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http://www.popmatters.com/pm/music/reviews/48127/ziq-duntisbourne-abbots-soulmate-devastation-technique/µ-ZiqDuntisbourne Abbots Soulmate Devastation Technique(Planet-Mu)US release date: 14 August 2007UK release date: 20 August 2007by Nate DorrOh, hindsight. When µ-Ziq’s last album, Bilious Paths, came out four years ago, I found myself decrying its apparent focus on heavy processing and spastic rhythmic overload. µ-Ziq’s Mike Paradinas had always distinguished himself from his contemporaries among the ‘90s IDM pioneers on the strength of his melodies, layered and majestic, whereas the new album buried them in rapid drum edits and noisy effects tweaking. Suddenly Paradinas seemed to be edging into the DSP-breakcore oeuvre already well tracked by the likes of Hrvatski and Venetian Snares, perhaps fittingly both signed to Paradinas’ own Planet-µ label. Hardly a concession to pop success, given the decidedly cult popularity of such cataclysmic percussion, but it seemed an odd bit of band-wagoning, especially considering that the sell-by date of the DSP-era seemed to be rapidly approaching. Digital signal processing, mainstay of the turn-of-the-century crop of new electronic producers like Kid 606 bent on breaking their loops as completely as possible, wasn’t nearly as fresh and exhilarating as it once was, and suspicions that it was more or less a clever gimmick were gaining weight.
There will always exist a niche for “difficult” music, music that pushes at various conventions and beyond. Usually when we talk about difficult music, it’s in reference to harsh noise, or minimal drone, or particularly vicious breakcore. Paradinas actually has done something interesting with this album, despite—well, actually because of—its unpleasantness. Duntisbourne Abbots... has the distinction of being the only difficult album I can think of defined not by sensory overload or abstraction, but by intelligible melodies that just refuse to be palatable, to sit properly in the gut for digestion. There’s a sort of innovation in that, but it still can’t make me want to listen. 7 September 2007Related articles
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