[idm] review: _thug: remixed_

From Alan R. Lockett
Sent Fri, May 10th 2002, 01:44

_thug: remixed_ ~ Various Artists (Aural Industries)

[projected release date: 27.05.02]

thug: remixed is a 70 plus-minute remix-fest featuring specially commissioned 
tracks from artists whose mixing manipulations run the gamut of popular 
electronic music stylings from breakbeat to beatless, electro to ambient 
experimental, drum'n'bass to abstract noise.

Thug, for those of you not in the know, is Adelaide-based Tim Koch, whose 
reminiscent melodies, slightly wistful ambience, retro-electro bloopiness, and 
fractured-but-smooth rhythms issued in Isolated Rhythm Chock, his first 
full-length for the Aural Industries label.  Unashamedly influenced by British 
label Warp's ambient-techno of the early 90s, particularly the Artificial 
Intelligence imprint, the album was released in 1999 to accolades 
internationally, with names such as Autechre and Boards of Canada being invoked 
as sonic reference points in reviews.  It is no surprise, then, to find this 
prodigiously accomplished debut album being plundered to provide the source 
material for a state-of-the-art exercise in remix aesthetics.  

"thug: remixed" contains 15 tracks in all, not all of which are entirely 
successful for this listener.  The concept of the album works well, however, 
with a number of outstanding remixes which preserve something of the spirit of 
the originals whilst adding a spark of something different. 

First off, Swedish duo, Boulderdash's atmospheric take on "123Heart" stretches 
a keyboard fragment into a cloud of warped ambience, underpinning it with a 
crunchy clicky hip-hop styled backbeat, queasy noises, and reflective marimba.  
Finland's Lackluster turns in a short piece consonant with the mood of the 
original "Quasipede".  His spin is to largely transpose the keyboard motifs 
from Thug's piece, soft-pedal the drums and weave a resonant squelchy synth 
bass figure through the proceedings, creating a successful retro ambient-techno 
cameo.  Super Science cleverly transforms "Rhino Song" into a mid-tempo  
psychedelic dance-pop hybrid with snatches of dreamy vocals, electro squiggles, 
and dubby bass; an original rendering with a trace of a playful smile on its 
face.  

Next the track ordering achieves something of a coup.  Sydney's Telefonica 
offer a remix of "Just Blue" which boldly ditches beats to create a beautifully 
spatial piece of ambient drift, floating on warm keyboard chord sustains.  The 
blissed-out mood is then brutally but effectively fractured by Sydney 
experimentalist Pimmon, who here eschews the outer limits of his customary 
avant-garde abstraction to give us a thuggish experimental techno take on 
"123Heart", driven by a hypnotic Minimalist keyboard loop, thudding 
Suicide-esque drums and lacerating hi-hat.  A winner!

This sequence is difficult to follow, and indeed somewhere around the middle 
onwards, the disc flags a bit, though enthusiasts of the retro-electro sound 
will thrill to the Southern Outpost Basschip mix, which largely preserves the 
haunting melancholic chord sequence of "Let Us Chip", underpinning it with a 
classic 808 Planet Rock-style backbeat and squelchy percussive sounds.  Trip 
hop devotees will also be drawn in by Octopus Inc.'s creepily atmospheric remix 
of "Leaving Obatem5", which lopes along in slo-mo Karmacoma-esque fashion, and 
breaks down into electro-noise entropy, before emerging into noir-ish 
resolution.  Best of the rest is Melbourne's Sense, who gives an object lesson 
in remixing, taking recognisable elements from "123Heart", and making them his 
own through his signature weaving synth lines, deep bass pulse, and questing, 
loose almost jazz fusion-inflected drum programming; a stand-out!

There you have it, then.  A worthwhile addition to the collection of fans of 
beat-driven ambient and idm stylings of recent years, thug: remixed's brazen 
eclecticism works as an enjoyable guided tour of the diversity of sub-genres of 
current electronica.

Alan Lockett

-- 


-------------------------------------------------
This mail sent through IMP: www-mail.usyd.edu.au

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: xxx-xxxxxxxxxxx@xxxxxxxxx.xxx
For additional commands, e-mail: xxx-xxxx@xxxxxxxxx.xxx