Zarko & Bulldog's Trans-Hemispheric Review of the 2000's

Another bunch I've never heard of - you're on form sir ;) Loved those video tracks too, especially the Tomorrow one. I like how, to me at least, it makes something quite out of the ordinary from a lyric and vocal performance that'd make it over the top of any more commercial track, what with how it uses those skewiff, African kinda polyrhythms and all. That's what I got out of it anyway. Either way, definitely something I'm gonna have to hunt down myself soon.

Should be getting my next review up over the weekend. I'll just have a quick think what it's gonna be of in the mean time...
 
Looking forward to your list mate. Unfortunately, when looking at the albums that have most influenced me from the decade, I realised I had already reviewed a fair % of them in my journal :( I will list them here still, just for the sake of it (No particular order).
Truart - Volkssturm
Mushroom's Patience - Roma,Wien.
Techno Animal - The Brotherhood of the Bomb
Contemporary Noise Quintet - Pig Inside The Gentleman
Onra - Chinoiseries
Stendeck - Faces
Kashiwa Daisuke - Program Music I

SO, rather than, I will be attempting to answer a rag-tag list of questions based on this decades albums. Not necessarily the best, but the best combination of the question and my own tastes. I sort of have a list atm, but would like some input by others if anyone has a suggestion. So far...

Most plain fun/Guilty pleasure?
Most explorative
Best soundtrack
Best debut?
Most chilled
Most aggressive?
Most oddball
Best genre?
Most influential?
Best album from a genre whose music I don't listen to from previous decades?

? = I am iffy on them as questions

So yeah, any suggestions welcome.
 
Dark Jazz Cont.

3) Macelleria Mobile Di Mezzanotte – Black Rubber Exotica (2005)

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Hey, I’ve talked about this fella before haven’t I? Yep, here it is. Wait, didn’t I ‘only’ give it 7.7 in that thread? Well, yes I did give it that score. However, it when comes to albums like these, it’s not about the numbers. I used to see this as a power electronics album first and foremost. Eventually it got to the point where I simply asked myself, ‘Who the hell cares?’, and that is how it came to belong in this thread. I doubt it will be the most popular album of the group – It is certainly a most harsh combination of electronics and jazz, and more often than not, the jazz comes second fiddle. This doesn’t mean it doesn’t hold a significant value in the scheme of things. So what is the album all about? It’s about being as abrasive as possible to create as dark a tone as possible. This is probably why it fits into the ‘dark jazz’ genre so well. Although it isn’t completed in a similar way whatsoever, the base aesthetic values remain the same. With a more forceful approach than either of the other two albums so far with Sexxxy, it would be fair to say you don’t think you are listening to a dark jazz album.

The album swings all over the place really, but where it truly shines out is the comparative nature of the albums three sides. The ridiculously abrasive power electronics, the seedy and throbbing dark jazz moments, and the moments of near quiet. I couldn’t quite suggest you ‘endure’ the album for the great dark jazz moments if you can’t sit through the other parts. Although they are nice, this album is a puzzle, one that is difficult to find meaning without all the pieces. Heck, even with all the pieces you don’t know what the **** you are doing. All I can suggest is that you give it a try, and that My Sweet Betty is ****ing amazing.

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My Sweet Betty

4) Zdzisław Piernik And Piotr Zabrodzki – Namanga (2008)

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Now this is the apex of inaccessible music for those who don’t like this sort of music. There is a minimal chance that you will like this album unless you have a taste for free jazz or avant garde music at least. That said, it is still probably a-top a list of great 2008 albums (Which looking back on was an amazing year in all actuality). Using a menagerie instruments and sounRAB to create an entangling web whose threaRAB sometimes lead to nowhere, this album is yet another than falls into my perspective of dark jazz, and my perspective alone. The Polish duo creates an album that is full of whimsy and wonder, yet throughout a fair amount of the album, it carries a sense of loneliness and isolation. It has its violent moments, but everything seems to be working in its singularity rather than as one.

As for the actual music, it is about creating as much depth with as little help as possible. Filled with short and sharp songs, most of the time failing to reach two minutes in length, the time constraints lend themselves well to this idea.
Some of the sounRAB from Piernik’s tuba are simply awesome, and fits into the genre perfectly. Other times he summons up Brotzmann’s spirit with a tuba, which is an amazing feat. There’s not too much more to say. This is an album that has to be listened to even be attempted to be comprehended. To be honest, sometimes I can make neither high nor low of the album. Once again, it falls outside the restrictions of what many would consider to be dark jazz, but it has its more ‘classic’ dark jazz moments. Still, it is one of the best albums from 2008, especially when it comes to jazz.

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Milkrototal

5) Kreng - L'Autopsie Phenomenale De Dieu (2009)

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Well, for the final suggestion is an album that is probably more fitting for the dark jazz name. Yet once again, it can be chucked into a whole bunch of different genres depending on interpretation. As I said at the start of this post, that is probably the best thing about the genre. Much of the time it is up to interpretation rather than any set guidelines. Rather than a specific sound, the genre is based upon a mood. This album is an absolute beauty from the 2009 line up. One of the more sample-based dark jazz albums I have come across, it uses vocal samples and such assortments of noises to great effect to create a disposition, sometimes based on antagonism, other times based on ambiguity.

As it is with many dark jazz projects, the music is about expressing a cinematic experience into the world of sound rather than through visuals. It does this amazingly well, with sounRAB such as Kollosus using a build up of layers and samples to create a sense of fear and foreboding doom. The screams and crying are legitimately distressing to the listener. The album, whilst containing a lot of tracks, has a fair balance between lengthy songs and short songs, which in this context, is quite fitting. Sometimes it can get into a little modern classical mode, but this isn’t a problem at all. In fact, it enhances the atmosphere of the album, perhaps better than if the album was purely a dark jazz album. This is essential listening in my books any day of the week. Apologies for the youtube video that features a song not from the album – Windows Movie Maker is being a bitch so I can’t upload my own as of yet.

[youtube]6dnnCKEF6kM[/youtube]
Kolossus

So that’s my side of the story. Although it follows a different path than many would expect, I still think that the collective thoughts on the genre speak for themselves. Its increase in popularity over time is only a good thing for the music scene in my opinion, and although I think I have introduced a fair few new names to people, this is only scratching the surface.

Other banRAB of interest:
Mushroom’s Patience/Roma, Wien. – Definitely has its jazzier moments, if not all the time.
Triosk/1+3+1 – Not bad stuff at all, perhaps not really dark in a sense
Tomasz Stańko Quartet/Suspended Nights – Again, not really dark, but has its moments
Dale Cooper Quartet and the Dictaphones
 
Time for a bump and a half...

The Bees - Free the Bees (2004)
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genre: indie, psychedelic
1. These Are the Ghosts
2. Wash In the Rain
3. No Atmosphere
4. Horsemen
5. Chicken Payback
6. The Russian
7. I Love You
8. The Start
9. Hourglass
10. Go Karts
11. One Glass Of Water
12. This Is the Land


There are probably a few questions that you want ansred, such as 'what's the capital of Trinidad and Tobago', 'who the hell are the Bees' and 'how do I fix my boiler?' The answer to those questions in no particular order; I've never done so myself, Port Of Spain and a psychedelic indie group from the Isle Of Wight. In fact, that last one about the Bees being from the Isle Of Wight is particularly interesting because, as you'll discover if you know these guys, Paul Butler's vocal Kris Birkin's pristine and twangy guitar sound (at least in places) very American, and not from such a quintessentially English spot. At the end of the day, what we have is a very fun, upbeat and energetically guitar-heavy indie sound spiced up by some touches of psychedelia here and there.

These Are the Ghosts kicks the album into life nicely and fittingly with a quick swathe of psychedelic-sounding feedback before the kind of echoey vocal eventually evolves into a nice, loud thrash-up of a song. Wash In the Rain introduces us to another stylistic theme of the album, that being loud, sharp and repetitive guitar motifs underpinning a very neat and catchy tune, with the odd use of the hammond organ keeping things in line with the overall sound. It's all very reminiscent of west coast psychedelia, as is the early highlight No Atmosphere - opened by a fantastic, rolling and repetitive guitar riff before a very neat little time change sets this one apart from the rest.

Following the more psychedelic-leaning opening salvo, we move into single territory, the first of these being the fabulous Horsemen, propelled as it is by some more very prominent guitar and a great little melody before an intriguing piece of studio trickery takes us through each chorus. Top stuff, and fittingly followed by the equally-awesome and catchy though much more simplistic Chicken Payback. The video's hilarious too. As you may have noticed by now, great guitar work and convincing echoes of west coast psychedelia are common strong-points of this album, and the five minute instrumental workout that is the Russian is yet one more example of this.

I Love You, as you might guess from the lame title, is the weak point of the album, being a very uninteresting little number as it is as the overall pace of the album starts to take a turn for the slower. Things improve with the Start, but nevertheless the weaker middle-section of the album continues here. Hourglass is much more like, as although it keeps going with the slower part of the album, and while it's unusual in that it's a rare, bass-driven number here, it plays to the rest of the album's strengths by using the hammond organ superbly and featuring some very good guitar work. The kind of carnival-time, waltzy aspects to Go Karts does make it seem as if the guys had been listening to Being For the Benefit Of Mr. Kite quite a bit when the idea for this intriguing little tune came to them. Easily the most left-of-centre moment of the album then.

As it nears its end, the album picks up the pace again as it speeRAB towarRAB its climax. The penultimate One Glass Of Water is another tune that really plays to the album's strengths in that not only is it catchy, fun and loud, but it also kinda tricks you into thinking you're dealing with a straight-up indie rocker before the rhythm section and guitar goes into overdrive and makes a beautiful mess of the whole thing. This Is the Land puts the lid on the whole thing as the band tear through another great little west coast-flavoured psychedelic number.

Overall, we're dealing with some pretty bloody good stuff, even if there are a couple of weaker moments to be found. I'm not exactly anyone you could call an indie lover, but I love this album when it plays to its strengths, as when it does it's far from an album you have to know and love a lot more indie to appreciate. Basically, if you're into your nice, loud guitars and especially west coast psychedelia (primarily Nuggets vol 1), get this album.

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[YOUTUBE]Wq7ASMbOpmo[/YOUTUBE]
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