Rewind: Anno Stamm on “Complexification”

Posted: August 1st, 2016 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

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In discussion with Anno Stamm on “Complexification” by T Power (1996)

I assume you were familiar with Drum & Bass artists before this record came out. How did you first encounter „Complexification“?

It was a vinyl that my older brother had bought. At that time I was not going to the record stores by myself, so my older brother was basically my record store. When I came home earlier from school, I would go through his record collection and then record the vinyls that I liked the most to a cassette with the Hi-Fi tower from my father. This was always very “James Bond” like, because touching my brothers vinyls and touching the Hi-Fi tower from my father were two major offenses, which would turn out really ugly if one of them would have caught me.

Why did you choose this particular track, the b-side to „Symbiosis“, and not another classic of that era, or even a different track by T Power, like his much better known „Mutant Jazz“ for example?

For me this song stands out in many ways and I think even for T Power this song is outstanding and unique. You are rather out of your mind when you produce such a song, or you are in an extremely clear state of mind. It is a song which breaks so many rules but still manages to be simply breathtakingly beautiful. That is a goal that I admire very much in making art.

Is Marc Royal aka T Power a producer you rate particularly high in Drum & Bass history?

I must admit that I reduce T Power pretty much to that one song. I like his general sense for sound and chords but I am not really an expert on his complete musical back catalogue.

„Complexification“ is not necessarily a typical Drum & Bass track. It is much slower, and it is working with Jazz leanings in the synth and bass sounds, while the beats and groove are hinting more to the sound West London’s Broken Beat scene. But does „Complexification“ transcend musical folder categorization, or does it even have to belong to a certain context?

I chose this track because for me it is a good example for “beyond genre”. This song is perfect in every way. It is idiosyncratic and lives in its own cosmos. There are no genres in that cosmos. Sometimes that is the problem with genres. You get into a routine because there are rules, schemes, patterns and templates you work in. You get lazy in terms of decision making. This song is not lazy at all. Every note is in its exact right place but it feels like it really started out with a tabula rasa thinking – everything can happen.

Do you like both, Drum & Bass and Broken Beats, and do you treat them differently, or do they come from the same origin?

In terms of “Drum & Bass” I started with the “Jungle” phase, because as you might know I am a big sucker for the drums, especially if there are played by the devil himself. That is why I really was into that fast, wild, raw and breaky material. Actually when it was called “Drum & Bass”, that whole thing was nearly over for me. Because all the wildness basically turned into one sterile
drum-loop… with saxophone samples. There was a big shift from the rhythmic energy to a generally more chilled background music approach. So, I think they may come from the same origin – but I would treat them very differently.

There are other fine examples where Jazz elements were integrated to the sound palette of Drum & Bass. Are you interested in Jazz, and how it can be worked into other music?

When there was the trend to just sample something smooth and jazzy over a fast drum loop, that was not very interesting for me. Sampling some “blue notes” doesn’t make you a “jazz cat”. For me and most of the people Jazz is about expressing yourself through playing an instrument, and also pushing the boundaries of that instrument. So, you have to have a plan if you want to achieve that purely with software. Squarepusher’s “Hard Normal Daddy” is a good example from that time, how an electronic version of Jazz may work. He brought the real instrument into the software world in a very smart and respectful way. But in terms of Jazz is about pushing boundaries of an instrument, then one must say that in that days there were a lot of other electronic composers who would
deserve it much more to be called “Jazz Cats”. Read the rest of this entry »


Finn Johannsen – Uncanny Valley Podcast 040.2

Posted: March 26th, 2016 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , , , , | No Comments »

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Strict Face – Alice

Mssingno – Brandy Flip

Myth – Lonely

Okmalumkoolkat – Allblackblackkat

Lamont – Pondering

Acre – Blood Artist

Cooly G – Landscapes

Kelela – All The Way Down

Kuedo – Mtzpn

NxxxxxS – Adventure Time

Rabit & Myth – Lonely Backseat Love

Wen Feat. Riko Dan – Play Your Corner (Kahn & Neek Remix)

Akka – Eye Of Zohra

Tala – Alchemy

Fang Lilies – Color Crop

Ikonika – Praxis

d’Eon – Foxconn II

Grown Folk x Main Attrakionz – I.C.E.

J.G. Biberkopf – Weakness

Sharp Veins – The Seeing Palm

Cid Rim – Charge

Darkstar – Aidy’s Girl Is A Computer

Myth – Evaporate

Surgeon – Golden

Anstam – I Stopped Counting

Burial – Come Down To Us

J.G. Biberkopf – Spirit

Mssingno – Skeezers

Starkey – New Cities

Starkey – Ok Luv (Instrumental)

S-X – Woooo Riddim

Guido – Flow (Instrumental Version)

Damu – Ridin

813 – The Whaler

Torus – U R

The Art Of Noise – Moments In Love (Beaten)

The Art Of Noise – Moments In Love

The Art Of Noise – Moments In Love (Caspa Remix)

Mr. Mitch – It Might Be

Sharp Veins – Water Logged

Cas – Drugs Don’t Work


Finn Johannsen – Strictly Vinyl Podcast 011

Posted: November 25th, 2013 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , | 1 Comment »

UK Bass Special for Strictly Vinyl podcast, now defunct.

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Alan Johnson – Goron Sound
BD1982 – Clear Walls
Brunks – Taiko
Hodge – Prototype Fear
Alex Coulton – Function
DVA – Step 2 Funk
Mark Pritchard – 1234
Aethority – Get Busy
Falty DL – Hip Love
Vibezin – A Little Higher
Mau’lin – Arriver
Goldffinch – Model (Femme En Fourrure Remix)
Rekord 61 – Pereval (Anstam Remix)
Akkord – Compound
Harvey Jenkins – Steelo
Lords Of Midnite – We Gonna Ride Tonite
Distal – 25 Automatic
Hodge – Pressure
Jono McCleery – Ballade (Djrum Remix)
Morcee – Black Hole


@ Kino im Elektroakustischen Salon

Posted: November 25th, 2013 | Author: | Filed under: Gigs | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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