AFX
http://www.rephlex.com
styles: techno, ambient electronica
others : Aphex Twin, Autechre, Brian Eno, Venetian Snares
Chosen
Lords
Rephlex, 2006
rating: 4/5
reviewer: split foster
Last year was a frustrating one for me as an Aphex Twin fan. Each month I
read reviews of his ongoing Analord series, a set of 11 singles released
only on vinyl. Hungry as I was to hear new stuff from Mr. James, my wallet
could not support the weighty demands of the Analord deluge. Thankfully,
James has realized that both he and his fans could profit from a release of
some of the new material in a more economical format. Thus, we have
Chosen Lords, a 10-track CD culled from the 41 cuts that comprise the
Analord vinyls.
The disc seems to be an exploration of James' own personae, dating back to
his ambient work of the '80s. With a fistful of monikers and nearly two
decades of top-flight productivity, Aphex's own backstory provides plenty of
source material for new songs (viz. the work of the myriad artists he has
influenced). Chosen Lords strides at a bratty midtempo clip,
seasoning the crystalline beauty of Ambient Works 85-92 with liberal
dashes of The Richard D. James Album's spastic genius. It's a
self-reflective project with songs that tunnel into themselves, cycling
through the various formulas that Aphex has deployed with such success over
the years. Here James rearranges his signature components -- tight, frenetic
drumming; transmogrified vocals; acid-bathed synths -- in an aural
three-card monte: constant movement belies an underlying sameness from track
to track.
The retrospective feel of the record comes in part from the age of the
analogue equipment. The vintage gear and homemade machines create both
elysian backgrounds and clenched arpeggios that bind each other in
barbed-wire knots. Voices and melodies sound squelched and scorched; they
vibrate with crackling anxiety as they invade each other's space. The drums
are speedy and acrobatic but never sprint fast enough to create his
trademark breakcore buzz -- the vintage hiss of the hi-hat and snare remain
audible throughout.
Although each track reflects James' sinister élan, the record's ending
impresses much more than its beginning. The last three tracks bear the mark
of attempts at originality and freshness, while the others seem more like
reconfigurations of past ideas. "Cilonen" lets a stocky bassline dominate,
while ascendant synths exhale and scattered errata zip in and out of the
slits between. "PWSteal.Ldpinch.D" is a direct nod to house with a steady
bass and hi-hat motoring beneath an antiseptic melody that's dull one second
and blinding the next, like brushed stainless steel. The last track is the
best thanks to James' canny juxtaposition of non-electronic instruments and
the omnipresent synths. The song opens with what could be church bells
(Chosen Lords), but its sonorous chimes morph pianoid and give way to
the surprising entry of shakers and serrated synths which lend a malignant
air far removed from the emotional stability of the record's first half. The
contrasts here are the key: the shaker sounds so present against that
synth -- dark and imaginary as phosphenes. The first nine cuts attest to
AFX's mastery of The Techno Song; by contrast, "XMD5A" inclines toward
electronic composition in its spacious seven-and-a-half minutes.
In sum, I'm quite happy to have this record, although I know it is far from
the most inventive of James' career. Rather than slashing and burning
through new territory, Chosen Lords merits attention as a charismatic
history chronicling the evolution of James' musical identities. For me, one
CD of such material is just right; it's an affordable reminder of the
singular talent that drew me to Aphex Twin in the first place.
1. Fenix Funk5
2. Reunion 2
3. Pitcard
4. Crying in Your Face
5. Klopjob
6. Boxing Day
7. Batine Acid
8. Cilonen
9. PWSteal.Ldpinch.D
10. XMD5A

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