Kalabrese – Hide

[Guest post by Brian Smith]

 

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Kalabrese: Rumpelzirkus – in my last entry, I alluded to a record that although came up short as my choice for electronic record of the year last year, I had recommended to people more than any other… and this is the record.

Rumpelzirkus is the debut full-length album by Swiss artist Sascha Winkler (aka Kalabrese) after a handful of releases on labels like the legendary Perlon and a history that includes a number of records as the drummer for a hip-hop outfit called Sendak.

Imagine if Can were doing really chill, sophisticated and sexy house music that truly blurred the line between music intended for the home and music geared for the dancefloor. With honest, personal, and universally themed lyrics that put a foot firmly in the world of pop, then you definitely should be buying what this rock is selling. The ONLY reason why it wasn’t my record of the year was because Kalabrese is (was) essentially a “rookie.”

With that, it wouldn’t be me if it didn’t possess at least a little of the experimental candy I long for from just about anyone I listen to. Originally a drummer, Sascha is NOT lost on nuance, space and for all intents and purposes (as the legendary Eric Dolphy said of drummer Anthony Williams), “pulse.” So in addition to all the anticipated drum sounds that define your groove, Rumpelzirkus is rife with all sorts of nifty and well mixed found sound and sampled percussion bits; put together so well, it offers serious feelings like it possibly being one ginormous jam-session that is far more earthy than most house music. It almost has a kind of Cologne (er, Köln) like style of avant-jazz conceptuality to it, which is why I think I made the original Can inference to begin with… a kind of Kraut-Haus, if you will.

Blogger Philip Sherbune descridbed Rumplezrikus as:

The closest comparison I can make it to Isolée’s We Are Monster, and even there the two musicians don’t really sound that much alike; what they share is a commitment to infusing the house format with all the spongy uncertainties of breath, slipping fingertips and room tone, and to morphing dance music’s linear structure into a form just as groovily functional, but with far less predictable follow-through.

I can’t say that I disagree with Philip… I also loved the unorthodoxiness of We Are Monster in very similar ways to this album as well.

This is “Hide,” enjoy!

[audio:http://www.audiodrums.com/audio/2008/01/05.mp3]

[download]

My Robot Friend – 23 Minutes in Brussels (extended mix)

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My Robot Friend (aka Howard Robot) comes from the emerging New York City’s underground electronic scene.   He’s opened for such acts as Le Tigre, Herbert, and Scissor Sisters.   From what I’ve read, he’s live shows are something to behold.   His shows have been described as Laurie Anderson meets Wizard of Oz complete with neon lights and pyrotechnics.

And is it just me (or this it could just be the result of listening to too much Depeche Mode), but I can swear I hear a sample in the background from the song “Pipeline” off the Construction Time Again LP.

My Robot Friend – 23 Minutes in Brussels (extended mix)

[myspace]

Kelley Polar – Entropy Reigns (in the Celestial City)

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Ok, so I’ve found my favorite album thus far of 2008, its Kelley Polar’s sophomore effort entitled, “I Need You to Hold on While The Sky is Falling“, which is scheduled for release March 3, 2008.

Not only is the album drenched in 80’s nostalgia such as Analog synths, appregiated synth cords, and beautiful DX-7 pad sounds, but true to the 80’s era of albums, this albums begs to be listened to from start to finish.   This is such a breath of fresh air from modern releases that sound more like a collection of singles that are just thrown together for the sake of releasing an album.   Album boarders at times as synthpop, other times gets nearer to an 80’s Prince-esque sound, and yet at other times gets closers to that New Romantic sound of ABC and Thompson Twins.

This track in particular is more inline with classic Human League sound meets Thompson Twins groove.

[audio:http://www.audiodrums.com/audio/KellyPolar_EntropyReigns(intheCelestial.mp3]

[download]

Related Post: A cut from Kelley Pollar’s first album: Ashamed of Myself

NOTE: As always, to download the songs from this site just right click on the link “download” and select “Save Link as…”

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