Quantcast

Call for Music Critics and Music Bloggers

Music
cover art

The Bionaut

Lubricate Your Living-Room

(Matador; US: 26 Jun 2001)

There’s something charmingly retro about this collection of tracks released between 1993 and 1997—given that electronica, with its focus on technology and sound innovation, changes even faster than fickle but technologically relatively static pop. Perhaps that charm comes from the devotion to melody or the decidedly ambient, subtle feel.


The Bionaut is only one of many projects fomented by Cologne, Germany’s Jorg Burger. He has also recorded and collaborated under the names burger/ink (a collaboration with Mike Ink), the Modernist, Trinkwasser and, most recently, Geometric Farms. This is not his first release on Matador, long home to innovative, high profile electronica—both burger/ink and the Modernist had Matador stateside releases as well. Lubricate Your Living-Room compiles 18 tracks from six separate albums originally released on the famous EMI Harvest label as well as his own label, Eat Raw Records. Therefore, what was until now available only in Europe is now (ahem) lubrication for the American living room.


Burger is one of the leading figures in a new German minimalism. This isn’t Philip Glass (who ought to be German), and it isn’t austere, either; rather, Burger favors melody and wash over the complicated beats and sonic one-upmanship common among both American and British DJs. Not surprisingly, for a project named Bionaut, the cuts on this album are consistently organic, light, and lovely.


The album opens with a delicate melody that sounds eerily as if it’s played on a reverb-heavy hammer dulcimer. Ethereal female vocals (contributed by Aquamarine) slide into the mix, and just when you think it’s going to be this exquisite, filigreed thing, there comes a deadpan voice (Burger himself, no doubt) delivering an ear-tingling, face-burning pornographic monologue.


It’s certainly an attention-getter, and really the only one on the album. Listeners are demurely charmed thereafter by haunting melody and beats like a softly thrumming rubber band—even, at times, by sounds that mimic calling birds. Most notable in this regard, despite the massively incongruous title, is track number 12, “Student Bashing at the Seaside”, originally from Lush Life Electronica.


Lubricate Your Living-Room is, for the duration, precisely what its title promises: intriguing music for downtime, or a soundtrack for meditation. In their loose structure and building inertia, many of these tracks evoke Bill Laswell’s numerous projects of the mid-‘90s, but without his propensity to adopt the beat of the moment. Burger’s lyricism is his own—a throwback to an era when “modernism” was something beautiful and strange.

Comments
Now on PopMatters
Call for Music Critics and Music Bloggers (Announcements) [Tue, 3:00 pm]
Bone and Bell Release Second EP (Mixed Media) [Tue, 10:00 am]
Cannes 2012: Day 9 - 'Student' + 'In the Fog' (Notes from the Road) [Tue, 9:00 am]
The 10 Greatest Aspects of the 'Star Wars' Franchise (Short Ends and Leader) [Tue, 8:00 am]
Devil May Cry: HD Collection (Reviews) [Tue, 6:45 am]
The Walkmen: Heaven (Reviews) [Tue, 2:00 am]
  1. The Top 10 Overplayed Songs You Hate by Artists You Love (Sound Affects)
  2. Tea with 'Sherlock': Investigating the Investigators (Features)
  3. Sunk? This 'Battleship' Stunk! (Short Ends and Leader)
  4. Tenacious D: Rize of the Fenix (Reviews)
  5. Top Ten Lost Midwest Punk Singles (Sound Affects)
  6. Like 'Doom', In Heels (Moving Pixels)
  7. 10 Pieces of Cinematic Art That Require Revisiting (Short Ends and Leader)
  8. Punk Rock's Pet Sounds: An Interview with Bomb the Music Industry! (Features)
  9. She's a Rainbow: A Tribute to Donna Summer (Features)
  10. Counterbalance No. 82: U2's 'Achtung Baby' (Sound Affects)
  11. 'Albatross': A Not-So-Weighty Coming-of-Age Meets Mid-Life-Crisis Film (Reviews)
  12. Counterbalance No. 83: The Stooges' 'Fun House' (Sound Affects)
  13. We Will Avenge Them Or… Be Avenged?: The Individual in the US Experience (Features)
  14. The 10 Greatest Aspects of the 'Star Wars' Franchise (Short Ends and Leader)
  15. The Queen and Her Crayons: An Interview With Donna Summer (Features)
  16. Early Summer 2012 New Music Playlist (Mixed Media)
  17. Killer Mike: R.A.P. Music (Reviews)
  18. The Best Canadian Records of the Year? The Fun Agony of Voting for the Polaris Prize Long List (Sound Affects)
  19. Sherlock Holmes, Dirk Gently and the Case of the Eccentric Detective (Columns)
  20. Flash Points: Mommy's Breast, Marriage Equality and Why Chipotle Is King (Features)
  21. Sergio Leone: Something to Do with Death (Columns)
  22. In Support of Supports (Moving Pixels)
  23. Flash Points: Chicks, Sluts and Facebook (Features)
  24. In Defense Of... Rock Radio: A Force in Popular Culture (Columns)
  25. Saint Etienne: Words and Music (Reviews)
  26. The Cult: Choice of Weapon (Reviews)
  27. Garbage: Not Your Kind of People (Reviews)
  28. Willie Nelson: Heroes (Reviews)
  29. 'People's Pornography': The Mundanities of Pornography and Surveillance Culture (Reviews)
  30. Feeling '80s Spirit: Post-Hardcore Punk for the Plastic Generation (Columns)
PM Picks
Music Archive
Announcements
Ratings

10 - The Best of the Best

9 - Very Nearly Perfect

8 - Excellent

7 - Damn Good

6 - Good

5 - Average

4 - Unexceptional

3 - Weak

2 - Seriously Flawed

1 - Terrible

© 1999-2012 PopMatters.com. All rights reserved.
PopMatters.com™ and PopMatters™ are trademarks
of PopMatters Media, Inc.

PopMatters is wholly independently owned and operated.
PopMatters is a member of BUZZMEDIA Music, MOG and Guardian Select.