Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Burial: Kindred EP - Review
Burial
Kindred EP
Rating: Woof Daddy
Though we know a little more about 2-step master Burial, aka Will Bevan, since the release of his landmark album Untrue, he has not been quick to capitalize on his fame and influence by releasing a ton of music. We've only gotten a couple of collaborations with Four Tet and Thom Yorke, and last year's stunning Street Halo EP. And those releases have stuck fairly uniformly with the Burial aesthetic, with minor variations that still seem to evoke the typical Burial sound while still advancing his sound. Scheduled to be released last year, but held up by production issues, Kindred is the latest teaser from Burial. While not a full album of material, indeed, Burial seems less than in a hurry to come out with another full length, Kindred's three tracks, which are longer and denser, take up almost 30 minutes of run time, and, in fact, show a new side to his sound, while still retaining the "Burial" trademarks. While pitch-shifted vocal samples still play a role in Burial's world, the are not the focus here, simply becoming another element in the mix. What is most striking about these tracks, aside from their length (two tracks edge the 12 minutes mark while one is almost 8 minutes), is the density and pure weight of what is going on. Burial's previous work was all about atmosphere, while here, the tracks become all about texture.
Lead and title track "Kindred" is the most "Burial" sounding of the three, retaining the trademark kick and block drum sound, but instead of it being in the front of the mix, it is pushed far in the back, letting the ominously brutal bass line take over, haunting wafts of choral synths hovering in the distance, the vocal sample insistent and choked up. Over the 11+ minutes, Burial brings in an almost symphonic attention to detail and pacing. In fact, the three tracks together almost make up a symphony in their pacing and structure. "Kindred" begins in standard Burial style with angelic synths and blocky beats before the grime and ash take over, the buzzing bass line smearing its gloom over the beats. There is a muscularness here that has been heretofore unseen, instead of feeling like a passive listener, traveling silently through urban streets, you feel like your feet are on the pavement, the danger around you, the clipped vocal samples are either the passers-by around you or the voices in your head. Again, Burial is a master at letting pauses and silences speak volumes. The final movement of the track breaks through the grime and darkness, a lighter synth pattern emerges alongside a more ethereal vocal sample.
Probably most shocking on Kindred is Burial moving on from his trademarked beat plan. Second track "Loner" is akin to Dylan going electric when Bevan moves the track up to 130 BPM. There is a bit of a fake out at first, with the opening bars featuring an almost Eno-esque ambient quality, before Bevan shoves an almost house beat in the mix. The track is quite subtle. Echoing vocal samples, which recall some of the vocals from This Mortal Coil's first record, burst in an out of a dense fog of atmospheric effects, arpeggiated synths rising and falling against a throbbing bass pulse. The drums dropping out occasionally, letting the other layers swirl around until jacking the beats back up again. It is the kind of track that definitely "sounds" like Burial but is also completely unlike him.
But nothing quite prepares you for the tour de force that is the final track, "Ashtray Wasp." Over a brilliant 11:30 minute plus run time, the track takes the listener on a chaotic journey, from fear, danger and loneliness, to a final sense of calm. He trades his blocky beats for a steam pulse with the vocal samples striking a gorgeous chord over the swirling mass of synths. The mid section of the track getting more agitated, the samples becoming more clipped and ambiguous, with Burial even drawing attention back to his work on Untrue with what sounds like a synth sample from that epic work, until the track rights itself again back into the swirling mist. Just when you think the track will continue in slight variations on this theme, the track basically drops out completely and morphs into a delicate piano based number with overlying clipped vocal samples that keep the track askew and haunting. What begins as a trip through hell becomes an arrival in bliss.
Kindred is an amazing continuation of the art that Burial makes. Instead of minute changes, he is going full out with pushing his sound to greater and more deeper meaning. These three tracks stay with you for hours, their pulse and haunting melodies lingering in the blood stream. In the 24 hours I have been listening to this record, my hand keeps reaching back to press repeat. Once these tracks have been ingrained in your body, there is no way to resist their pull.
Rating Scale:
Chilfos: masterpiece; coolest thing I've heard in ages.
Woof Daddy: excellent; just a hair away from being a masterpiece.
Grrrr: very good; will definitely be considered for my top releases of the year.
Yeah Daddy Make Me Want It: good; definitely invites further listens and peaks one's interest for more material.
Meh: not horrible, but certainly not great; could have either been polished, trimmed, or re-thought.
Jeez Lady: what the hell happened? Just plain bad. They should hang their heads in shame and be forced to listen to Lady Gaga ad nauseam as penance.
Tragicistani: so bad, armed villagers with pitchforks and torches should run the artist out of the country for inflicting this abomination on the human race.
Labels:
2 step,
album review,
Burial,
kindred,
Untrue,
woof daddy
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