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el stupid reviewo
 

Mr. el stupid reviewo on 2001-10-20 17:17 [#00043950]



5 years past... the cumulation of Aphex...
by brianmayo | Oct 18 '01
Pros: Different. Strange sounds, melodies and piano.
Cons: Some tracks like Gwely Mermans and Gwarek2 are just...
filler.
The Bottom Line If you want to liven up your stereo and mess
with your mind in a pleasureable way, then buy this album.
Recommended: Yes

OK, maybe you were expecting "Selected Ambient Works Volume
3". Or maybe "...i still care because you do." But your
wrong. Well, this album doesn't follow the past of Aphex
Twin and Richard James' ability to make every new album
sound different. It's strangely... following the rules.

But isn't the rule of IDM to not follow the rules? Autechre
has expressed itself as something different - not quite
music, but not quite noise. This borderline psychotic
quality has also been used to describe Aphex Twin - not
quite mainstream techno, but not quite... junk.

Or so many think. James' latest effort as the Twin - Drukqs
- is more a of a career summary than another step in his
career. This is well, a crowd-pleaser - a reason to get
Aphex fans going, instead of submerging his fans into
another landscape (which he did with Selected Ambient Works
Volume 2) he's put them in a familiar spot - his sounds on
Drukqs sort of echo his drill n' bass of the Richard D.
James album.

Cock/Ver10 is a harsh yet equal track that would sound great
played live. It's a get-up-a-go kind of track. The speech
bit at 2:50 into the song is a good reason to get up and
start dancing.

Tracks like Avril 14th and Nanou2 are more of the subtle
parts of Drukqs. Although they aren't really needed, they do
add a touch to the album. Some would call them annoying.
Some would call them beautiful. However, the most boring
tracks are filler at the most - Gwely Mermans is a prime
example.

After nearly 15 years of creating (and recreating) a genre,
Aphex Twin is back-to-basics, which is really odd for
Richard James. If you're an Aphex fan like me, it'll seem
different from his usual pattern to screw things up. For
everyone else, this is a perfect album to start with.
Great Music to Play While: Exercising



 

DblHeLX from moon on 2001-10-20 17:27 [#00043953]



right -friggin- on my man.
everyone seems to expect a repeat of earlier stuff. all his
albums are different.


 

1010-1111-10 from St.JOhn\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\'s Nf, Canada on 2001-10-20 20:02 [#00043971]



This is a decent review. Personally Drukqs hits me like a
brick in the face. At work i'll just start playing a tune in
my head to pass the time. The piano pieces are , well i dont
know really, i cant describe them. BY the way i'm not some
joe that would like anything RDJ releases, its just that i
personally like this album. I dont consider the reasons for
its release, its just sounds all put together, who cares
about their intentions....


 

PostModernVancouver from Urban PostModernVancouver< Canadaaaa on 2001-10-20 21:41 [#00044006]



Gwely Mermans a filler??
It's one of the most amazingly haunting tunes on the album a
la SAW 2 with some
beautiful fading in and out bass and drones coming through.
It's haunting , mysterious and vague and deadly played
loud.
Anyone whose come into my appartment and hears Gwely played
loud are all mesmerized, its a bloody stunner.
Whoever wrote that review on top is one serious shrooms.
GwelY Mermans is music for the wrong kind of haunted
house.... and a defining explanation in musical form of
these post-WTC attacks-times we're living in.
Unsettling, dark and a wordly global fear.
The message is in that piece of music fer sure.....


 

balthus from europe on 2001-10-20 22:15 [#00044013]



it's interesting that avril 14th and nanou2 are often
mentioned as the best pieces etc. the are the easiest
accessible of what i heard until now from drukqs. i like
avril 14th a lot (i have the nme sampler), but the excerpts
from drukqs surprised me... the prepared piano pieces and
mernan (gwarek sounds fantastic, too) and other piano pieces
are sounding more subtle, deeper. after all this anti-hype
of thought, 'well, maybe the album is in the end really not
that good', but after listening to the excerpts, i was sure
about that this is not the 'filler-album/contract-clearing'
a lot of people talked of about. there are now a lot of
albums which are hyped as 'masterpieces' and 'original', but
in comparing them to drukqs they are just boring products
and designed to please a wide range of consumers and
critics, who need some fashionable background music. it's
strange that critics are now praising empty and crappy
albums and films, but original new works of art are
dismissed, wether it's music or even french film (for me
music is an art form, and aphex twin's drukqs is a piece of
art, not a product).


 

Jeremy kwhy on 2001-10-20 22:15 [#00044014]



yeah but who would go into your appartment? There isn't any
humour on Drukqs, no revoloution...I don't need time to
brainwash myself into liking the tracks. For each of the
three genres he's covered on this album, he's done better
and so have other people. GOODNIGHT


 

PostModernVancouver from Urban PostModernVancouver< Canadaaaa on 2001-10-20 22:20 [#00044016]



This is just a matter of choice thats all, I'm just stating
my opinion.
Heres more reviews from AMG and Barnes And Noble, including
one describing Gwely Mermans:

Drukqs
Aphex Twin

Retail Price: $19.98
Our Price: $16.99
You Save: $2.99(15%)
Readers' Advantage Price: $16.14 Join Now
Not Yet Released: Preorder Now
This item will be available on October 23, place your
advance order now and we will ship it when it arrives!

Catalog Number: 31174
UPC: 643443117425
Format: CD
Release Date: Oct 23 2001
Label: SIRE / WEA

Buy it Now!

As you order, each item will be listed in Your Shopping Cart
in the upper left corner. You may make changes at Checkout.
Safe Shopping Guarantee!








Write your own Online Review!
Let others hear what you have to say.
Track List

DISC 1

1. Jynweythek Ylow
2. Vordhosbn
3. Kladfvgbung Micshk
4. Omgyjya Switch 7
5. Strotha Tynhe
6. Gwely Mernans
7. Bbydhyonchord
8. Cock/Ver 10
9. Avril 14th
10. Mt. Saint Michel Mix+St. Michaels Mount
11. Gwarek 2
12. Orban Eq Trx 4
13. Aussois
14. Hy a Scullyas Lyf a Dhagrow
15. Kesson Daslef


DISC 2

1. 54 Cymru Beats
2. Btoum-Roumada
3. Lornaderek
4. Penty Harmonium
5. Meltphace 6
6. Bit 4
7. Prep Gwarlek 3B
8. Father
9. Taking Control
10. Petiatil Cx Htdui
11. Ruglen Holon
12. Afx237 V7
13. Ziggomatic V17
14. Beskhu3epnm
15. Nanou 2

Reviews
Barnes & Noble
After disappearing into the British countryside for a few
years, the eclectic electronica producer known as Aphex Twin
(born Richard D. James) has returned. And boy, is he back --
Drukqs (pronounced "drugs"), Aphex's first full-length album
since 1996, is a doozy. Clocking in at more than 110
minutes, the double-disc set is stuffed with 30 cuts of
hyperkinetic beat-trickery, glowing ambient numbers, and
plaintive piano instrumentals that recall the work of
minimalist classical composer Erik Satie. Despite Aphex's
long absence, Drukqs proves that the reclusive producer
hasn't fallen behind contemporary trends. The aggressive
drum-'n'-bass beats and noisy synth effects on tracks like
"Avril 14th" reinforce James's title as a forefather to the
current crop of "intelligent dance music" producers like
Mouse on Mars. On "54 Cymru Beats," James fractures and
splinters crystalline drum shards into a jagged slab of
sonic sculpture that threatens to leap out of the speakers.
But the quiet moments here are just as engaging. The
ethereal "Gwely Mermans" is a wondrous piece of ambient
music -- the misty four-four thump sounds like techno
filtered through a dense London fog. Though it frequently
flip-flops between calm and near-chaos, Drukqs is infused
with wistful, childlike melodies and melancholy keyboard
tickles that could make R2D2 weep. Aphex's binary creations
are definitely driven by a human heart. Michael Endelman

All Music Guide
Despite threatening retirement several times, in 2001
Richard D. James finally released another Aphex Twin record.
But for all this record tells us, he may still be in
retirement. Spreading 30 tracks (most with unpronounceable
titles) across two discs, Drukqs sounds less like a major
new statement from electronica's best producer than the
results of a Sunday afternoon's trawl through his hard drive
for files he hasn't released before. Many songs here evoke
the feel of recordings long since past, from the quiet
ambient-techno of his breakthrough Selected Ambient Works
85-92 to the demonically extroverted programming of Richard
D. James Album and the Come to Daddy EP. Stylistically, the
record leans toward the later recordings, with many tracks
here reprising the off-key melodies and overloaded drum
programming of "Come to Daddy" or "Windowlicker." There's
also little rhyme or reason to the program; James veers
directly from a drill'n'bass firestorm ("Cock/Ver 10") to a
delicate piano piece á la Erik Satie ("Avril 14th") to an
acid-techno burner ("Mt. Saint Michel Mix") with barely a
glance backward for transition.

Of course, aside from all the criticism, the previously
unreleased musings of Aphex Twin are still far more
intriguing and solid than most producers' best releases. The
opener "Jynweythek Ylow" and "Ruglen Holon" are brilliant,
inscrutable pieces reminiscent of a rusty, bygone music box
or the gamelan music of Indonesia. And a few of the
second-disc highlights, "Meltphace 6" and "Taking Control,"
chart a middle-ground between the emotional ambience of
early Aphex Twin and the wracked hysteria of his later work.
Drukqs is a sprawling album that defies listeners to
understand or enjoy it as a whole -- it would've made a much
better fan-only release than the long-awaited return of the
techno vanguard's favorite producer. John Bush

Album Credits
Aphex Twin Primary Artist



 

balthus from europe on 2001-10-20 22:22 [#00044017]



uh, he did something before in the genre of prepared piano
pieces and piano pieces? and preparing pianos and playing on
an old harmonium is not funny for a type who is known for
electronic music? umm... well, maybe.


 

balthus from europe on 2001-10-20 22:31 [#00044019]



nice reviews, postmodern vancouver.

the only thing about i always wonder is that they are always
mentioning erik satie as an influence (maybe only because
aphex himself said that he is a great fan of him), but
there's a lot more to the piano pieces and drukqs in general
(of what i can tell after listening to some tracks and
excerpts). satie never prepared pianos (and there are a
bunch of prepared piano pieces). comparing the piano pieces
by aphex to satie's pieces is like comparing satie's pieces
to stravinsky's , cage's, reich's and glass' pieces (three
composers who said - as aphex did - that they admire satie's
music). aphex' pieces are just as original as theirs and as
personal.


 

PostModernVancouver from Urban PostModernVancouver< Canadaaaa on 2001-10-20 22:41 [#00044020]



agreed Balthus, his piano pieces are totally upto par with
the past greats.
I think the reason why they keep mentioning Satie is because
(I think ) that his DrukQs pieces just sound a lot like
Satie's work I guess.
Aphex has the greatest ear for melancholy and sadness in
music today which I think is wonderful.
Drukqs is absolutely brilliant, and even thought its not
that revolutionary it still is better then anything else
released these past 2 years by eons.
Drukqs will go down as one of the classics also as the years
go by.
RDj is faster then most of his fans and critics and reads
these times far better then most, people seem to
underestimate that RDj is a major trickster and is always
going to come up with whatever might be unexpected.
Trust me, naysayers about DrukQs or not, this is still the
work of the only musical genius left in music today....
No one compares....


 


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