Showing posts with label Techno. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Techno. Show all posts

One record at a time: 40. B12 - Electro Soma II

In 2017 Warp records decided to rinse the B12 back catalogue one last time and create another compilation of previously released material. This album was badged as "Electro Soma II" to capitalise on the re-release of the original.

The version of this album I own is the limited edition, double clear vinyl, which includes a booklet and is housed in a gatefold sleeve. There is also a download code included in the package which I seem to remember offered mp3, FLAC or WAV file types.

Three of the tracks here, "Debris" "Static Emotion" and "Satori" were all omitted from the LP "Electro Soma" but will be well known to anyone who owns the CD. There are also a significant number of tracks on this album that were released as part of the "B12 Records Archives" series of CDs; which means that less than half of the tracks on this album were new to me. Therefore this album largely represents an opportunity to own tracks on vinyl rather than hearing them for the first time.

Those tracks that are new are experimental and more ambient in nature. There is nothing here that makes you think: "They should have put this on the first album." These are clearly those tracks that remained once Warp cherry picked all of the best tunes for "Electro Soma". That's not to say there is nothing here without merit. "Fear of Expression", "Bubbles" and "Kaxaia-80" are all credible techno tracks, but they just lack that crucial edge. So this is a collection for completists or those who have an obsession with vinyl. The average listener can be satisfied with "Electro Soma" and move on. 2/5

One record at a time: 39. B12 - Time Tourist

Having enjoyed B12's first album "Electro Soma" you would have thought that I'd make certain I bought the follow up. Yet, for some inexplicable reason, the release of "Time Tourist" completely passed me by. Time moves much more slowly when you are young, so it's possible that I gave up waiting after 3 years and moved on to something else. 

In fact, I only became aware of the album's existence when I began using the internet in earnest sometime around 2000. I found it hard to buy the CD new at the time as it had been out of print for a few years. All I could find on eBay was a copy of the American pressing with, what I presume to be, a deletion cut through the top of the case. This CD was the only version I owned until Warp re-released it as a double "gold" vinyl LP in 2018. This version featured goodies like a booklet, a sticker sheet and a download with additional mixes. It's a nice package. 

At this juncture I will point out that this LP is not in a gatefold sleeve, and that is a good thing. Personally I don't like them and can't for the life of me understand why so many releases are marketed with a gatefold sleeve as a selling point. I find it difficult to place the records back in them and protective sleeves are much more expensive than a normal one. This record is the perfect package as it has a functional sleeve with a booklet to satisfy any yearning you may have for additional information or images. Record marketing people take note.

Like its predecessor, this album is essentially a compilation of music recorded under various pseudonyms. There is a nice mix of harder dance tracks alongside more experimental electronic music. Personal highlights are "Void", "Cymetry" and "The Silicone Garden". The standout track "Epilion" is a TR-909 infused monster pounding its beat and bassline into your head. The four additional mixes included on the download are interesting alternative versions but are ultimately inferior to those on the master release. If you're in the mood for some 'serious' electronic music with a techno pulse then this album satisfies. 3/5

One record at a time: 38. B12 - Electro Soma

In 1993 a friend played me "Obsessed", "Metropolis" and "Telefone 529" by B12. I hadn't really heard music like it before. Yes, this was techno, but it wasn't the kind of techno I was used to. This was lush and full of melody; I had to hear more. 

I bought the album "Electro Soma" fearing that the remaining tracks wouldn't be as good as those I had already heard. Yet from the mesmerising opening to the closing of the CD I was captivated. At the time I had no idea it was a compilation of material the band had previously released; it sounded like a coherent and consistent album to me.

For this play through we have the remastered, double blue vinyl version from 2017. The track listing here replicates the original vinyl which was different from the CD I bought. There are two tracks fewer and "Debris" is omitted in favour of "Drift" which closes the album.  

The opening "Soundtrack of Space" is one of the most haunting pieces of electronic music I have ever heard. I used to listen to this on the way to college as the perfect antidote to the stress of what I was about to endure. This track perfectly illustrates that B12 aren't just a "techno act" but a band capable of producing amazing electronic music. "Hall of Mirrors" and "Mondrin" further illustrate the sonic diversity on offer with innovative textures and great beats.

The high point of the album is probably "Metropolis" which is a thundering epic of the techno genre that would fill the right dance floor even today. Despite recycling a few Kraftwerk song titles, borrowing on Detroit techno sensibilities and sampling Jean Michel Jarre, you never get the feeling B12 are copying anyone. This music is unique and innovative and it stands up to repeated listening. 

B12 themselves are something of an enigma. Bizarrely their website is still live, but it hasn't been updated since 2007. Steven Rutter seems to be continuing with the band and new releases do appear sporadically. Mike Golding however seems to have quit music, moved to Germany and set up as a web developer. Anyway, I love this album and it never fails to transport my mind back to the time when I was young. It still sits firmly in my "Top 20 Favourite Albums" list. 5/5

Simian Mobile Disco do it again

Never has the phrase "Throw the baby out with the dish water" been so aptly displayed than in the recent output of Simian Mobile Disco. 

OK I get the whole 'change of direction' mid career crisis their extensive DJ sets have brought about; but why forget the tunes? The first two albums we full of cutting edge electronica coupled with slightly more pop orientated vocal work that made for a varied and entertaining package. 

This new album 'Unpatterns' is another techno driven dirge that doesn't really go anywhere. Like last years 'Delicacies' offering, this new album lacks the innovation of Underworld and has none of the melody of The Chemical Brothers work. This album's focus is so tightly set on the dance floor that its entertainment value is somewhat limited. Don't get me wrong, I love listening to dance music in all kinds of environments, just not dull boring dance music.

VCMG "Ssss"

Forming one of the greatest British bands back in the early eighties obviously wasn’t enough for Vince Clarke and Martin Gore. 30 years on they have decided to bury their differences and try again. Anyone with even as little as a passing interest in electronic music should have been eagerly awaiting the release of the VCMG album “Ssss”. So now it’s here what are we to make of it?

Well, despite having two of the greatest writers of pop songs this country has ever produced in the group, VCMG have gone down the ‘techno’ route. But it’s definitely techno with Depeche Mode DNA. Comparisons with “Speak & Spell” are a little wide of the mark, but there is liberal use of some wonderful analogue synth sounds that hark back to he early days of their careers and draw on their shared history and love of synthesizers.

I found the first single “Spock” a moderately entertaining slab of minimal techno that didn’t hold my interest for long. Yet in the context of the album the track sits nicely alongside its counterparts and sounds a much better prospect. There are some good tracks on the album with stand outs such as “Skip this track” and “Windup Robot” proving that these pop pioneers know just how to get us dancing.

This is my kind of techno – bright, mid tempo, funky, evolving and electro-pop tinged. Highly recommended to even none DM/Erasure fans.