All the sounds of the Fairlight CMI in one CD
The whole album is created on the Fairlight CMI and sounds like a cross between The Art of Noise, Thomas Dolby and Peter Gabriel with a bit of pop thrown in for good measure. The samples Leer uses are lo-fi 8 bit crunchy brilliance that could only come from a Fairlight. As the album unfolds some classic Fairlight presets are thrown in with some futher creative sampling to add the magic. This is the album I always wanted to hear the Fairlight produce.
For the ridiculously low price of £4.98 you can buy a CD that shows of an electronic ‘instrument’ like no other. Yes, Mr Leer has a good voice, and some of his songs are really quite brilliant, but the fascination for me is hearing a Fairlight used imaginatively. Sure Jarre, Kate Bush, Peter Gabriel et al used the Fairlight to great effect but rarely in such isolation. If you wish to hear this machine in its full glory these is no better place to start.
DJ Culture: a hidden gem?
Brian Higgins and the hit factor
The best evidence for Higgins’s true personality lies with the other acts with which he has worked. Sam Sparro says of his failed collaboration: “I did meet Brian Higgins but he, er, I can’t really comment on that. He’s a strong personality.”
Referring to another failed collaboration (I strongly suspect that here he is referring to his work on New Order’s “Waiting for the Siren’s Call”) Higgins states: “I’ve had the experience happen where the big artists were fine until they got into the mix room and they basically pulled the record to pieces. So I took my name off the record and the writing credits off the record. So big artists are often jerks of the highest order.”
Okay so you can’t hope to be best friends with everyone you work with, but Higgins does seem to have a habit of upsetting people. The name "Xenomania" means, according to Higgins, "the exact opposite of Xenophobia...a love of everything, of all cultures." Quite how one reconciles this philosophy with Higgins statement that “We’re Xenomania, so fuck you!” I do not know.
You can’t deny Higgins and Xenomania ARE very good at what they do. However, Higgins’swords seem to dismiss any other type of song writing other that the chart fodder they specialise in. There is a whole world of music out there and the vast majority of it is far more interesting, innovative and successful than Xenomania’s output. Higgins’s should be more conscious of this if he does not wish to sound quite so arrogant.
Yet there is a considerable amount of sense in Higgins evaluation of the Pet Shop Boys and their music. His feeling that they had not made a decent record since 1988 or 1989 is obviously complete rubbish; yet his assessment of “I think the rhythm programming had gone” and that they became self indulgent and used their music to chronicle their personal lives does hold water.
The proof of the pudding is in the eating and ‘Yes’, as I have already stated, is a brilliant record. I guess when considering working with Xenomania one has to undertake a risk benefit analysis. Will the final product justify the process? Can you endure a personality as strong as Brian Higgins? If you want a brilliant pop record then the answer has to be Yes.
Simian Mobile Disco come up trumps
Thus, their second effort “Temporary Pleasure” is highly anticipated. Kicking off with the pulsating “Cream Dream” featuring vocals by Super Furry Animals front man Gruff Rhys, this album is set to become a dance floor favourite.
Yet, unlike similar dance orientate efforts, this album has depth and is a considered endeavour. Catchy pop/dance cross over single “Audacity of Huge” is followed by trance like anthem “10,000 Horses Can’t Be Wrong”. The Italio house influenced “Cruel Intention” displays Shaw and Fords diversity and talent for crafting a groove. “Off the Map” and “Synthesise” are balls out dance tracks that deliver the four-on-the-floor kicks demanded by the dance floor. “Bad Blood” features Hot Chip vocalist Alexis Taylor in what strikes you as an obvious and satisfying collaboration, more should follow this if there is any justice.
The only poor tracks are “Turn Up The Dial” and the final cut “Pinball”. Whilst I acknowledge that “Pinball” is an attempt to balance against the heavy dance sound of the rest of the album, it just ends up sounding out of place. In addition, the track is just terrible in my opinion. Nevertheless, despite a poor ending, “Temporary Pleasure” is set to become less ephemeral than the title might suggest. Simian Mobile Disco seem to be generating quite a following both on and off the dance floor. All lovers of good electronic music should rejoice that bands as good as this keep making music.