
(03.21.05) I love the name of Audiobulb's new compilation:
Intricate
Maximals. It suggests an environment of Mandelbrotian complexity,
a series of whirrs, clicks, pops and bleeps that encompasses a
virtuality of infinite expression. Modern electronic music with its
thousand layers of DSP patches, virtual interfaces and unlimited track
layering allows for music that can be both infuriating in its
obtuseness and delightful in its confusion of elements.
Intricate
Maximals dodges the former by highlighting the latter.
Calika's "Latticel Work" is a skewed pop song that has cloaked itself
in a haze of machine noise and radio static, hiding the casual drum
kit and winsome acoustic guitar beneath a field of staggering static
pulses and arrhythmic metallic elements. Opener Autistici's "Nurture
Nature" burrs a field recording of birds and crickets with the slow
cascade of siren tones and buzzing curves of processed noise, a broken
soundtrack to an artificial world. Room performs a 'ventrimix' on "So
Gone" by Diagram of Suburban Chaos, looping a wordless breath of
female vocals against a slumbering beat and the rounded evolution of
early morning sunrise tones in a pleasantly non-chaotic fashion.
There is stuttering glitch pop in Marion's "Unpeopled," clattering
burps of sound against a laconic melody, while Cedar A.V.'s "Song for
a Republic" slathers radio hiss over a slow acoustic melody, a folksy
banana republic commentary that picks up a gamboling lattice work of
glitch and micro-elements. As the song progresses, Cedar A.V.
continues to layer elements, adding drum kit, squelchy synth pads and
looped vocals to build a comprehensive slice of life from the tiny
capital of a minuscule republic. Disastrato's "Requiem Pour une
Peuille Mort" is a Plunderphonics burst of synthesizers and vocals, a
quick spin across the AM radio dial, capturing bursts of church
chorals, piano music, half-words of talk shows, antique radio
commercials still rattling about the dial and the barest hint of 50's
rock and roll. The requiem thunders through this cut-up of Americana
before devolving into a shuddering rumble of subterranean magma
movement.
Effacer's incomprehensibly titled "Ponl Misc Mol Msc Nyk Oocl Uasc
Vroon Yang Ming" is the closet thing to a dub track, a sparse
ping-pong affair that sounds like a minimalist version of a ~scape
record. Room offers "Percule Extract," a bare beatless hymn of
horizon-seeking tones while Build's "You Can Get Here From There (if
you don't mind the T left over)" builds gently from organic tones and
harmonica into a luminous piece of soft ambience.
Containing eighteen tracks in all, Intricate Maximals
compresses several dozen hours worth of musical motifs and ideas into
eighty minutes of electronic expression. What keeps Audiobulb's
latest compilation interesting is the diversity of approaches and
sonic creativity. There's a lot of ideas here and most of them are
executed with complex aplomb. Excellent.
Intricate Maximals is out now on Audiobulb Records.
Audiobulb Website
Switches (Review: May 2004)
Exhibition #2 (Review: January 2004)