/>
musicOMH
home | features | albums | tracks | live | classical | blog
Facebook Twitter
search:

Bomb The Bass - Future Chaos (!K7)

UK release date: 15 September 2008
4 stars
Bomb The Bass - Future Chaos

buy this title


track listing

1. Smog
2. Butterfingers (feat Fujiya & Miyagi)
3. Old John
4. Burn The Bunker feat Toob
5. So Special
6. No Bones
7. Black River feat Mark Lanegan
8. Hold Me Up
9. Fuzzbox feat Jon Spencer

MORE
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
LINKS
ArtistName


Two decades have passed since the initial rush of acid house was felt - which means it's an astonishing 20 years since the smiley face of Bomb The Bass' Beat Dis was seen in the number one slot on the shelves of your local Woolworth's, and Tim Simenon's mug shot on the front of the NME. Plenty has changed, then - though the nostalgic yearning for the heady heights of 1988 appears to be staging a firm stand.

Much has changed since - though we still yearn for the days of 1988. Meanwhile Bomb The Bass - essentially Simenon, though now with a vocal regular in Paul Conroy - have moved on. Where they once aimed for the centre of the warehouse at peak time, now they lurk in the shadows at the edge - and their first album for thirteen years remarkably picks up where Clear left off.

The format is essentially the same, but has every right to be, as along with Leftfield's Leftism Clear was one of the very first electronic albums to experiment with a variety of vocalists. So with Conroy the vocal fulcrum, the well chosen guests this time include Mark Lanegan, Fujiya & Miyagi and Jon Spencer among others.

Any fears that Simenon's writing sabbatical has lessened his creative powers are immediately unfounded with the acrid Smog. The atmosphere is darkened, intensely brooding; and Conroy taps in to that with immediate effect, his slightly husky tones ideal for Simenon's production. By and large this is sensitive, responding well to the vocalist's mood and melodic inflections - particularly in the case of Lanegan, whose Black River is a deep, dark torrent with no bottom.

Perhaps the most striking track is So Special, where a winding bass loop and half-whispered vocal of Conroy ratchet up the tension, which remains coiled throughout. Lyrically the Fujiya & Miyagi track is most striking, the description that "I play Tetris in my eyelids" matched by Simenon's well-placed bleeps and whistles.

Future Chaos comprises just nine tracks, but with each Simenon stretches them out as far as they will go, keeping the tension throughout as they segue into each other. This makes for an unbroken listening experience of an hour that keeps to mostly withdrawn vocals and back beats of hidden menace - so no Bug Powder Dust equivalent here, but music that has equal power, if not the volume. A bit more variety between moods might not have gone amiss, mind - aside from the meditative loops of No Bones, the prevailing scene is a dark one with occasional glints - like a jewel roughened and obscured by the sand.

Given that this material has, by Simenon's own admission, been around for a while, he's done an incredibly good job in harnessing it together and making it sound fresh. Now he's up and running again, just watch him go.


Comments



out this week
Gotye - Making Mirrors Field Music - Plumb Tennis - Young & Old Emeli Sandé - Our Version Of Events
Ital - Hive Mind Speech Debelle - Freedom Of Speech Earth - Angels Of Darkness, Demons Of Light II Maribel - Reveries
coming soon
Shearwater - Animal Joy Young Magic - Melt Demi Lovato - Unbroken Xiu Xiu - Always
recent releases
Mark Lanegan Band - Blues Funeral Lindstrøm - Six Cups Of Rebel Blondes - Blondes John Talabot - fIN
The Twilight Sad - No One Can Ever Know Maverick Sabre - Lonely Are The Brave Cloud Nothings - Attack On Memory Beth Jeans Houghton - Yours Truly, Cellophane Nose
Leonard Cohen - Old Ideas Lana Del Rey - Born To Die Portico Quartet - Portico Quartet Errors - Have Some Faith In Magic
Django Django - Django Django The 2 Bears - Be Strong Darren Hayman - January Songs Barry Adamson - I Will Set You Free
First Aid Kit - The Lion's Roar Pulled Apart By Horses - Tough Love DJ Food - The Search Engine Chairlift - Something
Kathleen Edwards - Voyageur Leila - U&I Gonjasufi - MU.ZZ.LE Alog - Unemployment
  1. more album reviews

TOP ARTICLES NOW
Field Music
INTERVIEW
Field Music

David Brewis on the band's latest album Plumb and side projects.
Errors
Q&A
Errors

Steev Livingstone on unexpected tweets and Mogwai connections.
RELATED ARTICLES
INTERVIEW: Bomb The Bass
ALBUM: Bomb The Bass - Future Chaos
EXTERNAL LINKS
Bomb The Bass



  more album reviews...



musicOMH
about us
contact
copyright
home
elsewhere
Twitter
Facebook
Mixcloud
Soundcloud
Last.fm

© 1999-2012 OMH