CEX, live
Village Voice, May 2 - 8, 2001
by Simon Reynolds
Cex,
a/k/a 19-year-old Baltimore-based Rjyan Kidwell, is an infamous figure
in the world of IDM (Intelligent Dance Music). A recent IDM digest
contained an open e-mail to Kidwell and mentor kid606: "Do not
bowdlerize our subculture just so you can finally get your goofy looking
nerd asses laid." Their crime? Bringing too much showmanship to live
performance, which left-field electronica purists believe should be
faceless and abstract. The trouble with the purist line is that IDM,
because it's not dance oriented, can't count on involving the audience
through physical participation; in the absence of visual stimulation, it
runs the risk of lapsing into background ambience.
On
April 23, a kid606-and-friends night at Tonic showcased various
strategies for avoiding the laptop musician's nightmare scenario: that
"all is lost" switch point when the audience chatter gets louder than
the music. kid606 held the listener rapt through sheer density of sonic
events per second (and was helped not a little by Kurt Ralske's
ravishing improvised video projections). Matmos usually incorporate an
eye-catching performance-art element in their sets, but tonight they
simply played tunes from their new plastic-surgery-themed album (A Chance to Cut Is a Chance to Cure) against a backdrop of discomfiting close-up footage: ear canals, eyes, hair follicles, and the like.
Opening
the night, Kidwell took the most radical approach. Instead of playing
what he puts out on record (plaintive, melodious electronica perfectly
suited to the IDM palate), he's got a totally different live set based
around the premise of Cex as "#1 Entertainer in the Game." Naked save
for his fashion briefs, he looks like an emaciated computer programmer
but sounds uncannily like Eminem, his rhymes oscillating wildly from
professions of alpha-male omnipotence ("I know you're stressed/cos
there's only one Cex/and your girlfriend's pissed/cos it's not you") to
touching admissions of terminal dorkhood. Often he's rapping over
purloined grooves (like the Neptunes-produced instrumental track from
Jay-Z's "I Just Want to Love U"), and like a rap CD, he does
between-song skits—like his hilarious fantasy about going to the MTV
Awards "the year minimal techno blew up."
"Representin'
for fun" versus art-techno solemnity, Cex reminded the audience, "You
got booties, let's use 'em," and then vowed to "take your maturity/eat
it up, spit it out" (this accompanied by cartoon-raptor gestures of
devouring/regurgitation). Surprisingly, the audience lapped up Cex's
wiggatronica shtick, avidly participating in call-and-response and
throwing hands in the air on cue. As an in-joke/polemic within the
cloistered IDM context, Cex's Apple Mack Daddy persona is inspired,
although you do wonder how a real rap audience would respond to his
not-exactly-fluent freestyles. Then again, only the sternest purist
(techno or hip-hop) could fail to chuckle at Cex's adapted-for-PC booty
song, which starts by exhorting "Ladeez in the house, get the fellaz in
the house, to take their balls out," then extends its equal-opportunity
agenda to the inanimate: "Objects in the house, get the people in the
house, to take their balls out."
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