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Kode 9 : Rinse 22

It”s not hard to imagine some of these complacent and conformist tunes blaring from car radios or being played in clothes shops this summer

A picture of Rinse: 22

[dropcap style=”font-size:100px; color:#992211;”]K[/dropcap]ode 9, founder of the Hyperdub label and respected producer is a key figure associated with the development of dubstep and related micro-genres.

Steve Goodman is a lecturer in Music Culture at the University of East London. Kode 9 is probably more well-known than Steve Goodman, but the two are one and the same. As Kode 9 he’s produced some subtle and atmospheric work and so it didn’t seem unreasonable to have high expectations of this release, which would surely be an interesting overview of cutting edge sounds from the post-dubstep scene.

[quote]something’s amiss

when you already

have to skip

forward during the

short third track

in the hope of

finding something

more interesting[/quote]

It’s clear from the first track by the major player Burial, that the mood of the mix is going to be light, which might be fine if it only meant light of touch, or light in atmosphere but it turns out to be conceptually and artistically light (to put it mildly). Burial’s track ‘Truant’ is funkier than many Burial tracks, just as Kode 9’s own track here is much funkier than some of his productions.

The mixing style is fairly rapid, with many tracks only being heard for a short time so you know something’s amiss when you already have to skip forward during the short third track in the hope of finding something more interesting. What unfolds in the course of a mix is a slew of skilfully produced but often unlistenably kitschy and sugary tracks that are sometimes unbearable if you don’t have a very sweet sonic tooth.

By now it ought to be clear from the history of electronic music that very often trying consciously to be soulful results in a sterile soullessnes. No matter how well-produced this stuff is, it’s almost defiantly corporate and affirmative, where it is innovative it’s in the most clincal and (ironically for a compilation that tries so hard to be soulful), soulless way.

Rinse has the apperance of a corporate, lifestyle brand, but what makes the selection here so disappointing is that if you check Rinse’s youtube channel there are more interesting and abstract tracks that would have been more inspiring than the scrappy, inconsistent offerings here.

[quote]sleazy, unimaginative

and totally conformist

lifestyle muzak of

the worst kind[/quote]

The mode of mixing means that if you’re not in the mood or don’t have a taste for lighter tracks you have to wait around for the brief 50 seconds here and there where things get more interesting. The skilfully arranged string loop on RP Boo‘s ‘Steamidity’ is one of these moments, followed by Boo’s fast, minimal track ‘Red Hot’, but by this point in the mix it’s almost the case that anything that isn’t entirely saccharine seems like a masterpiece.

We get a tantalising minute or so of DVA‘s poorly-named but impressive ‘Chilli Burrito’ leading in to Champion‘s ‘Friday 13th’, one of several bleepy tracks that at least re-introduces some energy.
Kode 9’s own track, the poetically-titled ‘Uh’, recalls the bleep techno of Sweet Exorcist and has a strong linear drive and a deft arrangement over which it seems either populist or careless to place a sample of someone saying… ‘Uh’.

The following tracks by Kuedo and Visionist are more ambient but try to keep at bay the kitsch and populist tendencies that tend to dominate most of this compilation. We get a brief snippet of The Bug feat. Flow Dan‘s swaggering, angry ‘Burciaga’, which seems wholly out of place, but introduces some real tension and is one of the few tracks that seems worth following up if you’re in the market for innovation rather than regression.

Dexplicit‘s ‘Wave Machine’ is a much more heavy duty proposition, but again present in tantalisingly brief form as a prelude to yet another descent into commercialism, stunningly obvious vocal snippets, rejected pirate radio jingles and attention-deficit sampling.

The final eight tracks are more or less unlistenable – sleazy, unimaginative and totally conformist lifestyle muzak of the worst kind, as so much of this mix is. If mixes often serve to showcase interesting tracks you’ll want to follow up later, this mix serves as a kind of public health warning of tracks to be avoided.

It”s not hard to imagine some of these complacent and conformist tunesA picture of Rinse: 22 blaring from car radios or being played in clothes shops this summer and arguably Goodman is actively contributing to noise pollution by popularising them further. Unfortunately, it’s not so easy for the listener to un-hear the most insidiously earworm-ish of the tracks here.

As Goodman puts it in his interesting and important theoretical book Sonic Warfare – “Pre-emptive power therefore invests in the contagious virtual residue of memory. The sonic mnemotechnics of capitalism modulate future desire by activating the future in the present.

Based on this evidence, he seems to have learned the lessons of corporate sonic branding and mood manipulation all too well and decided to see if he can put them into practice. There are parallels here with the process of normalisation drum and bass underwent in the mid 1990s, when producers chose to move away from the hard beats and machine textures and try and recover (or clumsily inject) some soul. Based on this evidence, Goodman has decided to follow the lucrative but soulfully soulless path of jazz-sampling drum and bass producers such as LTJ Bukem.

To put it in the Deleuzian terms he uses in his theoretical work, Rinse 22 seems like a moment of re-territorialisation – a point when the de-territorialising flows of the underground are frozen and incorporated. In the classic Deleuzian scenario, this is usually a process done to rather than done by an agent, but Goodman delivers re-territorialisation from within, doing his best to normalise and regulate and to conform to and champion the wider (and admittedly inevitable) process of commercialisation and sterilisation that marks our culture.

[button link=”http://rinse.fm/releases/rinse22/” newwindow=”yes”] Rinse: 22 Website[/button]

 

 

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8 Replies to “Kode 9 : Rinse 22”

  1. Paste E says:

    What on earth are you on about ?
    LTJ Bukem
    calling footwork conformist lifestyle muzak
    hardly

  2. F. Alexander says:

    Here mate, bit of advice for ya: never write about electronic music ever again.

  3. NAILED IT BRO

  4. ujjijjju says:

    stick to writing about Laibach lol

  5. Alexei Monroe says:

    Well, “mate”, you’re right of course. I’ve been writing about electronic music on and off since the late 90s, but now I see the error of my ways. Failing to appreciate this mix (or footwork) is clearly a sign I should go off and commit critical Hara-Kiri.

    Seriously though, I specifically requested to review this CD as I find his theoretical work interesting and I’ve liked some of his releases (as well as liking Laibach!). He has the right to go off in a new direction and I have the right to respond.

    Also, the most enthusiastic review I’ve seen of it so far gives it 3.5/5.

    http://www.residentadvisor.net/review-view.aspx?id=12957

  6. ujjijju says:

    writing about electronic music for x amount of years doesn’t qualify anything. Rather, it explains your grossly outmoded frameworks for ascertaining of authenticity (in the sense of commerce v artistry, innovation/expression vs lifestyle ‘muzak’). If you think ‘soul’-influenced (read, black) chicago footwork is hollow lifestyle muzak, you need to step out of the electronic music writing arena. Your 90s german EBM expectation set is absurdly out of time & place here.

  7. Alexei Monroe says:

    Now I see where you’re coming from, that’s useful and interesting. You may be right to say that I’m not best qualified to discuss footwork, but I honestly don’t find anything significant or innovative in what I heard on this mix. I could simply reverse what you’ve said and say that if you don’t appreciate “90s german EBM expectation set” (sic) then you need to stop commenting on electronic music, but that would be equally absurd.

    EBM was my main focus in the late 80s when it was one of the most radical sectors in electronic music but it was soon surpassed. I’ve always preferred Dutch and English to German EBM and paid very little attention to it in the 90s, I was too busy listening to techno, electronica, the harder end of drum and bass, some trance and gabber and the darker end of abstract hip-hop (Wordsound etc.) I also find quite a lot of dubstep interesting, and this is why I was curious about this. There are many of my generation and with my EBM tastes who’ve followed many of the twists and turns of electronic music since then and will continue to do so and to comment on it. Thanks for the discussion and the chance to clear up a few things.

  8. Trust Review says:

    Hi there my children participant! I must declare that this particular blog post is awesome, wonderful written and are available with close to virtually all considerable infos. I have to observe further threads in this way .

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