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Showing content with the highest reputation on 12/04/23 in all areas

  1. Nervasystem Underground Culture Nervasystem – Underground Culture 7:54 Nervasystem – Perpendicular 7:50 Nervasystem With Virtuart & P2C – 3 Amigos 6:11 Nervasystem – Undercurrents 5:00 Nervasystem – Further 6:59 Nervasystem – ZipVelcro (BackTwoFront&InsideOut) 7:15 Nervasystem – Providence Of Fauna 6:20 Nervasystem With Process (2) – Discombobulator 7:29 Voodoo Voltage – VV777 2 x Vinyl, LP, Album, Limited Edition, Numbered UK Released: Jun 17, 2023 This is a difficult review to write. Why? Because I'm at a loss as to how to assess this album or what to say about it. Individual track commentary is almost redundant because the tracks are very similar to each other and none really stands out in any significant way. Nor is the aesthetic or style easily identifiable. Neither is it clearly good, nor obviously bad. I don't know how I feel about it either; I oscillate between thinking "faceless techno bollocks" and wanting to dance to some tracks. I'm not even sure whether this means that I should reassess my assessment criteria or undertake some other meta-cognitive revision. You see my quandary. What I can say is that the recording, mastering, and pressing is of good quality, though nothing exceptional. My copy had slightly dished vinyl and some surface noise towards the end of side 3 in "Zip Velcro", but otherwise was quiet and sounded well. The sleeve art is beautiful and is nicely printed on a very glossy gatefold sleeve. Generally this is a good quality production. I can also give a bit of background. Nervasystem is Mark Dressler from Brighton in England, a Goa veteran who produced some classic Goa tracks from the mid-90s onwards. I have the tracks that were pressed to vinyl and they are all really good, with the awesome track "Stardust" my personal favourite. Nervasystem also collaborated with Alexis Cousins as Nervasystem & Aether and produced 3 eps and an album on the obscure Elektrik Orgasm imprint and those are all also really good (though the mastering was somewhat on the bright side). There are a couple of defining features to these early 12" releases that are worth noting: from the start the beats were quite technoid and linear, though there could be breaky percussion, and indeed metallic percussion with great cymbal and hi-hat work was always prominent, with heavy 303 use. There was also a touch of industrial darkness in these releases, which were definitely not wave yer mitts in the air uplifting or positive. There was something grinding and hard about these tunes, tunes I grew to love. This tuff aspect has stayed constant throughout Nervasystem's by now storied career. Nervasystem's first album was only released on cd in 2002, 13 Amp Fusion, and is excellent. I don't know all the intervening albums so well, but 2013's Time Travel and 2016's Brainradio were also good. By this point Nervasystem had moved on from his earlier more Goa sound, creating even more technoish and linear tracks without much 303 use or percussive dynamism. Instead, they feature nice rhythm and subtle itchy twitchy noises and textures that are very or vaguely psychedelic. This latter is absolutely true of this latest album Underground Culture. This album is somewhere between trance and techno, with a linear rhythm section avoiding climaxes or build-ups and come-downs, zero galloping horse or machine gun one note bass, little by way of obvious melody, hardly any samples. This is anonymous music with little for the listener to latch onto, and that is its big strength and weakness. Anonymity. Due to this anonymous linearity the tracks do come off as sketchy, incomplete, not fully developed. I think that perhaps the most developed one is the last track "Discombobulator" with Sean Williams of Process (probably the best track on the album for me). So the album is danceable and most enjoyable, in an anonymous kind of way. I can try to sum up how I feel by saying that almost every track here seemed like it could carry on and develop further and would have been a great track if it had done so. In a word: unfinished. As you can no doubt tell, this has been a difficult review to write. I like this album, but it seems unfinished. It seems clear to me that Nervasystem can improve by taking more chances, being more experimental, embracing melody, and ensuring that tracks are fully developed. Maybe the next album will be a classic? ~*~
    1 point
  2. Amen 😂 80% of originals are better than new remasters. BTW antonomasia is an underrated track. I like it more than most of pleiadians tracks. The Auracle version sounds so much better than the dat records version. Hard to even compare.
    1 point
  3. Source was same (sh*t), isn't it? Re-issue just louder (as always), and mastered by Tim Schuldt which is guarantee of quality loss Auracle still a better choice
    1 point
  4. I have a new retrospective mix out now! This one covers the chaotic energy at the turn of the millennium, as the golden age of Goa trance was subsumed beneath the minimal wave, and we witnessed the first hints of what would evolve into darkpsy, forest, and full-on vault onto the world stage. 32 tracks, nearly 3 hours in length, and all smoothly mixed from carefully chosen source material. You'll know most of the names, if not the tracks themselves; Noma, Yumade, Parasense, Bypass Unit, Tim Schuldt, Logic Bomb, Children of Paradise, Shakta, Chi-A.D., Astral Projection, Blue Planet Corporation, and many more... Full track listing and other details can be found on my site: https://djbasilisk.com/mixes/transmissions-from-meropis/
    1 point
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