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Venetian SnaresMy Downfall[Original Soundtrack](Planet Mu) US release date: 9 October 2007 UK release date: 8 October 2007 by Nate DorrTwo years after the landmark breakcore symphony of Rossz Csillag Allat Szuletett, Winnipeg’s Aaron Funk has returned with a proper follow-up. Naturally, it’s not the first Venetian Snares release since then: he has maintained his usual hectic schedule with two EPs, two LPs, a 10” and, arguably, the ambiguously authored Last Step album in the interim. But as for the confirmed full-lengths, the pitch-black gabber assault of Meathole was more properly a continuation of the “evil” sounds of Doll Doll Doll and Find Candace, and Cavalcade of Glee and Dadaist Happy Hardcore Pom-Poms was more of a playful digression, combining some of Rossz‘s orchestral composition with the furious drum programming and amusing sampling forays of past efforts like Chocolate Wheelchair. For a return to the cinematic darkness and grandeur of Rossz, possibly Funk’s greatest achievement to date, we had to wait for My Downfall.
Fittingly, it is “Integraation” that most effectively speaks for the four drum-driven tracks. After a slow opening, the first breaks leap in over ascending strings and the arrangement begins an insatiable process of ramping up. This is mostly done through increasingly more devastating bass synth, each new line more distorted than the last, yet still never overpowering the other elements. It’s like Rossz‘s “Masodik Galamb”, except without ever giving way to complete gabber overkill. “The Hopeless Pursuit of Remission” introduces crisp acid lines to the mix without ever overlooking its orchestrations, but still tends to add little to the templates set by Rossz. Those acid designs get picked up more skillfully later in the brooding “My Half”, which is also punctuated by sharp vinyl cuts and discordant stabs of synth. The fourth and final appearance of Venetian Snares’ eponymous element are on “My Crutch”, which manages some of the disc’s stronger melodic themes. Together, these four highlights would make a solid 12”. Here they get a little lost in the instrumentals and may inspire judicious use of the skip button. My Downfall, though a welcome continuation of Rossz Csillag Allat Szuletett, lacks the full epochal freshness of that album’s innovations, and tends to obscure them a little in somewhat less striking material. A few elements have been added, a few removed, but on the whole it’s fairly familiar ground. Still, removed from the expectations created by Rossz, it’s a masterful synthesis of aggression and beauty. Removed from the expectations of being a Venetian Snares album, it’s nearly unbelievable. New listeners would be advised to start with Rossz, but they should hardly be underwhelmed were they to enter with the latest. Old listeners should be well-satisfied, if not driven to the same fever pitch of two years prior, but I suppose that’s the role rightfully occupied by career pinnacles: to be frequently referenced, and rarely matched.
15 January 2008Related articles
Review: Venetian Snares: DetrimentalistFilmore Mescalito Holmes25.Sep.08 Winnepeg's golden boy of breakcore blitzkrieg unleashes an opus to the drum and bass aesthetic with his 20th-odd long-player.
Review: Venetian Snares: Pink + GreenNate Dorr17.May.07 This is a Venetian Snares EP, so of course it's technically better than 90% of the breakcore being released right now, but it stumbles in crucial ways, especially when cast in the harsh light of expectation.
Review: Venetian Snares: Cavalcade of Glee and Dadaist Happy Hardcore Pom PomsNate Dorr29.Sep.06 The new album seems to be part of the more playful Venetian Snares lineage, most comparable, perhaps, to the manic surreality of 2003's Chocolate Wheelchair.
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