Maillist

 




Proto Acid The Berlin Sessions

With a new album out in May also on Laboratory Instinct here’s the 2006 album now available officially in the UK. The British acid house pioneer and drum’n’bass legend issued his own superb full-length on the German imprint. Having literally influenced generations of music-makers with an incredible discography that’s grown incrementally deeper since the ‘80s, the Manchester UK native and now Berlin resident executes the infectious 71-minute jam with a masterful meticulousness. Drenching Detroit-styled techno in sparkling electro, the set, recorded live in one session using two laptops and a DJ mixer at Gerald’s Diehold Studio on February 11th, 2006, flows with a relaxed ease. With one exception (“Auto Rebuild,” the third track, is a remake of 1990’s “Automannik”), the album’s 24 raw, club-oriented tracks are all new and were created in Berlin.

The collection departs from the style of his last full-length in many ways, the most obvious being the absence of singing. Asked why he decided to make it wholly instrumental, Simpson doesn’t mince words. “On my last two albums, I felt pressured to include vocals,” he replies. “Nowadays, I feel singers should be put on a bale of hay with a piece of straw hanging out of their mouths while playing acoustic guitar—keeping it real, if you know what I mean. I want to make music for clubs and sometimes you just have to get down and dirty into the machines and, to take it there, you can’t hold anyone’s hand. Some things just don’t need a vocal. What I’m trying to do is keep myself entertained as well as give the punters something new.” Asked to describe the album’s sound, Simpson says, “To me it’s proto acid; it’s how I feel house/techno music would have sounded if the whole rave thing hadn’t happened in England. When I was younger, I would go to soul and funk clubs and you could easily mix a techno/house track into your set without spoiling the environment. Could you imagine playing a techno track at an r’n’b club today? Things have splintered and fragmented and floated so far apart that funk seems to have dropped through the cracks. I’m one of those preserved creatures that basically loves to use genres as a palette. So when I say proto acid I’m saying this stuff has direct lineage to Chicago and Detroit in the mid-to-late 80s.” The mix’s strutting electro strain makes its first appearance in “Auto Rebuild” and dominates thereafter, though its presence is subtly modulated from one cut to the next, at one moment oozing a house vibe and the next techno. While differences distinguish one track from the next (though Simpson avows that his influences are more machines than particular artists, a seeming Drexciya influence emerges in “Droid” and the dark synth-driven “Feel the Heat” while dub rears its head in “Xray” and “Bass-o-train”), there’s clearly a unified feel to the album. “Skitzoid” casts a mechano spell, “Night Flight” breezily rocks, and the jacking cut “Voltar” broils feverishly for almost eight minutes. Bringing the mix to a chilled close, “Sweet You” floats in a billowing haze of jazzy pianos and locomotive drum brushes before vaporizing in a cloud of cymbal accents.


Track Listing

01. Marching Powder
02. The Strip
03. Auto Rebuild
04. Space 1999
05. Droid*
06. Nasty*
07. The Slink*
08. Transition*
09. Andromeda*
10. Monday
11. Clock
12. Downstroke
13. Bumpt
14. Plaything
15. Merlot Brougham
16. Xray
17. Feel The Heat
18. Skitzoid*
19. Night Flight*
20. Scaffolding*
21. Bass-o-tran*
22. Robogroover
23. Voltar
24. Sweet you


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