Electronica: Impressive new album by ...who??!

Oct 14, 2005 at 4:37 PM Thread Starter Post #1 of 19

nickchen

Headphoneus Supremus
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Actually, I'm freaking totally out about a new free album by my favorite artist in repect of electronica, ESEM.
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The following is a "professional" review from http://igloomag.com/doc.php?task=vie...tegory=reviews. Check out or leave it (I know, you tend towards the latter, your fault, not mine).

Quote:

Georgi Marinov has created the best sort of music: free stuff offered over the Internet and the only request he has of us (other than listening to and talking nicely about Scateren of course) is that we send him a postcard. Now, I realize that postcards don't taste good in milk nor do they offer much in the way of nutritional value, but as offers of appreciation to those who have moved you, they are a simple and elegant way to speak your mind and show your love. There are two important things you need to know about Scateren: where to find the record and where to send the postcards.

# The free music ::
# The postcards :: G Marinov, Izgrev 8-3-3, 8008 Burgas, Bulgaria

The rest of this review is just me making happy noises about the record for those who need convincing. If you don't need arm twisting: hit the link, get the record, download it to your MP3 player and go cruise the postcard racks while you listen to it. Otherwise...

Scateren opens with "B~ckbook," a clattering brook of electronic percussion that tumbles down from indistinct places where an elusive melody sings. It's a persuasive rattle against your speakers, a babbling rhythm that starts a flood of electronics. "Dispehrse" soars with piano, delicate keys flying over a gentle landscape of synth pads and tripping percussion while "Spider Boat Fisherman Loudspeaker Flash" is more restrained, an IDM shuffle around the dance floor while you clasp an ice princess to your chest and feel her chilly breath in your ear. (The title? At least it is recognizable words, instead of just random characters, all whack IDM-stylee.)

Lackluster contributes to "Aatu/USSN," a collaboration that sings with Esa Ruoho's deft touch of atmospherics. A combination of submarine music (the bleeps that rise out of the whirling mix and the submerged rumble of the bass drum) and cold winter rhythms, "Aatu/USSN" is both warm and cold, hard and soft, light and heavy. It's the best sort of collaborative work -- a track that takes you somewhere different every time you listen to it. "All This Empty Space Does My Head In" is lush textures, filled with gorgeous tones, tiny micro-notes, echoing rimshots and the sort of slowly evolving melody that unravels forever. This one is space music for the navel gazer in all of us (with just a wee bit of pop-pop static masquerading as beats). "A Sound of Halo" introduces strings and a harp to the beat-jagged landscape, evoking pastoral visions.

On his website, Marinov lists the generative reasons for the tracks and they all speak of an impulsive moment. Whether it be melancholy, desire, fear, love, distrust or just longing for something that is unexplained and absent, over the last three years Marinov has put these emotional touches to music and made tracks like "Legho (Send Someone Off To Their Dreams)," a illusionary track of light melodies and skipping beats that passes like gossamer strands of dreamstuff, like handfuls of mist that you want to grab but can't manage to hold onto. Marinov's music is elusive because it touches you and then vanishes as you try to examine what it has done to your brain. "Legho" echoes with both loneliness and hope and makes me miss all those who are dear and absent. And such reactions aren't restricted to "Legho." Scateren will wash you. Stop reading. Go listen.


 
Oct 14, 2005 at 8:01 PM Post #3 of 19
Hey that's the best freebie I've heard in a long long time!

I hadn't heard ESEM before but I'm very impressed. Kind of a laid back mu-ziq or more ambient squarepusher.

I highly recommend any other electronica heads out there take the time to get this! (Of course I'm on DSL so it took me like 10 minutes!)
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Oct 16, 2005 at 8:33 AM Post #4 of 19
Speed...it's an action movie. & Zayed Khan makes it funny! It's about these two guys wanting to shoot the Prime Minister of India. & Zayed Khan, a spy, & the spy's wife are going to safe the PM.
 
Oct 16, 2005 at 9:03 AM Post #5 of 19
Esem's musical origins are the "modules" of the 90's (*.xm, *.it,...) and he "still" sounds very late-"90ish". If you don't like the 90's sound in general, Esem isn't for you, of course. I personally like this breakup phase of electronical music very much, but feel a similar bashing attitude as yours when I'm confronted with the odd rock&roll cliche and all its followers.
 
Oct 16, 2005 at 7:14 PM Post #7 of 19
Hey..I have an issue wit this. Well, I think the video is great, but I have an issue hooking up my grill. My connector to the propane tank is not removable. Is there anything I can do? An adapters that fit? Would it be dangerous to keep both connectors?
 
Oct 17, 2005 at 7:13 AM Post #8 of 19
All a question of taste, especially in respect of minimalism. I know people who adore Autechre, Aphex Twin & Underworld and just run away when they're confronted with Matthew Herbert. BTW, I'm listening to Ruxpin actually, quite nice, but also somewhat redundant and following cliches, if I'm really severe.

Esem doesn't use trackers any more, it's just the way he started making music in 1996.

I agree that the piece he did together with lackluster is the best one on this album. Kinda strange, as I personally did not like lackluster that much until now.
 
Oct 17, 2005 at 7:48 AM Post #9 of 19
nice video man but i think in servos there is also a diode on the circuit board or the motor to prevent currents from the motor to the circuit. If there is one then it should be reversed as the motor wires. Just my two cents :):)
 
Oct 17, 2005 at 8:40 AM Post #10 of 19
Quote:

If you think I'm bad here you should see me complaining at a trance party.


Useful context.
 
Dec 28, 2007 at 8:30 PM Post #12 of 19
I've just listened to it (due to nickchen's recommendation at another forum) and it was worth my time.
Therefor I'm resurrecting this old thread in order to spread this music further.
The OGG version is still available for free here.
 
Dec 28, 2007 at 11:18 PM Post #14 of 19
I see he's been involved with sutemos, the Lithuanian electronica review site/net label. I'd say they release the best free music on the net...their compilations each have exclusive tracks from great electronica 'heavyweights' like Yagya, Digitonal, Maps and Diagrams, etc. #2 for me is Thinner/Autoplate.
 
Dec 29, 2007 at 8:26 PM Post #15 of 19
Pretty impressed by his first two tracks. Worth the fast download. May the free music project continue!
 

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