Showing posts with label Electronic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Electronic. Show all posts

One record at a time: 520. Electronic - Raise The Pressure

Electronic’s second album arrived in 1996, back when only DJs and unhinged men in anoraks were still buying vinyl. For the last ten years, original pressings of this album have been changing hands for anything between £100 and £200. I wasn’t prepared to lob £200 at a record by an artist I don’t actually collect, only to discover that a Discogs seller’s "near mint" translates to my "good plus, if you squint". So I lived without it on vinyl until this 2025 reissue. On paper, this new pressing ought to have the edge: it’s spread across four sides, which should mean a lower noise floor and a bit more room for the music to breathe. The fact that it is pressed by Optimal Media only adds to its laurels. But as I don’t own the original, I can’t do the smug A/B comparison, sadly.

The album kicks off with the rip-roaring anthem "Forbidden City" which is so infectious that even my Taylor Swift and Dua Lipa obsessed children occasionally request the "wash my hands song" in the car. "For You" is one of those indie-tinged detours Bernard Sumner takes now and again, but this is one I genuinely love. Despite the relatively limited electronic palette, I can’t help being carried along by Johnny Marr’s melodic guitar work and the breezy tune. Somewhere in the loft I’ve got a promotional postcard from when it was released as a single; the blurb says something like the writer could imagine it blasting out of open windows during the summer months. Which is pretty much exactly what happened at Bleeps and Booms Towers thirty years ago.

The first sign of a truly electronic-with-a-small-e track here is "Dark Angel". It’s got some terrific passages, and it’s easy to spot Carl Bartos’s fingerprints when the synths go gloriously haywire halfway through. The Korg T3 piano sits on a Yamaha DX100/27 "Lately Bass", and Denise Johnson adds a cracking vocal. The album’s more guitar-heavy, generally darker production comes to the fore again on "One Day", which plods along like it’s lugging the weekly shop up three flights of stairs. There’s enough melody to keep it afloat though, which is more than can be said for plenty of mid-90s chart fodder.

Then "Until The End Of Time" snaps the mood back to the dancefloor, riding in on Bartos rave hooks and Korg T3 piano riffs. I’m not a fan of the backing vocals, but there’s more than enough aural candy floating around to keep your ears busy and your better judgement quiet in the corner. The TB-303 squeals away as Bernard delivers some of his typically nonsensical lyrics that, somehow, still land. Next up, "Second Nature" has a great verse, but I’m not mad about the chorus. When this was released as a single, Richie Hawtin’s remix did the heavy lifting, giving the track the stronger dance sound it was crying out for. Another Düsseldorf-inspired number follows with "If You’ve Got Love", which even borrows the sampled vocal phonemes scattered across Kraftwerk’s later material and Bartos’s own solo records.

When we drop the needle on the second disc, we return to the slightly more guitar-driven side with "Out of My League", a breezy tune with more than a whiff of The Smiths about it. "Freefall" is a four-on-the-floor number that reminds me of New Order at their peak. The chorus arrives without much ceremony, but I still can’t help tapping my foot along to this one, even if actually getting up and dancing feels a bit ambitious.

"Visit Me" is an odd one, as it feels like it falls between two camps. While it has a breakbeat and some house piano, its pace is pedestrian, though it does feature some beautiful acoustic guitar work from Johnny Marr. Bernard’s vocal sounds completely out of tune to my ears, but the guitar carries things along like a mate patiently steering you away from the karaoke. You don’t need to check the credits to know Carl Bartos was involved with the penultimate track, "How Long", because it’s startlingly obvious. The final track, "Time Can Tell", is laid-back and wistful, with some funky bass guitar from Guy Pratt, but it can’t quite distract from Bernard’s vocal, which doesn’t quite have the muscle for the chorus. 

And so to the packaging. In the sleeve notes, Bernard goes off on a bit of a rant and uses a lot of words without saying very much. I was always puzzled by his closing line about losing the right of silence, but Google suggests he is probably referring to the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act, which curtailed the historic "right to silence" in criminal law. The notes have been described as "jarringly out of step" with the album’s mostly upbeat, dance-oriented guitar pop, and this is also true of the sleeve image, which feels oddly placed. All of this left me confused when I first heard the album. I never thought we would be getting a repeat of the first record, but I did expect something more cohesive than this album turned out to be. I can’t help thinking that, by cutting three tracks and revising the cover, this album would be more impressive. Still a noble effort worthy of attention today. 3.5/5

One record at a time: 102. Electronic - Electronic

If you were to ask me, "What is your favourite album?" the answer would sometimes be Electronic's eponymously titled debut. 

I have two copies of the vinyl: an original pressing from 1991 and the 2015 180g version. Whilst both sound good, I prefer the original. This preference is not only due to the quality of the audio but also because the original presents the album in the way the artist intended. All subsequent pressings of the LP include "Getting Away With It" and this track was most definitely not on the album when it was released. Adding non-album singles retrospectively might give the public the hits they crave, but it also bastardises the album a little for me.

"Idiot Country" is a great opening track and one that I have always appreciated. One reason I admire this song so much is that it manages to use the "Jamisen" preset from a Roland D-110 and make it sound good: this is no small achievement. There's no dip in quality as the pounding TR-909 kicks combine perfectly with Johnny's guitar in "Reality". In my youth I didn't appreciate "Tighten Up" as its featured so much guitar that it sounded a bit "indie" to me, but in the intervening thirty years I have grown to like it. 

Whilst Pet Shop Boys collaboration "The Patience of a Saint" isn't as successful as "Getting Away With It", it still remains an impressive track. I'm not a massive fan of the weak Roland CR-78 drum samples or the pad sound Chris uses for the chords but there is a great melody. Side One finishes with the majestic "Gangster". Personally I find it unfathomable that some people regard this track as the low point. How can you resist a line like, "I don't need a doctor telling me I'm full of juice"? Yes, some of the orchestra hits sound a bit dated but the TR-909 beat is amazing and I love almost every second of the backing track.

Side two opens with the short instrumental "Soviet" featuring Roland JD-800 piano, strings and not much else. "Get The Message" features amazing guitar work which is underpinned by a driving double bass. The catchy chorus meant this was always an obvious choice for single release. "Try All You Want" sees the TR-909 brought front and centre and we are treated to something that could have been included on "Technique Part II". Whilst the dance beats continue, "Some Distant Memory" is a little more wistful and even features an oboe 'solo'. The final track is the immaculate single "Feel Every Beat" which is the perfect combination of melody, groove and vocals. A rave piano is given a good workout as Bernard doffs his cap to the emerging house sound. An immense album. 5/5

Electronic "Especially Bad Edition"

There have been many poor “remastered” CD’s issued by increasingly desperate record companies in recent years. The New Order “Deluxe Editions” of 2008 remain the pinnacle of record company ineptitude and stupidity.

But there has emerged a challenger to New Orders crown with the release of the “Special Edition” of Electronics’ eponymously titled debut.

Why would you include a second CD with new edits of songs that are completely unrelated to the original album and exclude the rare and unreleased single edit of “Tighten Up”? Why add alternative versions of tracks recorded eight years later and omit remixes of “Getting Away with It” which have never been released on CD in the UK? Why label “Feel Every Beat” as the “2013 Edit” when it is in fact the DNA remix from 1991?

The release of this CD is a mercenary act that has been conducted by people who are completely ignorant. If you were to be generous to EMI records, you would describe this collection of music as ‘eclectic’. If you were feeling evil you would say it is a complete mess not worthy of a single penny of your hard earned cash.

If a CD is worth reissuing as a “Special Edition” surely it is worth getting right? This lazy ‘scatter gun’ approach to track selection is pathetic. I guess we should be grateful nothing on these two CDs has been taken from a vinyl source (unlike the afore mentioned New Order releases) and the uninspiring packaging does at least contain some new sleeve notes.

Personally I think it should be relabelled as the “Especially Bad Edition” and I encourage everyone to steer clear of it.

Roland D-10: it's everywhere! (almost)

The first ‘real’ synthesizer I ever used was a Roland D-5 – it blew me away. Inevitably, the D-5 was soon stolen from our school and replaced by a D-10. I used this synth for various projects until I left school in the early 90’s

The D-10 isn’t the poor man's D-50 as its name would suggest; the two were very different machines. In fact it is a shame the D-10 has the ‘D’ prefix at all. The D-10 was a kind of early multi-timbral ROMpler that Roland began to perfect with the JV series in the 90’s. Even though it wasn’t much of a synthesis tool (changing the presets would incur a severe reprimand at our school) the D-10 had some nice sounds and was easy to operate.

Many years later when I had left school, I bought a second hand D-10 as it was familiar and, by then, cheap. Yet, I never really heard the D-10 presets on records and found I couldn’t quite get the sound I wanted from it (I was listening to lots of dance music in the early 90’s). I assumed the D-10 was just too ‘cheap’ for professional musicians and that I needed something more modern. I parted company with the D-10 around 2001 and haven’t missed it at all.

However, in recent years I am hearing the D-10 everywhere. Electronics’ “Lean to the inside” is almost completely Roland D-10 presets (actually a D-110 in this case) and the song "Idiot Country" features the Jamisen sound. 808 State used it for the lead sound on ‘In yer face’ and used various other sounds less prominently on their "Ex:el" album in 1991 (lots of Korg M1 and D50 on there too). The title track from Tangerine Dream's album "Lily on the Beach" features the drums and the preset HarmoPan and there are several other presets scattered around the album.

The most prominent use of the D-10 is probably by Mike Oldfield; his album “Earth Moving” features the D-10 on almost every song. Listening to the track “Innocent” I realise the drums, bass, and various other bits are all D-10 presets. I am at a loss as to why I never noticed the use of these sounds before.

The D-10 will never be a classic, but it was used by recording artists and there is evidence to prove it. So a synthesizer I dismissed as terrible (but one of few I could afford) is undergoing a re-appraisal.

Where is my phone? I need to look at my eBay app.
 
UPDATE MARCH 2023 - I've added a couple of other tracks I have noticed feature the D-10 and I have also recently acquired a D-110