samedi 13 novembre 2010

- REVIEW : STUMBLED by IRON CURTIS -





Pour son premier maxi sur Retreat, Iron Curtis reste toujours aussi fidèle à cette sonorité classique mais contemporaine qui l'a fait découvrir au public. Les deux derniers morceaux "Creeps" et "All My Friends" sont plutôt dans le genre dubstep et hip-hop, deux genres qui s'implémentent facilement. On notera surtout le son très particulier de l'horloge dans "Creeps", mais mis à part ceci il faut reconnaître que Curtis a plus d'un tour dans son sac et qu'il n'est plus limité à la house.

Ses nombreuses excursions a Chicago le mettent à contribution dans ses productions. "Cover Me" est un très bon morceau deep house: les basses semblent sortir des abysses alors que les paroles nous envoient tout droit au-delà de la période musicale de personnalités comme Joy Orbison et James Blake. Cette douceur musicale vêt un autre aspect sur "Stumbled Across" où les sonorités d'une TR-808 et des notes de clavier nous poussent à gigoter et sortir de chez nous; l'ensemble des snares, hats et claps (termes techniques, ndr) ne sont pas synchronisés et pourtant le morceau "vit".

En d'autres termes, ce nouvel opus dans la collection des oeuvres d'Iron Curtis nous satisfait amplement, car la qualité s'y attenant nous promet encore de suivre cet artiste talentueux.

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On his first record for Retreat, Iron Curtis issues a caveat that we had all better come up with some alternative to the usual "classic but contemporary" cajolery normally reserved for his work. The b-side tracks "Creeps" and "All My Friends" are loose forays into hip-hop and dubstep-implied sounds respectively, and neither can be said to imitate. They're short sketches that aren't fully-rounded, but they cover enough atypical ground (the Gamelan-sounding bell breakdown on "Creeps" is a particularly nice touch) to suggest that house could eventually become an unnecessarily limiting style-bracket for the German producer.

For now, though, it's still his wormhole transit to Chicago and back again that sets him apart. "Cover Me" is quintessential deep house. The bass sounds as if it's pumped from the gills of some deep-sea creature while vocals chopped-up at chipmunk-pitch carbon date the track to the post-whatever era of people like Joy Orbison and James Blake. It's smooth and suave unlike the spasmodic body-rock of "Stumbled Across" where 808 hits and keyboard stabs seem to hold your hips in a split-second state of anticipation. An ensemble of snares, hats and claps aren't quite in time with one another, and that's the treat: it feels live. Classic and contemporary it might well be, but it's also surprising and satisfying, qualities that Iron Curtis seems to convey more and more with each release.


Iron Curtis - Stranded (Cut) by Iron Curtis

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