a kid to buy swimming pants – this shop apparently used to be a pavilion of Expo ’58 in Brussels which had later been transferred almost a hundred kilometres. And so after each fair some buildings were demolished, others were left to deteriorate and others were moved back to the country that ordered to build them or to another site in the state where the fair was held in order to thwart the temporality of these edifices.

Ives Maes, “Hall of Science (New York World’s Fair, New York 1964-1965)”, 2010 (c) Ives Maes

One of the most striking examples of relocation and the shift in not only taste but also in political program and inherent meaning over time is the story of the Russian pavilion that was erected in 1937 at the Paris fair. As is know and can be seen on pictures and postcards from that time, it stood right across the German pavilion on the other side of the Trocadéro. While the latter was a display of Nazi-symbolism with fitting grandeur and ornamentation, the creation of the U.S.S.R., equally monumental, was meant to act as a counterweight and it impressed above all thanks to the huge statue of two figures holding a hammer and a sickle on top. These two pavilions ultimately shared a prize at the fair for their respective architectural design.

As for the impressive socialist sculpture, it was later placed in Moscow and remained on view there, even after the demise of the communist regime. But only a few years ago it got a new setting, namely on the roof of a building based on the 1937 original pavilion but much higher. While it seems highly questionable Albert Speer’s construction including the Nazi regime’s emblems would ever be built again on a highly visible square or lane, the Russians apparently do not see any harm in boasting about an obsolete world view they once adhered to, by means of this communist architectural and sculptural icon.

All of these topics and more are of course further elaborated in the book itself. It includes three essays, each written from a specific viewpoint on the project; two of them are overtly historical in nature. Anna Jackson ruminates on the architecture, the industrial design and the technological gadgets that were on view at the most important World Exhibitions throughout the past. Evidently her essay starts with the mother of all Expos, the abovementioned edition in London (1851), dominated by Joseph Paxton’s Crystal Palace, a colossal prefab construction avant-la-lettre. It is clear that Jackson is well-informed about the subject; indeed, in 2008 she published a book about the history of the World Fairs. In addition she works as Keeper of the Asian Department at the Victoria and Albert Museum. Coincidentally (or not) this museum was established in 1852 in the wake of the fair and it was given the names of the British royal couple that incited the organisation of that Great Exhibition.

Catherine L. Futter is a curator at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, where she was responsible for Ives Maes’s solo show there in 2012. She too is familiar with the topic, especially with decorative arts shown at World Fairs. Here, Futter explores the relation between the history of the fairs and of the photographic medium. Both find their origin in mid-nineteenth century and both were supposed to reflect hope about the future. These parallels, along with interesting examples and cases are elaborated in her text. As it happens, next month the Getty Research Institute in L.A. organises an academic workshop about the promise of photography and how its history might be one of expectations. The title of this meeting is “Photography’s Past Futures”, a baffling happenstance.

Lastly, Elena Filipovic, senior curator at the Wiels Contemporary Art Centre in Brussels and curator of the 2008 Berlin Biennial, discusses Maes’s “The Future of Yesterday” along the lines of these historical overviews and branches out from the concept of temporality. She defines the products of the artist’s efforts between 2008 and 2012 poignantly as afterimages and concludes accurately: “These images not only come after the effect, but they act – as do the ghostly images that sometimes remain in our retina immediately after an image has vanished – as signs revealing that the remains of a never-arrived future have something to say to us in the present”.

“Ives Maes. The Future of Yesterday” is published by Ludion. ISBN: 978 94 6130 086 7.

Review: Ackin’ feat. M.Akamatsu – “Tembezi”; Bell Towers – “Tonight I’m Flying”; Lionne – “Composure”

Internasjonal, one of the labels spearheaded by Prins Thomas, aims at quality house and has recently hit the target twice with splendid releases. First there’s “Tembezi” by Ackin’ featuring M. Akamatsu. I must admit I don’t know a thing about the artists but the original track is simply gorgeous. It’s a deep house tune with a typical afro house beat, warm layers of sound, an African chant and lovely, elaborated pieces of jazz piano on top. Upon hearing it the first time, I was glad this kind of very musical house is still being made with conviction.

The Norwegian disco prince himself made a remix that is slower and more dreamlike. While he kept the piano parts he also added a live guitar and live bass. As a side note, a few weeks ago an odd Norwegian national obsession got media coverage all over the world: the ‘National Firewood Night’ celebrated the art of making a fire with wood with a twelve-hour long theme night on television. No less than twenty percent of the population watched it. Only, the show brought forth a discussion about whether barks should be placed face-up or face-down and because it truly is an important matter to most Norwegians, it kind of divided the country. Whatever the nature of that debate, I can perfectly imagine sitting with a group of friends around a fireplace in a cosy setting while communally enjoying this version of Prins Thomas. Marcellus Pittman on the other hand puts in some of his trademark impassionate synth drones and makes “Tembezi” sound deeper than Sognefjord.

This cherishable record was followed by an ep by the Australian duo Bell Towers, on which you’ll find two original songs as well as remixes by Idjut Boys of the title track “Tonight I’m Flying”. The latter has some good elements such as the wobbly disco slabs and the overall space disco mood but lacks a good structure that keeps one’s attention all the way.  The London-based, famed freak disco dons Idjut Boys do what they do best: their “Bell End Dub” is a slow-paced trip, induced with auditory hallucinogens while the “Idjut Boys Seepage” is another kind of a dub where parts of the original ooze through to form a most ecstatic listening experience – brilliant!

Further, I’d like to dwell on a current evolution in electronic dance music. That is, for some people house music – and especially its deepest variant – has returned in full glory though others will claim that it never vanished. One can anyway argue that a younger generation has learned to love it and started producing top house tracks at that. Some do this in a manner that adds a few interesting elements to the already existing basics while there are also producers that seem to go for an identical duplication of earlier house styles.

The fact is that this is actually neither new nor limited to dance music. For instance there are at this moment quite a few rock bands that reproduce the late 1960s, early 1970s hard rock and doom genres. There’s a slight difference in production and the same mainly goes for all electronic ‘retro’ waves. Here, it is substantially a rather important distinction since software emulates the hardware from around the beginning of the 1990s so that it is relatively easy to produce the same kind of house from that period.

Personally I never held much to the idea of newness in contemporary arts. Not that I’m utterly pessimistic about culture in our day and age but since the first decades of the twentieth century, with the introduction of the ready-made and found sounds, everything goes and up to this point almost everything has been used in creative processes. In my opinion, this doesn’t mean that artists cannot use the same building elements in a creatively fresh way. But somehow I think one can always make references to older forms when considering present-day cultural expressions.

As for these retro sounds, I reckon they come into existence because of multiple reasons. For example, a young artist may discover an old genre, takes a liking to it and will try to copy it – which is a valid part of an artistic learning process. Or it might be that someone feels a certain genre has been forgotten for too long which as such is a basically nostalgic move.

It may even be that a younger artist is partly or more or less oblivious to previous sounds that resemble their own; I recall an interview with twenty-something dj and producer Maya Jane Coles in relation to her podcast for the website Resident Advisor, where she is asked about a possible influence by MK and the early 1990s house sound and where she states: “To be honest I wouldn’t say MK was a specific influence as I was only familiar with a couple of tracks of his [..]. Obviously after the comments I checked out more of his stuff I can see why people would make the link. I respect his work a lot and can see that he’s definitely carved a strong sound in early house. […] Even though I’ve never been a hardcore follower of ’90s house music, (mainly because it was just a little before my time) I’ve always liked and respected the early sounds of house. I appreciate the simplicity yet effectiveness of early dance music […]”. Negatively, copying previous work or genres can simply stem from a lack of inspiration.

In any case it is quite hard to evaluate such exploits without knowing the motivation of the artist but I do not deem them less valuable per se. And to make this debate concrete I’d like to put forward a release by a young producer from Munich called Lionne. His latest ep “Composure” on Filigran Records features music that is clearly inspired by and copied from the New Jersey house sound of for instance David Camacho, 95 North and Mood II Swing. Coincidentally Lionne is a drummer just like John Ciafone, which is obvious from his beat patterns and rhythmic approach. His music is a flourishing, warm variant of garage.

But apart from that, there’s a more pertinent reference to New Jersey house. That is, the track “In And Out Of My Life” includes a vocal line of the same-titled track by Adeva from 1988, which is a true classic. As a consequence the sample is immediately recognisable but of course that’s not problematic at all; it has been used in several other songs as well, for instance one by Eric Prydz. Unfortunately I can’t help hearing the line going out of sync a bit after a short time, which spoils an otherwise fine track. In “Composure” Adeva’s voice appears again but cut in a different manner and integrated better. Turkish producer Ave Astra reworked this piece of full-on party garage into a deep dub wherein the use of the vocal is sparser. “Anytime” is Lionne’s best effort in my ears. It has a very catchy cadence and is better balanced production-wise. The whole ep is a good take on the said genre and proves that Lionne has potential but I only hope he’ll continue working on his own mode.

Ackin’ feat. M.Akamatsu – “Tembezi” is out since March 4th

Track list:
1. Tembezi
2. Tembezi (Prins Thomas Version)
3. Tembezi (Marcellus Pittman Remix)

Bell Towers – “Tonight I’m Flying” is out since March 18th

Track list:
1. Tonight I’m Flying (Original Mix)
2. Theme From Bamboo Musik (Original Mix)
3. Tonight I’m Flying (Idjut Boys Seepage)
4. Tonight I’m Flying (Idjut Boys Bell End Dub)

Lionne – “Composure” will be out on March 29th

Track list:
1. Composure (Original Mix)
2. Composure (Ave Astra Remix)
3. In And Out Of My Life (Original Mix)
4. Anytime (Original Mix)

Review: Conforce – “Time Dilation EP”; Vincent I. Watson – “Serene”; Lucy & Silent Servant – “History Survivors”; Elektro Guzzi – “Cashmere EP”; Dinos Chapman – “Luftbobler”

Popperola has been quiet for a while. This was due to the fact that I was moving house but now I’m fully settled in my new home, it’s again time for some writing. So here are a few reviews of notable records (and more will follow very soon).

Firstly I’d like to mention a new ep by Dutch producer Conforce, a man glowing with great talent. On his recently released “Time Dilation EP” on Delsin Records you’ll find four high-quality techno tracks that represent four different takes on the genre. Opener “Embrace” is a beautifully worked, otherworldly piece, coming along as a quasi-archetypical example of deep dub techno. “Last Anthem” then consists of warm, subaquatic tones contrasted with high shrieking sounds and a few underlying melodic synth lines on a simple, even substratum of beat and hi-hats: a configuration aimed at a trance-induced dance. Melody has been cut from “Receiver”, a darker and more metalloid fabrication. Lastly, In “Nomad”, the consistent beat pattern has been replaced by a more complex percussive structure which forms the basis for a track that seems to convey an introvert yearning. Striking and moving, to say the least.

Now, I must admit that I’ve always been quite a fan of Vince Watson’s work which, as you might know, is a personal variant of classic Detroit techno with an accumulation of lush, harmonic lines and endowed with great melodies. The man recently was given the opportunity by Pyramids Of Mars to draw attention to a different aspect of his oeuvre. P.O.M. is a fresh enterprise of Matt Edwards (Radio Slave) and thus a little sister of his Rekids that seeks to combine an output of left field music with design and art. Since Watson’s music was used in “Mad Dogs”, a British television series on Sky1, the Scottish-born producer has set out to explore the combination of cinematic art and music further under his full name Vincent I. Watson.

The result is the album “Serene”, a collection of ambient tracks that indeed would go well with moving images. Seemingly, it is made with a similar modus operandi as Watson’s techno material: gradually well-chosen layers of sound are woven into a mesh of almost sublime splendour. The thrusting beats and percussion have evidently been left out but the usage of hardware that is typical for Detroit techno and early electronic popular music is still a basic premise. Also, the man’s talent as a piano player often comes to the fore more noticeably. Moreover, what connects this material perfectly to film and television is that it evokes a narrative structure including elaborated build-ups and fragments of tension release. In short, this is an album that’ll let you blissfully float in the vast territories of your fantasy.

At the present time the label Mote Evolver continues to deliver high standard, proper techno. A new release is due in a few days and is in fact a collaborative work of two producers on their peak, namely Silent Servant and Lucy. Their ep “History Survivors” contains two tracks of relatively long duration that reveal the distinctive treatment of noise and weird, industrial sounds of the first as well as the latter’s capacity to develop arresting arrangements. So in its length of thirteen minutes, “Dormancy Survivors” does not fail to keep attention focused, its storyline remaining haunting and edgy. “Victors History” on the b-side has a distinct percussive quality and is more hypnotic by nature. While bleeps and shrieks reverberate, some stretched synthesizer notes bring emotion into play. Anyway, it’s a superb record that I’d like to recommend.

Something of another kind is the work of the Austrian band Elektro Guzzi. They can be considered as the main protagonists of what is called live techno, by which is meant techno performed with real instruments, other than live sets done with hard- and software by producers. Elektro Guzzi’s merit is that they play exceptionally tight, so that the warmth and organic sound of their analogue instruments fall together with their mechanical precision. Often this brings to mind other styles that heralded techno, such as krautrock. Their latest ep, which will again be released by Macro and is produced by their compatriot and techno veteran Patrick Pulsinger, features three pieces or, to be precise two tracks and a reverse version of one of these. “Cashmere” itself is, well, live or not, a thriving piece with a certain drama that is as captivating as it is hot. The reverse version (on the B-side of the vinyl version) is just what it claims to be: the same structure but re-written and played backwards, which the band delivers as an equally great song. “Crack Fox” has a stirring quality, mostly because of the wobbling, repetitive guiding sounds that are topped up by short, drone-like horn touches and a guitar part that sounds similar to a new wave lick. Indeed, Elektro Guzzi once more made a record with a lively and warm sound and well-balanced in recording and production that proves their status.

To conclude I’d like to point out a remarkable release by Dinos Chapman, one of the Chapman brothers, a British visual art duo that, since the early 1990s, drew a lot of attention because of the shock value in their oeuvre. Mind you, this is hardly ever without purpose and they keep succeeding in asking relevant questions. To work independently from one another is very unusual but now Dinos Chapman has conceived a music album called “Luftbobler” (on The Vinyl Factory) full of weird and extraordinary electronic music. In several instances, this works quite well. I’d suggest you check it out yourself; you can find some tracks here, and you might as well read this interesting interview with the Londoner in The Guardian, where he discusses the idea behind the making of this album, his musical influences and the work he does with his brother Jake: www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2013/feb/19/dinos-chapman-first-album-luftbobler.

Conforce – “Time Dilation EP” is out on vinyl since February 4th

Track list:
1. Nomad
2. Receiver
3. Last Anthem
4. Embrace

Vincent I. Watson – “Serene” is out since February 18th

Track list:
1. Hidden Behind The Eyes
2. Placid
3. Sagitaria
4. Re-Contact
5. Serene
6. Out of Reach
7. Celtic Beauty
8. Continuum
9. Abyss
10. Open Your Eyes

Lucy & Silent Servant – “History Survivors” will be out on March 4th

Track list:
1. Dormancy Survivors
2. Victors History

Elektro Guzzi – “Cashmere EP” will be out on March 3th

Track list:
1. Cashmere
2. Crack Fox
3. Cashmere (Reverse Version)

Dinos Chapman – “Luftbobler” is out today

Track List:
1. So It Goes
2. Whatever Works
3. Reaktorsnuhsnuh
4. He Has No Method
5. Smeyes
6. Where’s The General?
7. Pizza Man
8. Sputnik
9. Cool Operator
10. Luftbobler
11. Enrich Zann
12. Sun Lounge
13. Alltid

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