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Interesting Autechre 'review'
 

offline xceque on 2003-02-10 19:28 [#00550076]
Points: 5888 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



This is a review written by David Hemingway that came
with the printed press release for the Draft 7.30 cassette.
Thought some of you might be interested in it...


Intriguingly, the oblique track titles on Autechre's last
album referenced the vivid but unreal mental images
experienced in childhood, a white tasteless protein that is
the basis of cheese and is used in the production of
plastics, adhesives, paints and foods, a child's
decongestant, the incorrect use of words and ecological
communities living in still water. Confield initially
seemed an impenetrable album but - like the recent "Gantz
Graf" EP - with repeated listenings was revealed as one of
Autechre's best. On the release, Sean Booth and Rob Brown
created music that was akin to staring at one of the wonders
of the world through a corrugated metal fence or (as Simon
Reynolds has suggested) equivalent to the most abstruse
graffiti, "where typography is convoluted to the point of
illegibility".

Autechre's early releases - Incunabula and
Amber - were corrupted modifications of techno and
electro, shot through with a curious poignancy. Their most
recent releases, however, have largely ditched expected
melodies in place of increasingly complex machine music.
Last year's Confield seemed to push this aesthetic to
its logical apex. In Confield, you can hear the
detritus of electro, the "trace memories of Chicago and
Detroit" (David Toop in The Wire), the vestiges of
ruined song. Opening track "VI Scose Poise" sounded like the
sound of a ball bearing spinning around a metal dish,
"Eidetic Casein" has been compared to R&B from an alternate
cosmos. "Bine" took its name from the flexible stem of
climbing/twining plants and provided a sonic approximation
of this phenomenon. Confield could be electronica's
equivalent of gnobotics: In the words of Neumu's
Philip Sherburne Confield was "one of the purest
approximations of 'machine music' we've heard yet".

...cont


 

offline xceque on 2003-02-10 19:28 [#00550078]
Points: 5888 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



One of the greatest misplaced beliefs of the 20th century
was that technology could or would resolve
everything. Listening to notorious tinkers Booth and
Brown, it's easy to imagine that the duo are a celebration
of, or at least hugely inspired by malfunctioning
technology; technology gone wrong; the abuse of technology,
technology's defilement. Their music sounds tarnished. Their
records are swamped in glitches of static and murmurs of
feedback, crammed with unplaceable sound. Their Tri
Repetae
LP even bore the inscription "incomplete without
surface noise."

"I don't think we're actually celebrating machines going
wrong," Booth has said, "But we don't care if they do, if we
can then understand how and why and use them. If machinery's
going wrong it's simply frustrating. The music we create is
really considered but we're not afraid to let things do what
they're not supposed to."

It's frequently reported that Booth and Brown are offered
early versions of computer equipment to put through their
paces, to record on, to test on, to abuse; message board
myth has even suggested that the duo work with "devices
apparently cadged from the army". More recently, they're
reported to have been modifying software rather than
hardware, allowing them the opportunity to shape their
materials in greater detail. "303s and 606s are amazing,"
Autechre were quoted in Modulations - A History of
Electronic Music
(Caipirinha Press), "The aesthetics of
using those two machines together is totally beautiful. But
things get really interesting when you've got the
opportunity to create you own environment in which to work,
because obviously, the aesthetic is completely under your
control."

...continued


 

offline xceque on 2003-02-10 19:29 [#00550080]
Points: 5888 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



With this software, Booth and Brown claim to make music that
evolves at the same pace as their brains. "You can have your
entire track changing piece by piece," the duo told The
Wire
, "And that's what we're into. We like things like a
puzzle where it's revealing itself and changing. And you can
almost follow it because it works the same pace as
your brain works. The trick is not to get it to work faster
or slower but to get it in tune with yourself."

I've always assumed that the Autechre moniker was a
corruption of a sign outside a car workshop just down the
road from Warp Records old Sheffield office: 'Autocentre'
re-imagined by a duo who grew up on graffiti and electro. In
Energy Flash (Picador), Simon Reynolds has even
wondered if the 'aut' in their name stand for autism:
"Listening, the mind's eye conjurs up a vision of two small
boys surrounded by tekno toys, lost in their own little
pre-verbal world of chromatics and texture and contour."
Interestingly, Autechre have compared their drive with the
inquisitiveness of infancy: "We're driven by a child-like
fascination and a total curiosity, a love for an aesthetic
without really understanding why."

"We listen to a lot of our new stuff and it seems to be
coming from somwhere other than what we can understand,"
clained the duo, around the release of Chiastic
Slide
, "That's probably why it seems slightly magical, I
suppose."

...continued


 

offline xceque on 2003-02-10 19:29 [#00550081]
Points: 5888 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



At the time of writing, I've not heard the new Autechre
album, I've little idea what Booth and Brown have coalesced
with their "tekno toys." Though it could be a decoy,
Autechre's recent "Gantz_Graf" EP is presumably the best
hint as to how the new Autechre album will sound; the most
dependable blueprint as to where Autechre are now.
"Gantz_Graf" merges dense layers of toxic noise,
ear-shredding frequencies and even, submerged in the digital
mayhem, singing. "Dial"'s shreds voices and electronic
gurgles beneath a rhythm that almost convinces your brain
that it could be danced to. On the EP's final track,
"Cap.IV", (chapter four?) an increasingly manic rhythm
builds over curiosly orchestral chord structures, as more
voices slur and warp against the electro clatter.

Critiques often seems to [suggest] that Autechre are some
how being difficult, wilfully perverse, obnoxious. But for
my money, Autechre are absolutely lush... They're fucking
banging
, basically.

the end


 

offline DaWeeze from WANTED IN 16 STATES! on 2003-02-10 19:43 [#00550087]
Points: 5213 Status: Addict



Nice to see somebody "gets it".

Thanks xceque, however you're pronounced... ;)


 

offline nacmat on 2003-02-10 19:45 [#00550090]
Points: 31271 Status: Lurker



great


 

offline nacmat on 2003-02-10 19:46 [#00550091]
Points: 31271 Status: Lurker | Followup to DaWeeze: #00550087



long time I dont see you at loopz´s


 

offline Mr_Flappypants from Louisville (United States) on 2003-02-10 19:46 [#00550092]
Points: 2796 Status: Addict



i pronounce it 'eggs: yech!" because i dont like eggs


 

offline DaWeeze from WANTED IN 16 STATES! on 2003-02-10 19:48 [#00550093]
Points: 5213 Status: Addict | Followup to nacmat: #00550091



Been busy...


 

offline roygbivcore from Joyrex.com, of course! on 2003-02-10 19:59 [#00550103]
Points: 22557 Status: Lurker



i always pronounced it like execute with out the t


 

offline xceque on 2003-02-10 20:03 [#00550105]
Points: 5888 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



it's pronounced 'zec', you silly billies.

Do you pronounce 'xylophone' as 'ekzylofone'? I don't think
so!

Do you pronounce 'discotheque' as 'disco-tek-we'? No you
bleedin don't!

:D



 

offline roygbivcore from Joyrex.com, of course! on 2003-02-10 20:04 [#00550107]
Points: 22557 Status: Lurker



ZEC? what the fuck

execue is way cooler


 

offline xceque on 2003-02-10 20:06 [#00550110]
Points: 5888 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



However if you stick an 's' or another 'x' on the end it
becomes 'sex'!


 

offline roygbivcore from Joyrex.com, of course! on 2003-02-10 20:11 [#00550114]
Points: 22557 Status: Lurker



yeah, well, if you switch the letters around in my name, and
add some and take some away, it spelles EXECUE SOUNDS BETTER
THAN ZEC


 

offline magicant from Canada on 2003-02-10 20:20 [#00550120]
Points: 2465 Status: Lurker



if it was pronounced 'zec', should it be spelled 'xeque'?


 

offline Refund from Melbourne (Australia) on 2003-02-10 20:24 [#00550122]
Points: 7824 Status: Lurker



nice interview btw...


 

offline pachi from yo momma (United States) on 2003-02-10 22:08 [#00550182]
Points: 8984 Status: Lurker



nice bit of info there =)

i like Booth's quote; "The trick is not to get it to work
faster
or slower but to get it in tune with yourself."



 

offline Dinosaur from United Kingdom on 2003-02-10 22:12 [#00550185]
Points: 312 Status: Lurker



thanks... that was great.


 


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