Showing posts with label Breakbeat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Breakbeat. Show all posts

Rock Hyrax - Dissolute Lichens (2010) :: Review & Interview

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

rh-dissolute-lichensRock Hyrax
Dissolute Lichens
[Gravity Halo :: 2010]

Free Download + Interview

7/10

Brooklyn, NY based electronic musician / photographer Nate Dorr a.k.a. Rock Hyrax (formerly known as Mercurial) has just come back from a long hiatus and he's bearing gifts.  Dissolute Lichens, his new 7-track EP available for free download from the Gravity Halo Collective, explores mysterious ambient territory full of glitchy breakbeats, resonant synths, and curious field recordings, resulting in a quality IDM release driven by wandering melodies and layered rhythms.

I first heard Rock Hyrax on the excellent Broken Pieces compilation which was recently put out by Gravity Halo.  His 2 tracks stood out immediately, especially "Sickbot" (listen below), so I was delighted to hear that he was coming out with his own release soon after.  (I highly recommend downloading Broken Pieces in addition to the new EP.)

Rock Hyrax - Sickbot (from Broken Pieces Compilation by Gravity Halo)



The Dissolute Lichens journey begins optimistically with fun toy keyboards and plucky bass guitar over a stuttery D'n'B beat in "Flutter & Disintigrate" and then moves into a selected ambient works -meets- Plaid tune titled "Ossuary", complete with haunting vocal samples, electronic piano and complex drum cutups.  The echoey melody and drum beat style in "Brunching At The Edge of Time" makes me want to describe it as "tiptoe breaks"... listen to it and you'll know what I mean.  There is a really cool sound in "Lost Horizon" that makes me think of a clay flower pot being thrown onto the ground which breaks it open, spilling out a bunch of rocks and dirt clods.  "Being In A Person's Shoes" is a :48 second twinkly d.i.y. synth pop interlude that is pleasant but always feels out of place.  (In the interview below, Rock Hyrax tells us the story behind this little piece.)  The album quickly gets back on trail with more dark ambient electronica and eventually comes to its destination with "The Quizzing Sphynx", an eerie Dead Cities style track with some really cool drum work.

Preview Tracks:


Tracklist:
01. Flutter and Disintegrate
02. Ossuary
03. Brunching At The Edge Of Time
04. Lost Horizon
05. Being In A Person's Shoes (with Chie Mori)
06. We Will Slam Them With Our Wings
07. The Quizzing Sphinx


Download Rock Hyrax - Dissolute Lichens :: .ZIP of .MP3s | Label Page


-----------------------------------------------------------------
Nine Questions for Rock Hyrax - Interview
-----------------------------------------------------------------

Bc: How did you become part of the Gravity Halo collective?

RkHx: Nearly a decade ago, a bunch of expatriated mp3.com musicians ended up hanging around an offshoot electronic music message board, among them Gravity Halo spearheader Chris Oldaker (Cats on Earth, moto-slave), Deceptikon (of Merck Records, RIP, now still going strong elsewhere), Captain Ahab (taking his virtuousicly gonzo "ravesploitation" to europe soon, I hear), Sendy (still cranking out amazing drum 'n' bass via Gravity Halo), and myself. Eventually we went our separate ways, until Gravity Halo sprang up to pull us back together again, I suppose.

Bc: How do you feel your local surroundings influence your music?

RkHx: I've lived in Brooklyn for the past six years, and both the place and the era have meant being immersed constantly in great live punk/noise/diy madness (which I've been photographing and writing about since 2007 or so), but less so the really production-heavy IDM scene, which slowed down when a lot of the smaller labels died off between 2004 and 2006. I mean, old Planet-mu/Sublight drill'n'bass-er Datach'i apparently lives here, but I've never heard of him playing live here, and he hasn't released anything in a couple years. Tigerbeat6/Tomlab multi-instrumentalist Nathan Michel lives in Brooklyn but as far as in know has restricted his music-making to being a drummer in folk rock group (disclaimer: who are totally decent, but the man has so many other skills). It seems like everyone's been somewhat dormant, the IDM explosion of the turn of the century has definitely died away. But, as I said, other directions in music have been terribly exciting, and these impulses are hardly mutually exclusive of course. But I suppose this is probably part of a longer rant.

As far as my own music (realizing I have totally sidestepped the question), I was barely making the stuff in favor of writing about other peoples', which was certainly an effect of being so surrounded by music here.

Bc: Why the hiatus and what drove you to start making and releasing stuff again?

RkHx: The time/place context described above was probably involved, as I was thinking about noise/rock/punk more than straight electronics. But more than that, my laptop was terrible at sound. My keyboards crackled when I plugged them in, even the speakers buzzed. Everything I was trying sounded awful and I barely finished anything for 5 years. And so I let photography sweep in and take over my life, which I can't say I have any regrets about. More recently: better laptop and better software. And just realizing that I needed to keep writing music, along with whatever else I'm working on. Getting prodded by friends for EPs, film soundtracks, pop production -- this has also given me motivation.

Bc: Why did you abandon the Mercurial alias and what's the significance of the Hyrax to you?

RkHx: After being essentially invisible since 2005, it really seemed time for a clean break. The Rock Hyrax is closest extant relative of modern elephant in the animal kingdom, yet they're weird unassuming rodent-ish creatures that can stick to vertical rock faces with their footpads. I really just fell into the name years ago because it sounded right, and sheer laziness prevented me from thinking of anything better when time came to record again.

Bc: What are your top 2 pieces of hardware or software?

RkHx: Soundforge is the number one. For years I did all my editing and sequencing as just straight wave-to-wave chopping and mixing, exclusively in Soundforge. It's not the most efficient way to work, I admit, but it allows a certain freedom, to just be up to your elbows in raw sound without any complicated arranging framework to get in the way. I'm sure if I hadn't essentially self-taught, I would not have ended up working in so clumsy a manner, but I don't really regret it either. Nowadays, I do sequence in Ableton, but all my drum chopping and arrangement (as well as a lot of glitch effects) have to be straight soundforge.

Bc: "Being In A Person's Shoes" is quite a departure from the other tracks on the EP. Who is Chie Mori and how did you come about using her vocals in this track?

RkHx: Chie is a filmmaker friend who writes these simple, perfect little songs and really needs someone to arrange them. I wanted to, but when she recorded 17 songs in a single day and handed them over to me, I was so overwhelmed that I only really made headway on about 4 of them. This one was most finished, and I suppose serves as a kind of palate-cleanser before We Will Slam Them With Our Wings.

Bc: What artists or albums are really inspiring you right now?

RkHx: I just learned of / can't stop listening to Felix Kubin and Gangpol Und Mit. (Who suggests that, looking globally, there's still plenty of fantastically weird electronic sound being produced.)

Bc: You have some great photos on your blog, which kind of reflect an exploratory feel I also get from your music. Are you studying photography?

RkHx: I've taken a few classes, but the photography is more or less a self-taught, all-consuming hobby. The great thing about photography is that you can have your camera on you at all times, so you're always working on it. And it pulls out into the world in a way that writing music does not (unless you're in a touring band of course). Right now, I'm years deep into examining the semi-urban post-human landscapes of places like parts of Jamaica Bay and the Meadowlands of New Jersey. If you want a cohesive thread here, perhaps it is architectural glitch (collapsing buildings, abandoned neighborhoods) versus musical? It's not something I've thought much about, I just know what sorts of landscapes move me in some way.

Bc: Now that the EP is out, what's next?

RkHx: Well, I just stayed up all night animating little flickering designs for an art show/installation/party. That'll be done tomorrow, and after that I've got a bunch photography work to do, some stop-motion to set to music, and some kind of live video-projection project I've just been invited into and need to learn for the end of the month.

Connect with Rock Hyrax ::  Blog

Missqulater - Unfinished Downer EP (2010) :: Review

Friday, September 10, 2010

missq-downerMissqulater
Unfinished Downer EP
[Karakasa Music :: 2010]

Free Download

7/10

Missqulater's Unfinished Downer EP, released today by Karakasa Music, defies its own name.  This generous 5-tracker is a veritable fountain of pastoral pads and angelic voices behind manic DnB beats and old-school squelch that feels more like an upper than anything.

Track 1 "Proper Action" throws you right into the middle of the rave field with a driving acid bassline, persistent 4 on the floor, and atmospheric movie quote samples from Office Space.  "Back 2 Da Rooture" will keep you dancing and introduces the use of a chopped but relatively unaltered female voice which is a bit rare for this artist, but well executed. 

Anyone familiar with Missqulater's back-catalog will recognize in this EP a similar "uplifting" feel that his earlier work has, taking his brand of braindance to an almost spiritual place without sounding cheesy.  The album cover features a mysterious cavern lit by small candles - is this a place of worship?  Are these tracks actually hymns and prayers written for the Gods of Electronic Music?  Brothers and Sisters, let us rise from our DAWs,  turn to TB-303, Pattern 8, and meditate on the resonance of our bassline.  Amen break.

But Unfinished Downer isn't all about reaching a higher plane.  Track 3 "Pest" is a hot tub full of funky 80's flick "bwuh bwuh" basslines, sexy synth and lustful beats with busy 8-bit sounds spilling out over the edge.  Missqulater also uses these funny little pitched-up vocal clips that sound like mischievous characters from a Japanese cartoon that I've come to associate with his style.  "Scant 303" takes us even further into the netherworld and taps into some kind of eerie space mission broadcast, but "A Key Of Day" brings us back to our happy place.  This EP is a nice little slice of electronic dance music that is neither unfinished nor a downer, and I'd recommend it to fans of Orbital or Underworld style tunage.

Karakasa Music
With only a handful of releases under the Karakasa Music umbrella so far, it's clear that they are about quality over quantity and have a passion for unique, inspired IDM.  With 5 solid EPs out from H.P. Sneakstep, Mitch Murder, and now Missqulater, Karakasa is shaping up to be a netlabel to keep permanently on your radar.  They are also extremely accommodating from the listener's perspective, hooking up fellow audiophiles with a buffet of file types and qualities.  You can even download the Unfinished Downer EP 32-bit .wav master files and go skinny dipping in a sea of audio data.

Listen:


1. Proper Action
2. Back 2 Da Rooture
3. Pest
4. Scant 303
5. A Key Of Day

Download Missqulater - Unfinished Downer EP (.ZIP)  :: MP3 VBR | MP3 320kbps | FLAC 16-bit | FLAC 24-bit | WAV 32-bit (masters) | Archive.org Download Page

Connect with Missqulater :: MySpace | Twitter | SoundCloud

Moth Conk Midi - Amazing Stories (2010) :: Review

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

mcm-coverMoth Conk Midi
Amazing Stories
[CAOUTCHOU Records :: 2010]
Free Download

7.5/10

A true example of "you can't judge an album by its cover", Moth Conk Midi's "Amazing Stories" debut is not an acid house party mix nor is it a stoney study of analog experiments as the artwork might suggest.  Moth Conk Midi is the new collaboration project between Oxynucid of London and Berlin's own Vertical67, and if you're familiar with each of these talented artists' respective work, you're sure to be surprised by this genre-melding collection of well-produced electronic tracks.  Ambient Soundscape, Electro, D'n'B, Psyachadelic, Breakbeat, Leftfield, Downtempo, Experimental, and a smidge of Acid are all encapsulated in this release, making it widely varied and a great listen time and time again.

When firing up the opening track "Cohort I", I was met with a pleasant and unexpected array of traditional eastern percussion and string sounds that instantly piqued my interest, and had me doing a double take to make sure I'd pressed "play" on the right album. Indeed I did and moments later a sweet, melodic synth washed its way over the beat in a perfect blend of acoustic and electronic.  Enter drum machine about halfway through and we've got some excellent mellow IDM.  "Overpowered (featuring iAM9)" is a chilled out piece with sexy vocals by iAM9 and for me peaks around the 4:38 mark when that warm buzzy synth comes in and plays over the main melody.  "Autumnbreaks" and "Summerbreaks" give us some classic braindance while maintaining the laid back vibe that resonates throughout the entire album.  "Audiofiletourism" is a twinkly, but borderline elevator music track, (and I could swear I hear "Somewhere Over The Rainbow" somewhere in there) but it doesn't stray too far from the rest of the pack.  Overall this album is something Moth Conk Midi should be proud of and I recommend it to anyone into early Future Sound of London, The Orb, Plaid, and Squarepusher.


Listen / Preview:


Tracklisting:
1. Cohort I
2. Inhale/Exhale
3. Autumnbreaks
4. Overpowered (featuring iAM9)
5. Falkenfelser
6. Welcome To Rapture
7. Summerbreaks
8. Audiofiletourism
9. Cohort II


Download Amazing Stories :: Direct Download (.ZIP) | Label Page | Archive.org Page

Connect w/ Moth Conk Midi :: FacebookSoundcloud | MySpace | Last.fm

Missqulater - Acid House/Breakbeat/IDM Artist from Japan

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Missqulater 
Unpredictable modern acid house injected with a collage of electronic styles, lush melodies, and complex beats that defy you not to dance.
Free Downloads + New Album On The Way

27 year old Japanese electronic music maker Missqulater admittedly doesn't speak or write in English very well, but when he speaks to us through the universal language of music, his message is loud and clear. He exercises modern braindance composition techniques and sounds while honoring the classic acid house rave dance movement with an unmistakable throwback flair. Having listened to a lot of acid house and breakbeat in the late '90s and early 2000s, I can't help appreciate these stylistic homages that may be lost on newer / younger electronic fans, but there is definitely something for everyone in Missqulater's music.

When you sample the first track on his 2008 EP release "Landschaft", you will hear it begin with an Aphex Twin inspired orchestral pattern, but it is quickly layered upon with a quick beat, a lovely melodic synth lead and other rhythms that give it Missqulater's own unique flavor.  Throughout his 3 proper releases you'll find beautiful melodies intertwining with complex breakbeats, acid basslines, and funky interludes that often have me asking, "How did he come up with that?"  Vocals are scarce, but always sampled or vocoded and add a modest dose of funkiness, which comes as a relief to those who appreciate instrumental tracks.

Missqulater - Landschaft EP
[Tres Catorce Netlabel :: 2008]
7 Tracks



FREE DOWNLOAD + STREAM

As you listen to each of Missqulater's releases in chronological order, you can hear his sound palette and style become more varied.  His All Things Considered LP encapsulates such an explosion of ideas and wide assortment of styles but still maintains a signature sound.  The track Primal Zuper Acid is classic 4:30am rave while "Stop Smoking Peace Light" features soothing pads and sometimes dissonant chords overlapping eachother backed by an acoustic drum kit playing freeform jazz, yet somehow it all still fits within the context of this IDM album.

Missqulater - All Things ConsideredMissqulater - All Things Considered
[Love Love Records :: 2009]
17 Tracks

FREE DOWNLOAD

His latest output is an E.P. titled "Transaction Acid" released earlier this year and is probably his most complex yet most ravey so far.  It opens with a fast tempo'd, optimistic acid jammer overlayed with distant angelic choral pads and busy rhythm synth and continues to evolve into some pretty nostalgic, party-tastic dance tunage. 

Missqulater - Transaction Acid EPMissqulater - Transaction Acid EP
[Tres Catorce Netlabel :: 2010]
7 Tracks



FREE DOWNLOAD + STREAM

I wanted to know a little more about the man behind the cat face and where he gets his inspiration so I sent out a couple of questions like a message in a bottle across the Pacific Ocean and was happy to discover it had floated back with answers from Missqulater himself.

Bc:  Who has been your biggest inspiration to make music?
Missqulater:  My best hero was Michael Jackson in my childhood and now is Luke Vibert.  Luke is my fav and my best teacher.

Bc:  What has been your favorite live performance so far?
Missqulater:  Mogwai. I was Teen and shocked, The Loud Noize and Silence Melanchoric was so sweet!  Electronic Side, Squarepusher and Mouse On Mars, Juan Atkins are Farburous.

Bc:  What is your favorite style to compose?
Missqulater: Based On ACID House, Breakbeat, Electronica, IDM.  Twist many Knobs Of Synths, and Chopped The Breakbeats On Computer.

Bc:  Who are your favorite "up and coming" artists right now?
Missqulater:  Beatwife, End Pitch, Lactation Sandwich, Shiv, Psyspy, Acid Druid, Llen Rain Recordings

Bc:  When will your next release be?  And will it be an E.P. or L.P.?
Missqulater:  Soon My New LP coming On Spanish Netlabel "Tres Catorce Netlabel"  This Album taste is "Ravy-Acid breaks", Dont Miss It :)

Bc:  What did you have for breakfast today?
Missqulater: Haha, I didn't.  Nothing 'cos I am Hangover now (Thankful for holydays).  Just Drink Fresh Orange juice and Listen to "Polynomial-C" by Aphex Twin.

Hook up with Missqulater online at the links below and stay tuned for a review of his next album.

Missqulater :: MySpace | Twitter | SoundCloud