There seems to be new public enthusiasm for the cut and paste (dare we dredge up the genre-definition of 'big beat'?) pop shinnanigans in the vein of The Go! Team and The Avalanches of late - just look at the success Sonny J is currently seeing in the UK. It is into this mini-genre that Des Peres unleash their latest album, The Adventures of Cowboy and Miniman.
Only this one is schizophrenic. Veering from moments where it relishes in its own sense of explosive pop abandon on 'Dynamite' to the moody LCD Soundsystem with a guitar solo of 'Landed On The Edge Of The World' this is an album not afraid to try things. The album opens with the hip-house party jam of 'Sudden Thought', complete with lush orchestration and cheeky raps yet the closing track is a nice little scratchy punk-funk number. If variety is the spice of life then Des Peres have no worries.
As an album, The Adventures of... can be summed up by the camp 60s freak-out of 'Little Man Falls Out Of The Sky". Sampling the song used as the show's theme-tune, it's like Beck on Eurotrash. Or is it actually just like a McCartney Beatles tune? Who cares, either way it's a lot of fun and reflective of the rest of the album.
Fractured it may be and Des Peres' The Adventures of Cowboy and Miniman may not be the endless summer holiday of The Avalanches Since I Left You, nor is it quite the cotton candy napalm of The Go! Team's début but it is all theirs and, best of all, it is a whole barrel-load of fun.
BP x
album review
Album Review: A Cross The Universe - Justice
Earlier this year Soulwax unleashed the glorious live CD / DVD / Documentary Part of the Weekend Never Dies and it is very difficult not to view and critique A Cross the Universe, itself a live DVD and Documentary / Film, in the same context. And if you do you are left with a far more two dimensional experience: unlike the Soulwax documentary the Justice 'film' is deliberately obtuse. So much so in fact that you will probably feel you know less about the Gallic duo when it is finished than when it began.
Part of the Weekend was an insightful peek into a band that became part of a scene with no name, their influences, their peers and those they have themselves inspired, not to mention life on the road when on a (very) long tour. A Cross the Universe is exclusively a look at the last of these elements and whereas the Soulwax package featured live recordings here there are no full length tracks, just snippets. There is no real insight beyond an anecdotal look at just how weird it is to be a pair of young musicians thrust into fame in a foreign land and at times BlackPlastic was genuinely unsure whether the content on screen was genuine or scripted.
This last fact is probably particularly telling. Real or not, A Cross the Universe is a commentary not on THIS band, but a commentary on being in bands in general and the bizarre and twisted life it leads to. If nothing else, this DVD goes someway to explaining how you end up like Ozzy Osbourne.
So is it any good? BlackPlastic genuinely has no idea.
The CD is a little easier to comment on. You may or may not be aware of the recent controversy surrounding a photo that appeared to show Justice 'playing live' despite that fact their equipment was not plugged in. In good nature the band joked about performing 'unplugged' and argued that the error was noticed when the particular piece of equipment failed to work and there are indeed later shots from the evening that show the equipment with power. This in itself is evidence of the barmyness of being on tour - the fact that such a thing could go unnoticed for long enough that photographic evidence survives.
It also raises a question over whether the recording here is anything more than a studio tweaked version of Cross played to an audience. But it is important to remember that this doesn't actually matter. Firstly because the act of listening to a recorded 'live' event in your home is stupid anyway and secondly because live electronic music is often about little more than spectacle. With none of the vocalists present, what Justice are delivering is the shared experience of enjoying their music with like-minded individuals and, to be honest, putting Cross on shuffle in a big room would work almost as well.
So the tracks are suitably adjusted and there are a couple of re-edits for the die hard fans but the main point off this recording is the audible excitement of the crowd as they cheer and join in. The audio quality is questionable and in BlackPlastic's opinion it isn't as consistent a set as the Soulwax one on Part of the Weekend but there is still enough here to keep you going until the follow up to Cross.
BP x
Album Review: They Live! - Evil Nine
Back when BlackPlastic first reviewed Evil Nine's FabricLive album it was a pleasant surprise: this wasn't some boring, breaks-fueled yawn affair, it was a Facebook Republican Army-lead riot.
The more BlackPlastic listens to that album the more it becomes apparent that this is a mix album that helped define a genre. It is one of the first mix albums to put Justice, Test Icicles, Mystery Jets and Digitalism into a pot and turn the heat up and it still sounds fresher than most albums that have tried to do the same thing since.
They Live! is the realisation of the dream launched with that mix. This isn't breakbeat but it has breaks. It's not rock msic but it certainly rocks. Previous album You Can Be Special Too had some great crossover moments (the hip-hop influenced 'Crooked' for one) but They Live! works by being more extreme and more appealing at the same time. As if that weren't enough it even has an undead zombie theme.
They Live! does so much that it is one of the finest crossover albums released this year. Title track 'They Live!' is a zombie national anthem, its cold auto-tuned vocals sounding like a clinical and mechanical observation of the apparent futility of human existence.
There are also guest spots (as there were on the last album). El-P turns in a spot on the hard on the outside, soft in the middle 'All The Cash', melancholic in a "I'd throw myself to the zombies to save you" type way. Emily Breeze sounds all goth rock chick in a nineties way that should suck but Evil Nine's minimal approach to thrash metal makes it very, very right.
Concept albums are risky business and, to be honest, BlackPlastic isn't sure this really counts as one because the references are subtle and generally only apparent in tone. Having said which, if They Live! is a concept album then it succeeds with aplomb; this is a blast of a record. If there are any concepts deserving of albums they are surely zombies and / or space. Zombies IN space? We can dream - in the mean time pick up this year's darkest crossover record.
BP x
Album Review: Fabric 43 - Various selected and mixed by Metro Area
Metro Area's breed of obscure disco and raw 80s funk is always a little in danger of coming across as chin stroking wankery. When it works, as on the sublime 'Caught Up' on their self-titled début (in reality a compilation of EPs), it is utterly fantastic but a mix album just might be a case of over-egging the pudding if it takes itself too seriously.
Which is why Fabric 43 is odd, on two counts. Firstly it features a Fabric first as far as BlackPlastic is concerned: a comedy intro. And secondly because, despite this, it still falls flat.
There are glorious moments - World Premier's 'Share The Night (Breakdown Mix)' is everything that can be right about Metro Area. It is light, funky and impossible to not dance too. The instrumental of Disco Four's 'Move To The Groove' is so ridiculously camp that it is irresistible and the juxtaposition of the pop of Heaven 17's 'Penthouse and the Pavement' plays off the inherent disco of one of Sheffield's whilst loosening up the mix.
The problem is really one of sequencing. BlackPlastic hates to say it but there is too much here and too much of it sounds the same. These cuts are ALL good and within the right mix could standout and be a high point. The problem is that there is a lack of navigation, no peak and no development.
On a more positive note the mixing goes some way to making up for this as the blending between some fairly different tracks (in terms or rhythm and melody if not always style) is considered and smooth.
And so Fabric 43 is good. It will happily see you through a car journey or a dull morning in the office. It just isn't as great as a mix from Metro Area should be.
BP x
Album Review: Music Components - Rebotini
It's nearing Christmas, a time when BlackPlastic has to go digging a little harder through the racks than normal as the release schedule dries up.
The benefit of such dry spells is that they sometimes lead to you finding something a little different, like a copy of Rebotini's Music Components which BlackPlastic came across in Toulouse recently. Rebotini is part of Black Strobe, a group that (once they went their separate ways with Ivan Smagghe) seemed to lose all sense of what made them fantastic and so turned into a goth techno band as an outlet. Their début album, Burn Your Own Church, was not without charms but wasn't want people wants particularly either. Music Components, in some ways at least, goes back and delivers on the original promise.
This is an album of musical constructions produced using a selection of classic synthesizers. It's entirely instrumental, filmic in nature and jet black. An in that sense, it is a better realization of Black Strobe's promise that Black Strobe themselves are. The snide vocals of a 'Me and Madonna' would have been great but the throbbing electronics here are enough to deliver.
This isn't an album that needs much to be said - if you liked 'Inner Strings' and the thought of an album's worth doesn't sound boring then this is worth seeking out.
BP x