the genre known as dubstep - search and destroy

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Oh, and Vahid OTM - It does indeed sound like Urban Tribe.

jng (jng), Thursday, 25 May 2006 13:51 (twenty years ago)

Burial is so aging raver. So milque-toast. So hermetic. So exactly what I thought it would sound like after reading the Dissensus wank-fest.

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 14:41 (twenty years ago)

Perhaps try to look past the straw man?

jng (jng), Thursday, 25 May 2006 15:10 (twenty years ago)

Sorry, but the time when chopped-up beats, some noise crackles and a few wistful vocal snippets had the power to signify an incredibly deep, poignant, and moving meditation on urban desolation and spiritual emptiness is long gone for me

I mean really, this thing practically markets itself to people who still take Simon Reynolds and Kodwo Eshun as gospel truth. It's a symptom of how inward-looking and -thinking a certain strain of British music has become

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 16:37 (twenty years ago)

Sorry, but the time when...is long gone for me

we're talking about you now instead of the record, huh? that's not so interesting.

jergins (jergins), Thursday, 25 May 2006 16:43 (twenty years ago)

i look forward to hearing your scientific opinion on it

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 17:14 (twenty years ago)

So boy child what's yr remedy then?

How is this any less hermetic than most music making going on everywhere right now? And why is its hermeticness necessarily a bad thing? :Preaching to the choir perhaps? (which is bad in general,. across an entire culture, yes....)

Where is this non-self referential music- pop? mired in po mo slow mo... metal? creating avant versions of past trends... Indie? Retro a gogo... Hip Hop? Improv? Norwegian Jazz? MOR?

To what leading edge would you direct us? (forgive the sarcasm- I would genuinely like to know...)

gekoppel (Gekoppel), Thursday, 25 May 2006 17:33 (twenty years ago)

the time to meditate on spiritual emptiness and urban desolation is long gone, i think.

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 17:39 (twenty years ago)

'inward-looking' and 'aging raver' aren't epithets

jergins (jergins), Thursday, 25 May 2006 17:41 (twenty years ago)

I think it's hermetic because for it actually to mean the things it's supposed to mean, if one believes the dissensian line, you have to be intimately familiar with the history and theory of the quote-unquote hardcore continuum. For instance, I happen to recognize those decaying mentasm stabs on South London Boroughs (although they don't really resonate much for me anymore), but if you don't, it's just another electronic noise.

And it's hermetic because a) very few people other than music critics know or care about the hardcore continuum b) the hardcore continuum itself is hermetic. It's just a way of constructing the musical universe in order to continually place a small subset of British dance music at the center of everything that is radical. And there were a few years when that subset arguably was at the center of British culture, if not anyone else's. But those years are long long gone, and dance music--and especially dance music like Burial--isn't anywhere near the center of anything anymore.

So sure, all music is self-referential, but when the references are picked up by a tiny audience, they become hermetic. Arctic Monkeys are totally derivative, but a lot of people like them--regardless of whatever media conspiracies you might wish to spin--and that alone makes them matter.

No 'remedy' is necessary. I don't really care about the 'leading edge,' in fact I think the very concept is bogus--a form of marketing, basically--and I'm actively opposed to it.

Aside from all that, I just think the emotional register of the music is so timid (and one could have said this about Urban Tribe, or plenty of Mo' Wax stuff, in fact a lot of dance music that professes to be for something other than dancing. It's all this wistful fading synth wash crap, and you have to work so hard at projecting meaning into it... which is perhaps why people wind up over-reading...

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 17:49 (twenty years ago)

OK- I think analysis is fine for putting some personal context on a piece of music... but obviously it ought to stand on its own merits... I think Burial works on levels other to those of a "memorial" as some have posited, but if it doesn't for you, that's fine (I personally enjoy muffled stuff with crippled beats- on a sensual level, rather than analytical or context-based one).

I suspect Burial did not write this music with these references in mind somehow, these are post-justifications for the work of someone who works with samples, likes 2 step, and feels his production skills are sub par (wrongly) and therefore cloaks them in static (thats what he claims anyway).

Craetively speaking hermeticism is crushing to future developments of interest outside of an endless post modernist cycle thru past ideas, no matter how far said music reaches... (and I think innovation is more than a mere marketing strategy, although it is that as well)

I don't buy the whole Arctic Monkeys are big and therfore "important". Significant perhaps, as a guide to what people will buy, how marketing strategies work etc...

Whether something reaches to a big audience or not is not a guide to quality (either way) tho I suspect you would agree with me there. So therefore the AMs are just as hermetic, it just happens more people like it. That means little to me (personally). They are hardly reaching out in any way other than a market-defined one (ie- musically they are not bridging any gaps, they exist in an imaginative straight jacket even more limited than that imposed by the supposed hardcore continuum...). For me to enjoy the AMs would require just as much "projection" of meaning...

gekoppel (Gekoppel), Thursday, 25 May 2006 18:06 (twenty years ago)

It's all this wistful fading synth wash crap, and you have to work so hard at projecting meaning into it... which is perhaps why people wind up over-reading...

NO

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 18:24 (twenty years ago)

that's total nonsense. i've played urban tribe, aphex twin, boards of canada, photek and so on for my parents and grandparents. it's not hard to instinctively "get it" - "this is depressing, isn't it?" is what my dad said about urban tribe. "it's like science video music" is what my mom said about boards of canada. "in tribal iran, tribal people play two-drum festival music all night long with the dombak" is what my grandfater said about photek.

OTOH i DO agree with this bit:

you have to be intimately familiar with the history and theory of the quote-unquote hardcore continuum. For instance, I happen to recognize those decaying mentasm stabs ... but if you don't, it's just another electronic noise

still, i don't think somebody HAS to be intimately familiar to at least get some aesthetic pleasure out of burial.

it sounds to me like you're somewhat over-familiar with those strategies - as is probably anybody who's been following basic channel since day 1! i could see that coming to grips with that might be much harderfor you than coming to grips with layers of strange electronic noise might be for an arctic monkeys fan!

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 18:30 (twenty years ago)

boy child, you might have the same feelings towards burial as i do towards so much microhouse!

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 18:33 (twenty years ago)

I don't buy the whole Arctic Monkeys are big and therfore "important". Significant perhaps, as a guide to what people will buy, how marketing strategies work etc...

And I don't buy the whole "people are sheep" thing. As Hollywood blockbusters prove every year, you cannot make something a hit unless people like it. Marketing will get you onto the radar, but it can't do any more than that.

So therefore the AMs are just as hermetic, it just happens more people like it. That means little to me (personally).

That's a sign of your solipsism, then. Artwork does not exist independent of the world, or the audience, either in its creation or its reception. How the audience reacts is an intrinsic part of the meaning of any piece of music. And one of the most interesting things to think about, too. Certainly more interesting than exhausting the dictionary of adjectives droning on about basslines that collapse in on themselves, etc.

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 18:33 (twenty years ago)

"this is depressing, isn't it?" is what my dad said about urban tribe

That's just it! That's all it is. You just get the idea that there's some vague sense of sadness in the air. There's no dimension or nuance to the sadness. It's all so wan, so one-note.

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 18:37 (twenty years ago)

how much more do you need?

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 18:44 (twenty years ago)

Given that I can easily get much more from, say, any Miles Davis solo, it's not really a question of need...

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 18:53 (twenty years ago)

I'm not saying people are sheep! Just cos something is popular means little more than many people like it... it might be good, or it might be bad... sometimes, lots of people get it "right" (in my view) sometimes they don't (again in my view)... they aren't sheep (suggestible yes, but so are bloggers and music crits... and everyone else).

Marketing does a bit more than get stuff on the radar, I think, although that is perhaps a large part of its functionality...

The AMs are hermetic CREATIVELY. They aren't building bridges ARTISTICALLY, merely COMMERCIALLY-- they sell more records. As this is not an indicator of quality (either way) they remain just as hermetic.

And how ARE the audience reacting to AMs then? Many (younger ones) say they are exciting, they say something about their lives, and they are good music to go out to etc. Many (older ones) perhaps say they are nothing special, but have some good tunes. Why is this interesting? Qualitatively?

gekoppel (Gekoppel), Thursday, 25 May 2006 18:55 (twenty years ago)

xpost - where are the extra feelings? does miles pick better notes than urban tribe?

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 18:57 (twenty years ago)

Just cos something is popular means little more than many people like it...

No, it means it resonates in the kul-cha. It might not resonate in any particularly deep way. But why it does is worth teasing out, because it might tell us something about our society. (And that's what makes, say, Tom Ewing's Popular blog interesting.)

Aside from that, I find Arctic Monkeys far more vivid, entertaining, and complex on a straightforward musical level than Burial. I don't think you do need to know the references to enjoy them. But that's by the by.

Urban Tribe don't pick notes at all! Except maybe like one for every tune.

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:00 (twenty years ago)

you are treading dangerously close to a gear-ism of emotion.

"THIS song has MORE emotions than THAT song"
"THIS song has BETTER emotions than THAT song"
"THIS song has MORE MEANINGFUL emotions than THAT song"

without actually being able to point at the emotions are in this song or that. you will probably fall back on "well, i just FEEL the emotions" - which is ironic, considering you're accusing people of solipsism. you can't have it both ways - implying overreading or overreaching in other's interpretive skills and then taking a strong subjectivist viewpoint.

also these miles davis vs arctic monkeys vs urban tribe vs burial arguments revolving around fanbase are just idiotic!

did urban tribe spend years touring and playing clubs as support for better-known bandleaders? has burial been relentlessly playing shows and making the press? i don't think it makes sense to compare arctic monkeys and urban tribe when they're working w/ two very different infrastructures - and surely you're not going to argue that the infrastructure just sprung up overnight around the monkeys because they connect that much better w/ the fans!

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:01 (twenty years ago)

boy child, you are revealed as geir and i claim my $20

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:02 (twenty years ago)

xpost It's all atmosphere, that's the problem.

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:02 (twenty years ago)

no it's not! "peacemakers" has a beautiful chord progression!

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:03 (twenty years ago)

Or are you saying there's no point in progress, and the only arbiter of reach is sales volume? [strawman alert I know...]

These are legitimate arguments... but need more clarity perhaps?

gekoppel (Gekoppel), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:03 (twenty years ago)

ah, how quickly all internet debates devolve into technical meta-debates about the rules of debating. wake me when that part's over.

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:03 (twenty years ago)

here's another point: saying something like "see your dad proves there's not much depth to urban tribe" is not proving much - i played about 5 minutes of it to him and he was only half-listening. i am sure he could sit down with it - if he was so inclined, he mainly listens to smooth jazz and world music - and find much more there than "atmosphere".

so i can't point out your wack use of rhetoric without being accused of indulging in "technical meta-debate"?

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:05 (twenty years ago)

I think Burial has been curated as the linchpin holding together the two prominent dissensus history-narratives ('hardcore continuum', and 'hauntology'). I suppose this kind of reification always risks feeling myopic or pretentious, full of superspecific or presumptuous self-importance. But I don't think this way is less valid than a "naive" sensuous experience. Is it a problem of a self-fulfilled prophecy of enjoyment? I actually feel a little partial to the thrust of all the frame/fiction dissensus sadness stuff but I'm also not sure Burial is such a benchmark album. I quite liked Kpunk's writing on it but where he hears worlds of ghosts I hear maybe a medium sized melancholic alleyway or something.

)alex(, Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:06 (twenty years ago)

xpost - wake me when you have something more interesting to say than "miles davis is better than urban tribe".

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:06 (twenty years ago)

When more people like something it means merely that. No more! But it is useful as an indicator I agree, but of society, not of the music per se. And that indicator can be examined without enjoying the music of course!

oh and AMs aesthetically=death in my mind, it is true (probably as death as Burial is in yrs...)

gekoppel (Gekoppel), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:06 (twenty years ago)

without actually being able to point at the emotions are in this song or that. you will probably fall back on "well, i just FEEL the emotions" - which is ironic, considering you're accusing people of solipsism. you can't have it both ways - implying overreading or overreaching in other's interpretive skills and then taking a strong subjectivist viewpoint.

also these miles davis vs arctic monkeys vs urban tribe vs burial arguments revolving around fanbase are just idiotic!

did urban tribe spend years touring and playing clubs as support for better-known bandleaders? has burial been relentlessly playing shows and making the press? i don't think it makes sense to compare arctic monkeys and urban tribe when they're working w/ two very different infrastructures - and surely you're not going to argue that the infrastructure just sprung up overnight around the monkeys because they connect that much better w/ the fans!

This adds up to the following: Any kind of qualitative comparison is impossible. Which is one big smokescreen that has been played out on a million threads before this one.

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:06 (twenty years ago)

I agree, Alex, that like most things the IDEA far outstrips its purported musical incarnation (like MBV and numerous others...)

gekoppel (Gekoppel), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:08 (twenty years ago)

xpost - i don't think it's smokescreen to point out that you shouldn't compare burial and arctic monkeys. why don't you compare burial and mj cole? or urban tribe and kenny g?

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:08 (twenty years ago)

"see your dad proves there's not much depth to urban tribe" is not proving much

I don't think your dad 'proves' anything. I just think his assessment is correct.

so i can't point out your wack use of rhetoric without being accused of indulging in "technical meta-debate"?

But that's not what you're doing. Instead of responding to the specifics of what I say, you're just jumping straight into a really tedious objective vs. subjective debate that could be applied to anything at all as a way of cutting the legs out from under me.

you shouldn't compare burial and arctic monkeys

There's no shouldn't about it. I'll compare anything I like, thanks. It's a lot more fruitful than pretending that everything exists in it's own... hermetic... little universe.

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:13 (twenty years ago)

Actually Burial v MJ Cole is not a bad comparison at all... 2step vs 2step in different incarnations ....

gekoppel (Gekoppel), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:14 (twenty years ago)

oho, but boy child i just pointed out urban tribe use more than one note! and that their sadness is not one-note! and it's not hard at all to read meaning from their synths - even my old man can do it! respond to that!

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:16 (twenty years ago)

Boy Child- I would like to know why you let the AMs off hermeticism on a musical-cultural level. Generically they ARE effectively pretending that they exist in a sealed world (about oooh 1978-1983 maybe?)

And whilst examining their impact and what that means is interesting (I've done it- it was interesting yes) I don't see why this means that this impacts on the music. You yourself seem to like them for the music they make, whereas I don't...

gekoppel (Gekoppel), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:17 (twenty years ago)

yes, you can read meaning in urban tribe. i noted that. it's just a rather one-dimensional meaning. When I said one-note, I didn't mean it literally.

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:18 (twenty years ago)

hmmm ... this is sort of like "green eggs and ham".

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:20 (twenty years ago)

is Burial the 00s answer to Omni Trio
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omni_Trio

DJ Martian (djmartian), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:23 (twenty years ago)

I would like to know why you let the AMs off hermeticism on a musical-cultural level. Generically they ARE effectively pretending that they exist in a sealed world

I don't think they're culturally hermetic, because a lot of people like them. It's a pretty simple point, although one you seem to have trouble with. Formally, sure, they are--although I think an obsession with form is one of the most obvious blinkers worn by people who think from the dance music context. In terms of attitude/content, I don't think they are hermetic.

For the record, I don't think they're the greatest thing since sliced bread either. They were just a good... comparison... point with Burial in terms of the level of reference to a larger tradition in the music.

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:23 (twenty years ago)

"THIS song has MORE emotions than THAT song"
"THIS song has BETTER emotions than THAT song"
"THIS song has MORE MEANINGFUL emotions than THAT song"

Of course, these things are not finally proveable. But the interesting thing is in attempting to argue about them, and thus attempting to articulate how and why a piece of music works.

What is not interesting is immediately jumping to the conclusion--this is not proveable! it's green eggs and ham! Because then what do we do? Stop talking and go home to our little universes.

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:26 (twenty years ago)

a lot of people like burial and urban tribe! it's a pretty simple point, although one you sem to have trouble with!

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:27 (twenty years ago)

yes, you can read meaning in urban tribe. i noted that. it's just a rather one-dimensional meaning. When I said one-note, I didn't mean it literally.
-- boy child (bo...) (webmail), May 25th, 2006 1:18 PM. (later)

i would not call this "articulate"

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:28 (twenty years ago)

Of course, articulating how and why a piece of music works is the really hard part that takes lots of time and thought and struggle... and thus rarely makes it onto internet message boards.

And on that note, I have to go to a meeting.

a lot of people like burial and urban tribe!

yeah, must be at least 10,000 worldwide. Lots.

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:28 (twenty years ago)

i would not call this "articulate"

Of course, articulating how and why a piece of music works is the really hard part that takes lots of time and thought and struggle... and thus rarely makes it onto internet message boards.

I don't exempt myself from this.

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:31 (twenty years ago)

considering urban tribe don't have access to the same infrastructure as exists to promote live rock music, i'd say it's pretty good!

you have to compare "number of people who heard UT" vs "number of people who loved UT" - i'd say the number would be high, better maybe than even the arctic monkeys!

renegade bear shot by cops on frat row (vahid), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:32 (twenty years ago)

considering urban tribe don't have access to the same infrastructure as exists to promote live rock music, i'd say it's pretty good!

ah, there's always a conspiracy theory. poor urban tribe. if only they had the marketing, they would be topping the charts!

you have to compare "number of people who heard UT" vs "number of people who loved UT" - i'd say the number would be high, better maybe than even the arctic monkeys!

lol

boy child, Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:34 (twenty years ago)

Hmm, but an obsession with form is hardly limited to those of a "dance-friendly" persuasion is it? I can see your viewpoint, but I find it difficult to agree with it...

And I would question whether examining music on the level of form is any more blinkered than yours...

"content"- is this lyrics to which you refer? "attitude"... well I guess my criticisms would again be along the lines of formalism there too! I get yr point, they reach a wide audience therefore they are non hermetic--- but why does this give them value on any level other than a socio-anthropological one?

gekoppel (Gekoppel), Thursday, 25 May 2006 19:34 (twenty years ago)


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