Sketch Wrote:
Great record here.
A couple of other really good albums from this year:
Steve Reich: Variations for Wind, Strings & Keyboards / John Adams: Shaker Loops (San Francisco Symphony/Edo de Waart)
Edo de Waart's hand on both of these pieces is just great. The guy might be the best pure minimalist composer ever. He was a fan and brought that love and sort of quiet rebellion to performances. With that, this version of Shaker Loops (one of my favorite Adams pieces) sounds great, however, I wish it wasn't a digital recording. As for the Reich piece, I have gone back and forth on it countless times. It doesn't feel timeless and easy like so much of what he did, but on this album where backed with the Adams piece (whose work generally sounds ridiculously calculated, but not here), it works. It's a nice contrast between the two pieces. Probably not essential, but a good listen for sure.
Ghedalia Tazartes: Une éclipse totale de soleil
This album is goofy and fun oddball stuff. The Sex Pistols samples are fun, there are some brash moments thrown in here and there, but it never gets real serious. Not groundbreaking in any way, but I think it is a pretty good riff on Zappa by way of an electroacoustic madman--again worth a listen.
The Art of Noise: Who's Afraid of the Art of Noise
It sounds dated for sure, like most electronic stuff from this period--but damn there are some killer ideas on here. I think the line that can be drawn from this album, to 90s Mo Wax, to Scott Herren in his glory days, to the synth lines of Emeralds and Oneohtrix is pretty short. This album has been a consistent go to for me whenever I am stuck for ideas over the years. This is what pushing electronic instruments to the limits is all about. Pulling tones and rhythms from all over the place, letting an oscillator do what it is supposed to do, but retaining control. Just a fucking awesome record that I can't imagine ever getting tired of. Go listen to Beat Box and try to not like it--you will fail.