There were rumours that this EP would return to the same territory as last year’s Zomby EP rather than the oldskool digression of Where were u in ’92?. It doesn’t revisit either, but that’s OK – with One Foot Ahead of the Other, it’s finally become clear that we should abandon any hope of tying Zomby down (which, of course, would probably get boring). Instead, it seems he’s an artist who opens the minds and widens the palettes of listeners with each successive release, presenting us with both new and old alike as if he were the eccentric tour-guide of a large and diverse musical museum.
All these images are of sculptures by Naum Gabo, which I added some psychedelic colour to. See also César Domela, El Lissitzky, Vladimir Tatlin and Richard Lippold.
Like the Zomby EP though, One Foot Ahead of the Other explores a fresh new musical language, but where the first EP showed us the sublime with its complex mass of looming structures exhilaratingly balanced on the threshold of human comprehension, this one shows us the beautiful: a ballet of delicate, crystalline structures spinning elegantly like diatoms underneath the microscope. The previously monstrous arpeggios are replaced with abstract studies in the unfurling of intricate pitch sequences, a technique that was first explored on the older EP in the maximalist spinning-top of ‘Kaliko’ and one that reminds me of Paul Klee’s description of his own artistic technique: ‘taking a line for a walk’. One Foot Ahead of the Other could well be named after the stepwise motion of the quasi-scalic monophony that pervades this gratifyingly cohesive batch, this thorough investigation of a particular – and particularly beautiful – musical palette.Zomby’s method of hypnotically developing musical structure through the systematic expansion and contraction of metres, rhythms and pitch sequences is from a different galaxy to most dance music – and it isn’t just an experiment either, on this EP it’s a fully-formed and comprehensive stylistic proposition. This musical style shifts metrical configurations as if they were gears on some abstract, geometrical bicycle, driven constantly and inexorably forward by robotic feet. It always has such a momentum. ‘Helter Skelter’, its title suggesting a different kind of spinning motion, is a case in point, it’s a svelte ‘Kaliko’ trimmed down to drums and two parts which are gradually entwined, sometimes in parallel, sometimes in contrary motion, into a rotating double helix... until we land with a bump at the end, where the entire track’s pitch sequences are compressed into crushed, dissonant chords.It’s not just the textures that are thin, delicate and minimalist, but also the tone quality of the synthesisers themselves. As if in cheeky response to the deep and flabby basslines that have dominated certain dancefloors in recent years, these synths are cold, high-pitched and fiddly constructions that shower down like hundreds and thousands, and the lightly skittering 2-step beats that accompany them are a perfect percussive match. Fascinatingly, these tracks seem miniscule in size, they’re intricate miniatures, sonically and structurally pure – to pump up the volume would be to achieve very little and arguably do them wrong. Instead, this disc seems to work well at different speeds: higher tempos reveal the overall structural design most keenly, while slower tempos have a fuller sound and bring the stepwise motion to the fore.
Delicate abstractions these tracks may be, but humourless they are not. Each voice can be heard as a personified dancer, conscientiously repetitious and yet stumbling charmingly over the odd drop of micro-wonk, and the blowing of tiny, buzzing bubbles into the ears is sure to raise a ticklish smile. The background synths with their modest oscillating phasers might be characters from an ambient jungle toy town. ‘Pumpkinhead’s Revenge’ could be the name of a bizarre children’s game with its dissonant and gestural riff, the last section of which is repeated like a playground chant, while mock-serious bangin gym beats and cheesy lo-tech tom fills heighten the absurdity.One Foot Ahead of the Other is another characteristically inventive and surprising step on a tour through Zomby’s rich musical mind. As I type this, Zomby tweets that new releases are on their way – I’m probably not the only one who’s dying to see where he’ll take us next.
Though it’s well worth a read (as always with Woebot), this review of the new EP did leave me a bit cold if only because it was so heavily indicative of a certain prevalent sort of criticism. Lengthy and arguably needless preoccupation with context and ‘explanation’, particularly concerning the role of narcotics? Check. Attempt to naturalise a tendentious contextual history of the music? Check. Dominance of nostalgic connotations? Check. Less than imaginative regret over the passing of the past (i.e the absence of ‘Aquafresh’)? Check. Gratuitous reference to Simon Reynolds? Check. Lack of musical detail? Check. Hollow promises of greatness? Check. Plugs the release into a cynical wider narrative, probably about the end of history? Well no of course, but there’s only so much word count to go around. Zomby is reductively painted as a drug-enabled infant – we definitely owe this music more than that. Time for a new sort of criticism perhaps?
Like the Zomby EP though, One Foot Ahead of the Other explores a fresh new musical language, but where the first EP showed us the sublime with its complex mass of looming structures exhilaratingly balanced on the threshold of human comprehension, this one shows us the beautiful: a ballet of delicate, crystalline structures spinning elegantly like diatoms underneath the microscope. The previously monstrous arpeggios are replaced with abstract studies in the unfurling of intricate pitch sequences, a technique that was first explored on the older EP in the maximalist spinning-top of ‘Kaliko’ and one that reminds me of Paul Klee’s description of his own artistic technique: ‘taking a line for a walk’. One Foot Ahead of the Other could well be named after the stepwise motion of the quasi-scalic monophony that pervades this gratifyingly cohesive batch, this thorough investigation of a particular – and particularly beautiful – musical palette.Zomby’s method of hypnotically developing musical structure through the systematic expansion and contraction of metres, rhythms and pitch sequences is from a different galaxy to most dance music – and it isn’t just an experiment either, on this EP it’s a fully-formed and comprehensive stylistic proposition. This musical style shifts metrical configurations as if they were gears on some abstract, geometrical bicycle, driven constantly and inexorably forward by robotic feet. It always has such a momentum. ‘Helter Skelter’, its title suggesting a different kind of spinning motion, is a case in point, it’s a svelte ‘Kaliko’ trimmed down to drums and two parts which are gradually entwined, sometimes in parallel, sometimes in contrary motion, into a rotating double helix... until we land with a bump at the end, where the entire track’s pitch sequences are compressed into crushed, dissonant chords.It’s not just the textures that are thin, delicate and minimalist, but also the tone quality of the synthesisers themselves. As if in cheeky response to the deep and flabby basslines that have dominated certain dancefloors in recent years, these synths are cold, high-pitched and fiddly constructions that shower down like hundreds and thousands, and the lightly skittering 2-step beats that accompany them are a perfect percussive match. Fascinatingly, these tracks seem miniscule in size, they’re intricate miniatures, sonically and structurally pure – to pump up the volume would be to achieve very little and arguably do them wrong. Instead, this disc seems to work well at different speeds: higher tempos reveal the overall structural design most keenly, while slower tempos have a fuller sound and bring the stepwise motion to the fore.
Delicate abstractions these tracks may be, but humourless they are not. Each voice can be heard as a personified dancer, conscientiously repetitious and yet stumbling charmingly over the odd drop of micro-wonk, and the blowing of tiny, buzzing bubbles into the ears is sure to raise a ticklish smile. The background synths with their modest oscillating phasers might be characters from an ambient jungle toy town. ‘Pumpkinhead’s Revenge’ could be the name of a bizarre children’s game with its dissonant and gestural riff, the last section of which is repeated like a playground chant, while mock-serious bangin gym beats and cheesy lo-tech tom fills heighten the absurdity.One Foot Ahead of the Other is another characteristically inventive and surprising step on a tour through Zomby’s rich musical mind. As I type this, Zomby tweets that new releases are on their way – I’m probably not the only one who’s dying to see where he’ll take us next.
Though it’s well worth a read (as always with Woebot), this review of the new EP did leave me a bit cold if only because it was so heavily indicative of a certain prevalent sort of criticism. Lengthy and arguably needless preoccupation with context and ‘explanation’, particularly concerning the role of narcotics? Check. Attempt to naturalise a tendentious contextual history of the music? Check. Dominance of nostalgic connotations? Check. Less than imaginative regret over the passing of the past (i.e the absence of ‘Aquafresh’)? Check. Gratuitous reference to Simon Reynolds? Check. Lack of musical detail? Check. Hollow promises of greatness? Check. Plugs the release into a cynical wider narrative, probably about the end of history? Well no of course, but there’s only so much word count to go around. Zomby is reductively painted as a drug-enabled infant – we definitely owe this music more than that. Time for a new sort of criticism perhaps?
I'm amazed that someone can write so much about someone changing the settings on an arpeggiator.
ReplyDeletethen open yer mind-ears.
ReplyDeleteInteresting review, and excellent blog overall. The EP left me unsatisfied, though, and I wrote a review about it here - http://igloomag.com/reviews::1846::Zomby_One_Foot_Ahead_Of_The_Other_EP_Ramp_
ReplyDeleteLet me know what you think. Cheers!
Does this mean I can retire? I jolly well hope so! :-)
ReplyDeleteha! oh please don't retire. I was just a little caught up in what I saw as the unique and rather innovative musical intrigue of this particular EP, and though I found what you said about ganja compelling and persuasive and perhaps appropriate, I'm keen to discourage any sense that this is music for and by giggling stoners playing with gameboys, the conclusion some readers potentially then coming to being that it only really sounds good or musically viable when you're high, which is a sort of thought-terminating aesthetic isolation.
ReplyDeleteThe Impostume presumed that comment was down to paranoia about one of your posts and it wasn't at all - in fact when you said that classical music was on a life support machine I really agreed. As soon as I've moved house I'm gonna write a series of related posts, one of which will aim to evaluate the current state of classical music and its role in that Paul Morley documentary and the recent 'classic goldie', where Goldie had to write an orchestral piece - both of which made a load of telling and questionable aesthetic assumptions. glad to hear you had a good holiday.
Dude can't even figure out a proper way to end a track... 'let's just fade it.' Title track and Expert Tuition have the same beat. I'll bet on 9/4/09 you regret some of this review.
ReplyDeleteI thought Helter Skelter ended quite effectively and innovatively, and an unceremonious ending seems appropriate for suggesting the perpetual motion of shifting, minimalistic patterns (Zomby is really into the similarly abrupt Philip Glass). Those two beats aren't exactly the same though they are pretty similar, but actually I liked the cohesiveness of the EP, the one style being thoroughly explored, the internal differences being only subtle. I found it a positive thing - frank, minimalist and economical rather than just lazy (quite a bold move considering that the expectations of listeners such as yourself are perhaps more prevalent). I'll grant that such things can be seen as lazy from the most conventional points of view, but this EP (and Zomby's work as a whole) suggests a different way of listening.
ReplyDeleteWhat's happening on 9/04/09? Today isn't it?
Not really sure of your intimacy with electronic music but if you can't hear how the title track and expert tuition have the same beat with slightly different eq then you might be right about that 'different way of listening' thing. I actually like this ep just don't understand the need to intellectualize it... I dont see the boundary pushing that you might but still find it to be a fun listen. A month from your OP, thats 9409
ReplyDeleteYeah it was the EQ I was talking about when I said it was different. Sounds like the same loop perhaps, but different EQ. Like the manipulation of the MIDI signal of one row of pitches with effects like arpeggiators (if that's how it's done): subtle, minimalist changes, which can be as musically satisfying and pleasurable as a more maximalist richness. They're different ways of listening, I feel this EP rewards the former, but both can be good.
ReplyDeleteI was getting worried that 9/4/09 was gonna be Judgement Day or something...
DOM said...
ReplyDeleteI'm amazed that someone can write so much about someone changing the settings on an arpeggiator.
Everything is notated by hand or played on keys, nothing is ever mechanically reproduced by settings or sampled and looped..rather the only mechanic used is the sequencer itself,