Showing posts with label Vex'd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vex'd. Show all posts
Sunday, 14 August 2011
Vex'd – Degenerate (2005)
It may be a slightly disappointing thing for an excited Burial fan to find out, but there's an argument brewing that, actually, dubstep's biggest star isn't even a dubstep artist at all - his music is too atmospheric, too beautiful, not rhythmically slavish enough. I won't get into how much truth there is in that argument right now, but it's certainly true that the man who has been designated as the figurehead of dubstep sounds little like his contemporaries. Pinch probably comes closest, but his songs are just that - songs - as opposed to Burial's more composed, non-linear tracks. Outside of that, artists like Kode9, Spaceape, Various Production, and Skream tend to make music that's less organic and more obviously rooted in UK's underground dance scene than anything you'd imagine Burial would make at this point.
Genre elitism, perhaps. Every artist in the genre stills shares a 2-step beat and a hardcore aesthetic, after all, and how they push and pull the music around that should be their own choice.
Vex'd, too, are pushing in a direction that's seen some people cut them away from the genre. The difference here is that this production duo have gone in an entirely opposite direction to Burial. Whereas his two albums were built to be listened to loudly in the dark, with headphones on, Degenerate is simply built to be listened to loudly, any time, any place. It's fucking brutal. If you want intricate production then you'll probably find it here, but ultimately this album is all about making a 2-step rhythm and a breakbeat production sound like the heaviest thing in the world. The obsession with brutality and power almost moves this into industrial territory; it's easily heavy enough to please any metalheads that don't have an inbuilt dislike for electronics.

Respite from the chaos does come in brief doses. "Crusher Dub" is more or less a straight-up dub track that works as a much-needed pause in proceedings despite some nasty drum processing, and "Fire" offers up a beautiful sample of a string quartet. The menacing, minimal interlude "Destruction" completes the album's more measured mid-section. Despite that, though, the abiding impression of Degenerate is a brutal, nasty Neanderthal of an album that will piss off as many people as it entertains - and if this sounds like your kind of thing, then you'll probably have a hell of a lot of fun listening to this. The second disc contains the 12" singles that created the buzz for this album in the first place, including the early versions of "Lion" and "Pop Pop", renamed for the album as "Lion V.I.P." and "Pop Pop V.I.P.". (Sputnikmusic.com)
TRACKLIST
1-1 Pop Pop V.I.P. 6:55
1-2 Thunder 6:36
1-3 Angels 6:34
1-4 Corridor 6:24
1-5 Cold 3:32
1-6 Venus 5:38
1-7 Gunman 6:08
1-8 Crusher Dub 3:09
1-9 Fire 6:27
1-10 Destruction 0:58
1-11 Lion V.I.P. 5:59
1-12 Slime 4:51
2-1 Canyon 6:03
2-2 Pop Pop 6:00
2-3 Ghost 5:55
2-4 Lion 7:05
2-5 Smart Bomb 5:46
2-6 End Of Line
Featuring – Search & Destroy 6:25
Saturday, 30 July 2011
Vex'd - Cloud Seed (2010)
If timing is everything in the business of selling records, then Vex'd might count themselves two of dubstep's most unfortunate men. It may seem a smidge premature to muse underrated or overlooked talents in a genre so youthful, except Cloud Seed—a "lost" second album of sorts—is proof positive that phenomenon already exists in 2010.
Half a decade ago, Vex'd, AKA Jamie Teasdale and Roly Porter, resided in Bristol, pre-dating the city's rise to dubstep pre-eminence. Debut album Degenerate was unleashed on an unsuspecting world in the summer of 2005, back when dubstep reviews routinely arrived with an explanatory genre caveat. A handful of subsequent 12-inches later, the trail went cold, the pair eventually going separate ways.
Comprising a collection of cuts created circa 2006/2007 originally destined for their sophomore album, plus a clutch of remixes, Cloud Seed isn't the follow-up proper thatDegenerate's industrial big bore exhaust explosion demanded. It is, in fact, an entirely different beast; tamed, but in its own standalone context, amongst the most beguiling full-lengths in the broad dubstep bracket since Burial's Untrue.
While Untrue represented the view from a South London nightbus window, Cloud Seed takes the same route through tower blocks and cold concrete ravaged by a chilling nuclear winter, at points orchestral to the point of classically trained compositions. "Remains of the Day" backs that notion early on, an ambient Terminatorfranchise-worthy soundscape as eerie as post-blast wave dust settling. Closing epic "Nails" is a steampunk nightmare machine so invasive that it heightens awareness of the very blood pumping in your veins, apparent black metal-sampling epilogue included. Similarly, there's a tangible malevolence at the heart of "Out of the Hills," riffing off patented space-dub vibrations versus disorientatingly thick weaves of peripheral bass.
It follows that as a retrospective collation that a certain coherency would be lacking, flitting from subtleties to, in the case of "Killing Floor" (Mah Mix)—the original the flip of 2006 single Bombardment of Saturn—tangible links to Degenerate's muscular darkstep. Yet it remains tempting to ponder where Teasdale and Porter would be now if Cloud Seed had emerged immediately after its creation at the height of Burial fever in 2007, or even beaten the anonymous one to the punch. Perhaps it's just as well that it didn't, though: remaining perfectly of the moment three years later, back then chances are that Vex'd would have disappeared over the horizon of dubstep's ever-evolving curve where few ears could keep pace. (RA.REVIEWS)
TRACKLIST
1 Vex'd Feat. Warrior Queen – Take Time Out
Vocals Warrior Queen 5:14
2 Vex'd – Remains Of The Day 3:55
3 Vex'd Feat. Anneka – Heart Space
Vocals Anneka 4:51
4 Vex'd – Out Of The Hills 5:02
5 Vex'd – Shinju Bridge 1:52
6 Vex'd – Slug Trawl Depths 1:36
7 Plaid – Bar Kimura (Jamie Vex'd Remix)
Remix Jamie Vex'd 4:55
8 Vex'd Feat. Jest – Disposition
Vocals Jest 4:03
9 John Richards – Suite For Piano & Electronics (Vex'd Remix)
Remix Vex'd 3:50
10 Vex'd – Killing Floor (MAH Mix) 3:28
11 Gabriel Prokofiev – String Quartet No.2 (Vex'd Remix)
Remix Vex'd 4:39
12 Distance – Fallen (Vex'd Remix)
Remix – Vex'd 6:18
13 Vex'd – Oceans 4:59
14 Vex'd – Nails 4:43
Labels:
AMBIENT,
Anneka,
DUBSTEP,
Grime,
INDUSTRIAL,
Vex'd,
Warrior Queen
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