Rouge's Foam - The Premature Burial: Burial the Pallbearer vs Burial the Innovator. Here you can listen to this blogpost as spoken word and together with the musical examples. Download this as a high-quality mp3 and listen elsewhere by clicking the arrow on the right of the player.
What is Burial’s music ‘about’? What does it ‘do’? Come to think of it, what is his music? What does it mean? Of course, all of this is up to the listener’s imagination, but for a while now there’s been a certain degree of consensus on the answers to these questions: Burial ‘mourns the death of rave’, his music is (to paraphrase a handful of commentators) a ‘plaintive echo from a bygone era of collective energy’, ‘a melancholy, ghostly memory of the faded promise of rave, drenched in weathering and mired in urban decay’.
It’s difficult, not to mention pointless, to argue that this reading of Burial, derived from ‘hauntology’, is invalid. Its validity seems confirmed by interviews with the guy, even if the interviewers sometimes do come across as a bit leading. To dispute this reading would be intolerant, even mean-spirited – it’s as a pallbearer for rave that Burial takes on a powerful meaning for many of his fans, and why argue with that? Of course to see Burial in this way you’d first have to agree that rave is in some sense dead, and that’s a hotly disputed point. It’s a question I won’t try and answer here, largely because at the time rave was in its generally accepted heyday I was just getting into solid foods, but being reluctant to sit down and accept that I’ve arrived at a time when musical culture has declined almost to worthlessness, the ‘death of rave’ angle on Burial doesn’t really have any definitive meaning for me per se.
It’s a reading that’s solidifying into a naturalised collective interpretation of Burial though – his image within culture and history is being covered in six feet of earth. But this fresh, living and newborn voice still has a lot more to offer than the corpse of rave. There’s Burial the Pallbearer, but there are other Burials too.
Burial the Painter: Representations of London
I’m not necessarily saying that Pallbearer-inclined listeners are unaware of or ignoring these other Burials, but other ways into listening to the music can get somewhat neglected. One way of listening that has been described to a small extent in music criticism and by some listeners outside of the more underground urban music scenes however is Burial the Painter, who seems to portray the physical and emotional environments of his native Zone 2 London with startling familiarity. One of the common unconscious preconceptions of our time, particularly among those who might describe themselves as being ‘serious’ about music, is that music (as opposed to lyrics) is ‘autonomous’, ‘abstract’, largely meaningless, that music is ‘about music’ primarily, and ‘about’ anything else only secondarily and weakly, that it exists wholly or partly in a vacuum, separate from and above any external worlds – that it’s pure sound and not sound with worldly meaning. Burial the Painter challenges these preconceptions by revealing a music that can be in constant, detailed and illustrative dialogue with a worldly reality that listeners can recognise and relate to, not just enriching the world but reflecting and embodying it too.How does Burial paint London so effectively? Part of the appeal is that it’s so difficult to pin this down: he does nothing so simple as recording the sounds of the streets, the voices and traffic, and even were he to do this, it would only amount to only one dimension of the city, that of the sonic. The only non-musical samples he uses come from a small number of films and contemporary computer games. Burial’s representational skill works through subtle association rather than strict reproduction. As images, his tracks reveal all kinds of recognisable detail, but he’s not a photographer so much as an impressionist painter.
Burial the Painter is an ally of Burial the Pallbearer because his tracks have a loose but appreciable resonance with dance music styles like rave, jungle, 2-step garage and dubstep, which contribute many of the associations that specify the Zone 2 London of the early twenty-first century. The light, nimble beats may remind you of 2-step, the shadowy bass sounds a bit like a junglist hoover sound, the vocals are a fractured reflection of RnB and rave’s soul divas – these are all musical symbols of Zone 2 London because they’re aspects of musics that come from there and that are listened to by many Londoners.
Burial references other musical styles that can seem to address more historical aspects of the London environment, though, and sometimes he seems to look back to the 1890s just as much as the 1990s. ‘Archangel’, from Untrue, is a fan favourite largely because of its excellent melodic vocal science (see below), but the sample of Romantic orchestral music that it’s built around is also a major part of its appeal. It samples the intro video to the Playstation 2 game Metal Gear Solid 2 at a point when the game’s protagonist, having technologically rendered himself invisible, jumps off a suspension bridge in torrential rain with his arms spread out angelically. The sample exemplifies contemporary orchestral music written for epic films and computer games (dominated by strings, untexted mixed choir etc.), which itself is derived from the classical music of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. More specifically, the sample’s pseudo-baroque harmony and grandiose, orchestrated melancholy could point to the late Victorian and Edwardian urban Gothic grandeur that still forms an important part of the Zone 2 London cityscape. This Gothicism is particularly characteristic of areas that didn’t usually lie underneath the flight-paths of the Luftwaffe and/or were historically well-off areas, such as the south-west (Burial went to school in Putney and the Wandsworth area is depicted on the cover of his self-titled debut LP).
The sample could be a choral snippet from a lavishly orchestrated Romantic performance of Bach’s St Matthew Passion, held in the Royal Albert Hall on a rainy November evening in the late nineteenth century as the Bach revival was in full swing – the Victorian RAH isn’t a gothic building but it is a venue where you can hear rain drumming on the rooftop. I’m also reminded of composers like Brahms (German but popular in the homes of the Victorian middle classes), Hubert Parry and particularly the Elgar of the theme to his Enigma Variations, which shares many musical similarities with the Metal Gear Solid 2 sample, such as the speed, orchestration, stepwise harmonic motion, minor mode and their related keys (Enigma’s opening is in G minor, ‘Archangel’ is in the harmonically next door C minor, and both put emphasis on the subdominant chord/key during the course of the melody).
‘Forgive’ loops a sample thought to be from Brian Eno’s ‘An Ending (Ascent)’ which is a synthesiser piece, but Burial’s reverb makes it sound nonetheless grandly orchestral. I know they’re not there, but I swear I can hear symphonic French horns and trombones in the mix. Burial’s London is a place where distantly-heard echoes of contemporary urban music reverberate against a backdrop of rain-eroded Victorian schools, stations, churches, cemeteries and prisons.
The connection of Burial’s music with London goes beyond the simple association of certain musical styles with the places where they’re produced or celebrated, however. Sound effects, again taken from films and video games, also play an important part. In the context of this music the metallic noises of falling gun cartridges, drawn jungle knives and rifles being reloaded in the music are not so much threatening indicators of urban warfare as the non-specific background sound of an inhabited industrialised environment. The ubiquitous hiss and crackle of vinyl records that overlaps with recordings of rain on empty streets has been seen as a metaphor for (musical, cultural) decay, which it can be, but in a less complicated sense it describes the dirty, weathered and rainy streets of London with amazing efficiency.
The subject matter in these paintings of London isn’t usually very specific, even with the descriptive track titles, and nor should it be – again, Burial’s depictions are emotional reflections and impressionistic atmospheres rather than literal reproductions. Perhaps this is an obvious point, but it’s worth a second thought. ‘Night Bus’ manages to convey what it’s like to wait for or ride one of London’s night buses home at 2am, but there’s no glazed robotic voice reminding us ‘One seven one. To. Bellingham, Catford Bus Garage’, no constantly shifting crowd of tightly-squeezed passengers and no rumble of giant diesel engines. Instead, there’s the intermittent sound of rain in the middle distance and a slow, simple, pulseless minor-feel melody in the treble with an echoing, heavily processed vocal phrase nestled gracefully at its core: semi-conscious rumination around a couple of ideas in a beautifully basic mood, largely isolated from the surroundings. ‘Night Bus’ perfectly reflects the vaguely melancholy, half-asleep state of mind you’re in at the end of an exhausting night out, still a rainy hour’s travelling and walking away from home and a warm but lonely bed. Burial’s London has the emotion painted in too.
Burial the Storyteller: Text and Narrative
Instrumental music generally gives rise to meaning by association or connotation, unlike pictures or words, which have relatively specific (or denotive) meanings, but a piece of music can still tell a story by manipulating its connotative elements over time. Burial’s music has the best of both worlds because it incorporates recorded sound effects (sonic photographs, really) alongside sampled speech. By combining these specifically meaningful sound-objects with the more ethereal language of musical connotation, Burial acquires a unique and strangely gripping ability to tell mysterious and open-ended stories.In forty-six seconds, Burial has told a compelling – and frightening – story. Who says these opening words, and why? Why the tone of spirituality? More pressingly, what’s the relationship between the opening voice and whatever it was that happened next? Did she show something, do something? Was something done to her? It’s fitting that Burial sampled a Lynch film, as his musical storytelling method has a lot in common with the director’s cinematic storytelling method. Both rely on connotation and mood to create effective stories when the conventions of specified meanings break down, raising questions rather than answering them, and it’s this disorientation that makes Lynch’s films so much more terrifying that conventional horror films. In fact, Lynch’s films contain many instances of carefully constructed atmospheres of anticipation climaxing into a moment of shock just like the untitled opening of Untrue – the monster that suddenly walks out from behind the wall at the back of the Wendy’s restaurant in Mulholland Drive, for example, and the moments in Inland Empire when Laura Dern’s face suddenly becomes grossly distorted.
Where ‘Night Bus’ could be a relatively static painting of someone on or waiting for a bus at night, tracks like Untrue’s ‘Endorphin’ tell a much more complex and ambiguous story. A minute-long segment in C minor of soft tones, multi-layered crackle and looping rave synth sounds featuring the slowed-down and pitch-shifted words ‘…and you see all these flashing blue lights’ is repeated in its entirety. At the end of the second iteration there’s an abrupt ending of this material, leaving only dislocated reverb, then suddenly new material for the last thirty-five seconds fades in. In this coda it’s started raining and we quickly modulate to a strange new key (ultimately F sharp minor, which is harmonically the furthest you can get away from C). A final cadence falls into place, its oddly emphasised penultimate chord a caustic open fifth on E natural (E and B natural are both notes that are very dissonant and out of place in C minor), which really creates a burning sensation. Then the downward octave-leap at the end confirms the arrival in a new and slightly disturbing harmonic place. The story has an AAB structure, and there has been a major development: something dramatic has happened, harmonic ‘home’ is now far away and we’re not taken back there. The quoted speech and the title are clues whose significance is unclear, enhancing the mystery rather than clarifying anything.
Another beatless track on Untrue, ‘In McDonalds’, ends with the words ‘you look different’ just as the music has died to deep, reverberating hum. These words, spoken by the mother of the main character in the film Bullet Boy, have been slowed down and deepened, so ironically it’s whoever says these words that sounds different. We’re listening from the perspective of an implied first person whose transformed state (i.e. the change in appearance noted by the second person) is further demonstrated by their strangely altered hearing at the moment a friend or relative expresses concern, as if they're on the threshold of a bad drug trip or something more supernatural. What happened ‘in McDonalds’?
Burial the Singer: Unquantised Melody and Vocal Science
The end of ‘In McDonalds’ is an elegantly simple instance of Burial using electronic manipulation of voice to powerful expressive effect, and he does it in more elaborate ways throughout his work, particularly on Untrue. The complex electronic alteration of rhythm and pitch in vocal samples to create new, cyborg melodies is referred to as ‘vocal science’. It’s a hallmark of recent underground dance music and Burial is an innovator and a master of it. The name ‘vocal science’ clearly comes from people who believe this kind of music to be a rational, painstaking and objective exercise (ugh), and it’s slightly misleading because although complex technical wizardry is often required, it’s still very much an art(form) and can be likened to older traditions of decorative improvised singing.Burial himself doesn’t sing on his tracks (as far as I know), but he does construct a personal singing voice for himself by reshaping vocal fragments selected from pre-existing music, positioning rhythm, pitch and EQ with precision just like any other vocal performance. His vocal science is an inventive and artful balance of melodic grace and rough rhythmic collage achieved through the re-engineering of found sound. The results are junkyard sculptures that point to new and undiscovered worlds of vocal-melodic expressivity.
Perhaps the most striking aspect of Burial’s voice is its inhuman, androgynous quality. By always shifting the pitch of the vocal samples up or down, male voices take on a feminine or childlike quality and female voices take on a masculine quality respectively, something Burial has described as ‘sexy as fuck’. In fact, this pitch-shifting is so complex and widespread among Burial’s tunes that categories like ‘male’, ‘female’, ‘child’, ‘adult’, ‘black’ and ‘white’ are entirely left behind. In this way Burial’s voice can be seen as a Utopian fantasy, poignantly representing an ideal Self or an ideal Other, as in the legend of Pygmalion, about a sculptor who creates the perfect woman out of ivory. I use the phrase ‘Burial’s voice’ in two senses, as in simply ‘the voice of Burial’ but also describing something created by Burial – as in, appropriately, ‘Frankenstein’s monster’.
On ‘Archangel’, as on other tracks, Burial’s voice is a transcendent post- (or pre-) human, an angel that professes its love (‘holding you, loving you, kissing you’) in a broken voice both soothing and gothically lachrymose, and promising from a supernatural plane that with all this ‘[you] wouldn’t be alone’.
Burial turns the possibilities of unquantised rhythms (i.e. rhythms that don’t line up to a metronomic pulse) to his expressive advantage, using a subtle, precision earliness or lateness to make the voice seem like it’s breaking with emotion. This can be heard noticeably in ‘Etched Headplate’, but the most powerful instance is in ‘Near Dark’. A sample of the words ‘I can’t take my eyes off you’ is repeated over an over, pitch-shifted into different variations to create a great eight-bar melody. Listen to how each phrase is rhythmically placed though: the first one, an initial proposition, is slightly early, anticipating the drop of the main material, so seems to be nervously rushing ahead. In the second phrase, which forms a response to or development of the first, we notice that the ‘I can take my…’ half of the phrase is too fast, but then it slows more to align with the beat, and the final note differs from that of the first phrase, implying a new harmonic direction. The third phrase is the one that really gets you – it’s a calculated fraction of a second late as if pained, reluctant to carry on. It also returns to the harmony of the first phrase like an insistent denial of the second phrase, and after this the fourth phrase is late too. Rhythmically, the sample moves like a fish in a stream, sometimes swimming against the current of the beat, sometimes propelled forward by it, all with an effortless shifting of fins. Emotionally, it’s like a subtle, perfectly timed acting performance that sends a shiver down the spine.
Occasionally people ask whether the effects of techniques like unquantisation are ‘accidental’, in accordance with the ancient, glorious and undying traditions of skepticism towards new art along with rhetoric about drugs, infantilism, mental illness, savagery, degeneracy, disrespect of tradition etc etc. It’s irrelevant really. Burial, whatever musical training he has or hasn’t had, clearly does possess a remarkable ear for inventive rhythm (as well as for melody, harmony, texture, structure, sampling) and ‘Near Dark’ has to be one of the finest uses of electronic unquantisation, this brand new musical technique, that I know of. You don’t write a tune like ‘Archangel’ and then fail in your intentions to line rhythms up ‘properly’.
Burial the Poet: Words, Phrases and Sentences.
There are lots of ways to construct a melody, but a particularly effective method is to string together a series of sub-phrases that respond to and develop each other, often along the lines of the so-called ‘question and answer’ (also known as ‘call and response’, or more technically ‘antecedent and consequent’) pattern beloved of music teachers. There could be any number of equivalents to poetry in music, but to pick just one: the construction of melody mirrors the structural balancing acts of poetry that take place up and down the hierarchical levels of words, phrases, sentences and stanzas or paragraphs.Burial the Poet operates in the area where close vocal science becomes large-scale storytelling, crafting musical phrases and sentences in an alien language with shifting, intangible meanings. Instead of nouns there are pitched tones, instead of verbs there are harmonic directions, instead of adjectives there are effects like filters, EQ and reverb, instead of rhyme, assonance and alliteration there are melodic logics like ‘call and response’, and instead of punctuation there is rhythm. This is a process most clearly exemplified in ‘Near Dark’ and ‘Archangel’. ‘Etched Headplate’ has a more irregular poetry, while ‘Ghost Hardware’ creates the line from a handful of disparate elements. In ‘Shutta’ an unusual phrase is constructed from four staccato chords that are harmonically embellished with vocals.
My favourite example of Burial the Poet is the main melody of the brand new track ‘Fostercare’ from the amazing 5 Years of Hyperdub compilation released recently. It’s an astonishing track, one of the strangest and most fascinating since ‘Shutta’. As poetry, the opening lines of the melody reach right inside you and hold a conversation with a part of you that you never knew existed.
This melody is unusual among Burial tracks in that it’s constructed from much smaller fragments of vocal samples, so there are no words to make out. We’re in C sharp minor, and the first phrase (the call) starts with an anacrusis (also a poetic term) by entering before and anticipating the harmonic downbeat. The first phrase ends, via an unquantised downward slide, on the minor third. The second phrase (the response) partially lines up harmonically with the bass, which cycles two bars of tonic (C sharp, home), one bar of G sharp and then a bar of the foreboding submediant (A major - we actually hear A major’s third over G sharp, a bar before the bass comes in with A). Here it’s not just the beginnings of the notes that are unquantised to great effect, but the ends too: there’s an odd semi staccato feel as the notes cut out slightly early that makes the voice sound timid. As in ‘Near Dark’, the third phrase is another ‘call’ and so echoes the first phrase. Here, though, it’s actually exactly the same as the first, which is what makes melodic sense here, but again Burial is cleverer than trite reiteration, and muffles the phrase with a low-pass filter, making brilliant use of technology that wasn’t available to the writers of expressive melody in the nineteenth-century.
Then the fourth phrase, another ‘response’, mirrors the second phrase accordingly, again, switching the harmony to the submediant. Now Burial’s bassline, powerful as it is, is pretty simple, just a loop of three notes, so he’s running out of ways to keep his melody fresh by the time he gets to the fifth phrase, (which is a new ‘call’ and could be thought of as the beginning of a new sentence), so he changes his game. Instead of using anacrusis as he did before, he does the opposite, waiting until the downbeat has passed before the notes of the fifth phrase start, now quite close to where a sixth phrase should be. This phrase actually takes place halfway between where the fifth phrase and the sixth phrases should be were the phrases coming in at the same rate as before.
All the fifth phrase does after the first note is bounce back and forth between two more notes, the third and fourth scale degrees. With traditional notes, traditional paper and traditional conventions of melody, this seems a little weak, a rather flat gesture (though deliberate imperfection or naivety like this is something you often find in Schubert or Schumann). Played on an acoustic instrument it wouldn’t sound that great, but Burial’s unquantised rhythms and manipulative vocal science really bring the phrase to life with a judiciously controlled articulation that no acoustic composer could possibly hope to notate for a performer. That Burial manages to turn such a relatively dull phrase into something like this is yet another example of how he’s made advanced use, practically unprecedented in its sophistication, of the medium of electronic composition to multiply the possibilities of composition as a whole.
The fifth phrase was a ‘call’, but even though we’re left hanging and the bass implies that a response is due – there isn’t one. In fact, the melody stops right there, even as the background harmonic parts carry on as before. The melody was an irregular six bars long but the background harmony carries on to the regular eight bar mark, and then goes on for a further eight bars without any melody as if it were a dub version. After this, new material comes in that offers a new beat but now doesn’t even have any harmony. The track sounds ‘unfinished’: as it carries on it boldly puts a highly tense lack of melodic (and then harmonic) material in the foreground.
Burial the Architect: Texture, Form and Cadence
‘Fostercare’ is the inverse of conventional expectations of structure, an ‘Archangel’ robbed of its melodic material just as it was getting going. This is another example of Burial’s storytelling ability (think of this structural outline in the context of the track’s title), but it’s also a notable outing for Burial the Architect.Conventionally speaking, there are two dimensions in which music can be subject to structural or what could be called architectural design: the horizontal and the vertical. The horizontal axis is time, while the vertical axis spans the variety of sound produced in a single moment – usually this means pitch but timbre and frequency in general could also count. Construction across the horizontal time axis is often called ‘form’, while construction across the vertical axis could be called ‘texture’. In practice it’s ultimately quite difficult to notionally separate the two categories, just as a building is (to add on another dimension) a three-dimensional object and not a pair of two-dimensional objects at right angles, hence the analogy of ‘architecture’.
A key two-dimensional structural point in many musical styles is the cadence, an event which can bring structural harmony both to a close and to a new beginning. Really well done cadences have been rare since the nineteenth century and they’re often barely more than vestigial in contemporary popular music. Burial, though, seems obsessed with them, creating layered and innovative cadences almost out of nowhere with startling creativity. New voices and sounds will suddenly enter to accentuate a cadence, heighten the anticipatory tension and then bring it home to release of that tension. This is particularly noticeable in ‘Distant Lights’ and ‘Etched Headplate’, where Burial uses a single cello tonic note to bring out the cadences while that surreptitious leaping bass approaches from beneath.
Burial’s approach to structure is usually pretty fiercely original, but ‘Ghost Hardware’ is one of Burial the Architect’s most inventive and accomplished edifices, showcasing his skill for form and texture at every level of structure, from the small to the larges scales. Burial has said that he’s not into long intros that slowly build everything up, but his alternative structures are not weakly abrupt, and here he manages to create a very short and detailed intro that works remarkably well. Satisfyingly paired down though it is, it nonetheless introduces many of the motifs that take on key structural roles as the track plays out before the anacrusis of the vocal phrase takes us elegantly to the drop. One of these is a quote from the film Girl With a Pearl Earring: Scarlett Johansson exclaiming ‘you looked inside me’ when she sees Vermeer’s portrait of her. Throughout the intro, Burial uses sound effects like he’s reinvented the medium of percussion and its structural logics (the break, the fill etc). The material for the intro is used in beatless secondary areas that periodically punctuate the track and contrast with the track’s main material, building in texture and heightening tension while the harmony remains rooted to the spot.
The primary texture of the track is dominated by a deep bass part that’s only used to present a bare minimum of load-bearing harmonic anchorage. It amounts to only two notes for the cadence at the end of the eight-bar ‘sentence’ and one more short note in the middle, irregularly positioned in bar four where bar five would have been the obvious, more even place for it. This is much like syncopation or unquantisation but on the much larger scale of bars rather than the pulse and its subdivisions. This economy of bass sets up a great interplay between areas of presence and areas of absence. Just as the difference between areas of low and high air pressure causes the wind to blow, so there’s an ebb and flow of anticipatory tension and release across the eight-bar ‘sentence’ – listen out for it, it’s something Burial’s very good at. Here, as in ‘Fostercare’, Burial is acutely and audaciously aware not just of exactly where to put notes, but where to leave them out.
Burial the 21st Century Composer
The Burials I’ve identified here are just some of angles from which to look at this multi-faceted composer. Of course, Burial is all of these things simultaneously – despite the necessarily sequential nature of this discussion, singing was never distinct from poetry, painting was never distinct from storytelling, poetry was never distinct from architecture. There are many more Burials too – others that I have or haven’t touched upon that could be recognised may include the Percussionist, the Audiophile, the Engineer, the Polyphonist, the Gamer, the Film-Watcher, the Music Fan, the Listener/Perceiver, the Orchestrator, the Gothic, the Socialist Realist, the Dancer, the Poststructuralist, the Bricoleur, the Romantic, the Diarist, the Raver, the Independent, the Victorian and the Myth. I feel that I’ve barely scratched the surface of what Burial offers here. Given all this it seems that effectively Burial is still anonymous, still to be discovered. It’d be a shame to prematurely make like we’ve got him sussed.Many music critics compare contemporary music with the music of the past, sometimes favorably, often unfavorably. Taking the opposite approach, one could compare contemporary music to how music could be in the future. (Let’s not forget that the past is usually just as much of an unknown, just as subject to the clouding of ideology and bias, as the future can be). I’d like to think that rather than simply being a reminder of what we might’ve lost, Burial’s music is a foretaste of what’s to come.
Is Burial one of the first truly twenty-first century composers? Absolutely. His music has to be one of the most accomplished, sophisticated and personalised applications we have to date of the possibilities inherent in the technologies of twenty-first century electronic composition (and he pretty much used the bare minimum there) and the twenty-first century musical and sonic environment. But even Burial, astonishingly unique and innovative though his music is, keeps a loose grip on the stylistic conventions of Western music’s previous few centuries. Perhaps by making uniquely detailed inroads into post-experimental electronic musical style ahead of others, he’s paving the way for the detailed and articulate languages of newer, even bolder generations of composers.
So what does this word ‘composer’ mean, now that we’re in the twenty-first century?
This essay is partly a response to this and partly inspired by Arnold Schoenberg’s essay ‘Brahms the Progressive’. Also want to mention that Burial the Ballardian was already on the list of Burials, and that Devil, Can You Hear Me, who writes a good blog, complained about the ‘codified aesthetic’ surrounding Joker while this post was still on the drawing board.
This is the second part in a four-part series of essays on musical pasts, presents and futures. The other parts are:
1. ‘Hauntology: The Past Inside the Present’.
3. ‘What is a [Classical] Composer?’.
4. ‘The Twenty-First-Centry Modern Composer’.
EXCELLENT post.Thanks for the excess of listening and connecting here.
ReplyDeleteOut to Burial, Whistler and 90s London.
ReplyDeleteDamn you!
ReplyDeleteI wanted to connect Burial and Whistler's Nocturne in a post ages ago, but lost track and couldnt quite find my angle.
As always, an excellent post.
Oh, thanks for linking me too.
Daniel
Excellent post!! Your description and interpretation of Burial's techniques and artistic abilities made me fall even deeper in love with his music! When you mentioned that his melody reaches parts of you that you never knew existed, that is exactly how i felt!! Thank you! and thank you BURIAL!!!! He is from the future! :)
ReplyDelete... would you mind if I translated this to spanish for my own blog? Of course this would go credited to you, as the author, with a link to your own blog. Cheers!
ReplyDeleteThanks, go for it! Glad to hear Burial even has sympathisers in such sunny climes.
ReplyDeleteOn Twitter this afternoon Daniel Trilling found an excellent poem by Thomas Hardy that matches the Burial listening experience:
http://999poems.blogspot.com/2009/04/966-beyond-last-lamp-by-thomas-hardy.html
As a huge fan of "Burial the Percussionist" I was initially a tiny bit disappointed in "Fostercare". Then it crept up on me, and you really nailed it here, it's the Poet coming to the fore.
ReplyDeleteA lot of food for thought here, as always. Excellent stuff, thank you.
wow - thank you for this. some wonderful passages and thoughts that only serve to enhance, not detract from or demystify. huge respect.
ReplyDeleteThis post puts much of the sensations I feel while listening to Burial in to words; it's somewhat uncanny how you've managed to do it here. Nonetheless, I deeply enjoyed reading, listening, taking mental notes and being completely enveloped all over again by the magic of Burial. The rain, and the very powerful architecture have always been key elements for me and are what drew me to Burial's craft in the beginning. It's lovely and reassuring to learn that this sensibility is shared and validated in text. The paintings included here almost directly translate the sheer emotional impact of the music into images I've, until now, only seen with my eyes shut and headphones at full blast. I needed this... so much.
ReplyDeleteAmazing.
hmmmm...you lost me on this one. I loved ur Wonky ideas and insights but I think you are playing Burial up to be a modern musical electronic composer 'Genius' when I honestly believe he is so very accidentally where he is cos of people he knows and inventing a sound, as good as it is, i agree, which came along as a much welcome soothing undercurrent for the Big Ballsy and Dark Bass tunes of the Steppas that looked to him to somehow round out the one dimensional nature that was all too prelevant at the time. Hyperdubs vertable saviour from disappearing into its own navel.
ReplyDeleteYou mention people questioning whether the unquantised nature of the tracks was a mistake? No, i dont believe so either, but neither is it the awesome spectacle you proclaim it to be. it just is.
I mean, whats so bloody amazing about that?
Burial is a boderline fluke, and time will tell while the rest of his catalogue trys hard to out do UNTRUE, which so far none of it has.
>Keep up the great work
PEACE
_strunkdts_
hey strunkdts, cheers. I didn't use the word 'genius' but I see what you're getting at (maybe your using that word had something to do with that cultural-baggage-handling term 'composer' - my next post will look into that sorta thing). I feel that Burial makes such inventive and effective use of unquantisation as an entrenched aspect of form and expression that it amounts to something quite groundbreaking, but the unquantisation is only one factor in his overall importance. As you say, time will tell.
ReplyDeleteAs far as I know 'Fostercare' is the only non-remix, non-collaborative music Burial's released since Untrue (as a holistic work, yeah, it's probably the strongest release), and I think that track's pretty amazing, it competes.
Being a musician myself and feeling out everything I can out of music in any situation, what you said about Burial and the layering, the precision and vision of his compositions is pretty much spot on. Your "WONKY" post was brilliant as well.
ReplyDeleteKeep it going, I always love an in-depth read into a musical journey. BIG-UPS
Wow, I liked Burial before but you've created a new kind of love I have for him now. Thanks for pointing out so many of the technical musical aspects that someone like me who is uneducated in the subject can understand and appreciate.
ReplyDeleteI've heard Fostercare before, but the way you pointed out the 'vocal science' of it (combined with a better understanding of the previous tracks) made me actually short of breath while listening to it.
Normally I would dismiss an article of this length as a "tl;dr," but I'm so glad I sat down and read this whole thing. It enabled me to experience such an emotion through his music that I haven't experienced before.
you mentioned that in Foster Care
ReplyDelete'The second phrase (the response) lines up harmonically with the bass, which is going back and forth between the tonic (C sharp, home) and the foreboding submediant (A major)'
and that
'Now Burial’s bassline, powerful as it is, is pretty simple, just two notes'
But i'm pretty sure the bass is three notes, a two bars of C#, followed by one of G#, and one of A.
Then at the end of the sample you hear it cadence, C#, F and C# ( a plagel cadance?)
Amazing post. Write more please!
ReplyDelete@Rouge's...sorry man, i reread my post just now and what i really meant was Burials first and self titled is the effort for which he will always strive...thats what i feel anyhow.
ReplyDeleteI really like your musings on music and look forward to reading more.
i cant believe youre as young as you say either! :)
_strunkdts_
hey Toby Hamand, thanks for listening so carefully - 's good to know that people aren't simply trusting my musical jibba jabba. You're right of course - while I do aim to simplify things where I can and I do remember hearing three notes, what you quote is an outright mistake and I'll amend it.
ReplyDeleteNot thinking I'd go into harmony I wrote the poetry section away from a keyboard and I (gulp) used a flash keyboard to approximate those murky pitches. The C sharp in the melody threw me into thinking in an A feel, curses. In fact throughout, the melody behaves as if the bass was just C sharp and A.
Now that I listen again I hear it's a bit more complex and wonder if there's maybe a B in the line somewhere. I'm not sure that I'd agree that the end of the eight bars is a plagal cadence (isn't that penultimate chord B major, when the strings come in?). Ah, anyways. But cheers for pointing that out.
Interesting, and illuminating. However, in severao thousand words I don't think you managed to capture the essence of Burial in the way that Mary Anne Hobbs did in her review of 'Untrue'...
ReplyDeleteI have to say I think it’s the most wonderful mosaic of sound I’ve ever heard in my whole life, it doesn’t even sound like it was made on this Earth, it could be a transmission from a star in a galaxy far far away... and I don’t know about you, but this excites senses deep in my soul that I didn’t even know I had, and it makes me feel like I’m falling in love with music at a completely different and way deeper level… Burial let the curtain fall, the stage is yours. Life and sound will never be the same again…”
I like the way you've analysed Burial's music, and identified things that I had never noticed before. However, getting caught up in the possible mechanisms/aims/processes of the music, and the individual kicks/loops/samples, can detract from the overall experience. For me, the best way to enjoy Burial is not to assess his merits as a poet/composer/audio architect, but to put in your headphones, and hit the streets. In response to one of the earlier comments, I don't think that the word 'genius' is too strong.
Anyway, nonetheless a very interesting a post! Certainly helped me get through my monday afternoon.
Cheers for reading and your thoughts Alastair - the main argument of this post was that if there were a claim to have captured the essence of Burial then it would be a great shame. This post is a quasi-musicological essay in aesthetics, not a review or an attempt to replicate or, as you hint at, to replace the listening experience (and god forbid the latter). What I tried to do, rather than bring Burial into the harsh light of the laboratory for close general ('over'-)analysis, was reveal some facets of the music that may have previously been hidden for some people, to suggest some new paths for listening.
ReplyDeleteBut yeah, hit the streets with headphones, definitely.
what a waste of words
ReplyDeletesh*t up and listen to the music
Listening is what I have been doing - lots of it, carefully, it's where I got these words from. They're here so that others might feel encouraged to listen similarly carefully, and they don't cost anybody anything.
ReplyDeletevery interesting and well written, write something about joy orbison?
ReplyDeleteExcellent read! Can't get enough of Burial, you have given me a further insight into his genius.
ReplyDeleteBy far the most insightful artical/blog post on Burial. Burial is the wrecking ball music needs right now.
ReplyDelete.......And is surely paving the way for more innovative producers coming through, lets not ignore the lesser known new talent either. Music is in a state of flux right now and perhaps we have some of the most interesting material is yet to come. The state of music is now equivalent to the heady DIY aesthetic of punk, where people who haven't had the opportunity to use large studios and expensive equipment can now do things on a much cheaper budget with professional results.
ReplyDeleteWin/win situation then?
Hope so RL! Burial is one of the first to really demonstrate the potential of this neo-Punk / Second DIY Revolution you talk about (probably the main contributor to such a revolution is the rise of music-producing software), both with his innovation and the sophistication he puts on top of that.
ReplyDeletethe first album is a billion trillion times better than the second.
ReplyDeletethat's the only point i have to make.
untrue. :)
The "ghosts of rave" thing is not necessarily the hopeless, beholden-to-the-past thing that many of the Cultural Entropy boohoo-we're-all-doomed it's-not-like-it-was-in-my-day gang would have it be...
ReplyDeleteIt reminds me of the line from One Dove, at the height of rave, in the ultimate comedown song 'White Love': "and when it is dark / there are ghosts / that give me hope".
In reading your posts I often feel like you're "connection-hunting," and this one is no exception. Still, I personally love the fact that other people are thinking a lot about these things.
ReplyDeleteMy favourite part about this post is that, while I often consider Burial a sort of musical guilty pleasure, you give him his due regardless of his non-"serious" background. Your words about the self-awareness of his quantization choices hit the nail on the head; the poetic function (axis of selection meeting the axis of combination) doesn't rely on a technical stylistic awareness, but rather a set of good ears and good taste.
I look forward to the next one.
-Brian park
PS. RL, I love that musical innovation beyond guitar feedback is available to so many more people nowadays; but, I can't help worrying about focusing on new producers simply for their newness.
ReplyDeleteThere will be thousands of new aesthetic ways to present music in the next few years, but will we simply grow so fixated on newness of sonic qualities that we let great songwriting fall by the wayside?
I just heard Charlotte Dada's version of Don't Let Me Down, with polyrhythmic African bells all over the place, and it is still a beautiful song, just with different wrapping. I hope we haven't become more interested in the wrapping than the gift.
im pretty sure the sample at the start of 'Fostercare' is taken from Kaija Saariaho's 'jardin secret 1' - to be found on the release 'computer music currents 5'
ReplyDeleteIm surprised that he doesn't make more of this sample, being content to use it as a touch of colour. Although I suppose its three clear repetitions do create very audible landmarks, defining the form to some extent. On second hearing i think there are also delayed/reverbed/filtered fragments of it that add to the burial-esc indistinct and shifting background texture, that gives the music so much of its character. I am a bit disappointed that he hasn't used it as a melodic/harmonic/rhythmic fragment as with many of the other samples he uses. The track is still ace though.
ReplyDeletep.s i thoroughly enjoyed your article...a great way to approach Burial's work.
ReplyDeletep.p.s I wonder whether Burial is really musically 'paving the way', or rather perfecting and concentrating those forms already there, perhaps tending towards the end of a genre(s)? Maybe they are the same thing though...he is definitely creating a precedent for a fresh sense of depth in dance/electronic (or whatever) music that should allow other like-minded artists to flourish. Whether there is the talent to capitalize on this remains to be seen...i hope there is.
ReplyDeletep.p.p.s Scrub the word genre...that word creates more problems than it solves, as i think your article expresses. Burial perfects the art of allusion perhaps, one perspective/definition is never sufficient...ill shut up now.
ReplyDeleteowwwww
ReplyDeleteMore insightful writing I have never seen on a blog. Well done friend. There is a lot more to Burial than I give him credit for. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteno way man, no way!!!
ReplyDeleteAwesome post. just been recommended this blog and loving the insights. I've just been reviewing call and response and its use in memorable music on music production blog i co-write - lost in musik. http://www.lostinmusik.net/?p=1347
ReplyDeleteThis was amazing. Since my very first time hearing Burial, played one evening in Trevor Nelson's show during a personally-nightmarish December 2007, I'd felt that my notion of what music could be had changed forever. Now, just over four years later, I've had that feeling acknowledged in a very real sense by your in depth analysis. Analysis I'm far too musically ignorant to have understood the jargon of, but still.
ReplyDeleteAnd it only took me two years to stumble upon it. All hail Reddit.
Your analysis is spot on and quite chilling. Greatly appreciate it
ReplyDeleteFabulous essay
ReplyDeleteThis is the most astounding blog post I've come across in months. Thanks for the in-depth venture into the world of Burial. I've been looking for such review for a long time. Cheers.
ReplyDeletedo you feel any different in these opinions (better/worse) since the release of newer work? or maybe more poignantly, do you believe these claims still apply (more/less) in the artist's newer works?
ReplyDeleteI think my opinions about what I wrote about remain the same, even after hearing the new material. Burial has expanded a bit - longer tracks, darker tracks, more narrative-type tracks, and even dancier tracks, but I think the underlying aesthetic is the same. But give it another 4 years and who knows? I'm sure one day I'll be writing about him again, and will need to update!
ReplyDeleteJust commenting to say that I always knew there was something about Burial I just wasn't getting, but I didn't want to dismiss him (or her) as an artist. After reading this article, though, my aesthetic appreciation has been greatly enhanced, so much so that I decided to order Untrue on vinyl last night.
ReplyDelete