BASEMENT JAXX
"Red Alert/Yo Yo"
"Rendez-Vu/Jump 'N Shout"
director's cut, Village Voice, February 23rd, 1999
by Simon Reynolds
Nobody
exemplifies the promiscuous impurism of late-'90s house music better
than Basement Jaxx, the South London duo of Felix Buxton and Simon
Ratcliffe. On their two recent singles (four A sides + dub versions = an
album's worth of stuff), virtually every track creates a new subgenre.
"Red Alert" is P-Funk house: Bootsy slap-bass, g-funk synth, a chorus of
psychedelic dwarves. Flipside "Yo Yo" has been hailed as "punk garage,"
for the Nirvana/Pixies heft of its fuzzed-out bass riff. But the chorus
reminds me of Jamie Principle's eroto-mystic house classic "Baby Wants
To Ride." If Prince-wannabe Principle had ever got to make his own Sign of The Times, it might have sounded like Basement Jaxx.
On
the most recent single, "Jump 'n Shout" is ragga-house driven by a
flagrant, in-yer-face thug of a bassline and hectic patois patter;
"Rendez-Vu" could be either "flamenco-house" or "The Genre Formerly
Known as House," meshing Castilian guitar flurries, Zapp-style vocoder
ditties, and a lush Prince-like decadence. Where most dance producers
make a virtue of creative thrift, Buxton and Ratcliffe are maximalists:
instead of interminable loops, you get new patterns every couple bars,
sonic singularities, an insanity of detail, and a mix riddled with
dub-wise wormholes. Yet the Basement boys' sonic largesse never
degenerates into eclectic whimsy or that multilayered-but-not-
integrated form of additive composition that undoes so much
computer-based music.
The duo's debut album, due for April
release, reveals even wilder twists to the contours of house as hitherto
known— like "Don't Give Up," a quiet Sturm und Drang ballad of
billowing acid-bass and Scott Walker strings. Remedy looks set to do for
house what Reprazent's New Forms did for jungle in '97— explode the
genre's parameters, and grab the ear of the wider world beyond.
BASEMENT JAXX, interview
The Wire, summer 1999
by Simon ReynoldsWithout
fanfare, house has crept forward to become the leading edge of dance
culture again, like it was over a decade ago. It's managed to sidestep
the grimly purist rut that's ensnared minimal techno and drum and bass ;
rather than getting paranoid about stylistic contamination and
bastardy, late Nineties house is pragmatically open to outside
influence. Slyly, it assimilates rhythmatic and texturological tricks
from overtly experimental forms of electronica, then resituates them in
a juicier pleasure-principled context. As a result, late Nineties
house encompasses a huge range of flavas: Stardust/Roule/Daft Punk-style
disco cut-ups, Herbert's voluptuously textured future-jazz, Green
Velvet's tripped-out story-songs over harsh machinic grid-grooves. And
then there's Basement Jaxx--Felix Buxton and Simon Ratcliffe--whose
music is so promiscuously impurist it should really be dubbed The Genre
Formerly Known As House.
The Jaxx boys' first three EPs were
lumped in with the mid-Nineties wave of "Nu-House," British outfits
such as Faze Action and Idjut Boys. But Buxton & Ratcliffe soon got
fed up with that scene's snobbery and authenticity fetish--the obsession
with reproducing the sound of "Loft classics" (disco productions by
Larry Levan and Francois Kevorkian popular at New York underground clubs
in the 1970s and early Eighties).
"Nu House was good at first,"
says Ratcliffe, "but it quickly became dull and smug--'we know what the
cool records are, we're replicating them, and isn't it groovy?'" Having
rapidly achieved their initial goal--mastering the skills of
contemporary US house auteurs they admired like Masters At Work and Mood
II Swing--Basement Jaxx were hungry for new challenges. "In the
beginning, we were just trying to be house producers," says Ratcliffe.
"Now we're trying *not* to be house producers."
The Genre
Formerly Known As House tag fits because Prince and his balancing act of
identity-through-constant-flux is an aesthetic model for Basement
Jaxx. Their debut album Remedy recalls Sign O' The Times in
its insanely detailed production, compulsive stylistic hybridity, and
warped vocal multitrackings. Above all, it's Prince-ly in its
maximalist-not-minimalist extravagance--ideas that other producers
might spin out for entire tracks occur as sonic singularities,
gratuitous one-offs. "We want you to hear something different each time
you listen," says Ratcliffe. "Hopefully we don't over-confuse people by
putting too many things in. Then again, you want to be slightly baffled
by music, don't you?"
Remedy's most jaw-droppingly
disconcerting moment might be the point in "Same Old Show" where the
listener realises the tune pivots around a sample from "On My Radio" by
ska group The Selector--a short phrase of eerie vocal counterpoint
brilliantly isolated from its perky Two-Tone context and looped to
monstrously mantric effect. A protest against the formulaic homogeneity
of dance music, "Same Old Show" gets it message across as much through
its sound as the "it's just the same old show" sample. "There's a kind
of ugliness to it," decides Ratcliffle. "A lot of the
original Chicago house music was done by people who really weren't that
musical, in the traditional sense. But the wrongness gave it a real
excitement . It's good not to be too safe about being in tune or having
correct timing. 'Same Old Show' isn't about musical cohesion, really--
it's about energy, and oddness."
Waxing lyrical about the scuzz
appeal of Camberwell (where the duo's studio is based) compared with
chic neighbour Brixton, Ratcliffe says the Jaxx are "anti-style... Our
music's saying 'fuck off' to things everyone thinks are cool." In this
Camberwell spirit, the Jaxx put a deliberate record-skipping effect into
"Yo Yo," another Remedy stand-out. Combined with a
simultaneous bassline change, the skip, says Buxton "makes you feel like
everything's slipped. It's great because it's like a *new sensation*.
And that's a bit of our jazz attitude--like Coltrane pushing his
instrument, doing things that initially sounded totally wrong, and it's
only later you realise 'that was music all along''.
Also citing
jazz as an influence, Ratcliffe describes the Jaxx methodology as
"freestyling-- we freestyle in our programming". The duo jam with their
machines to create things like the strobing,
wobbly-fingers-in-your-earhole effect in "Razo-Caine" (a fantastic bonus
track on the recently re-released "Red Alert" single). "With that, I
was playing the samples live on the keyboard and pitchbending them,"
explains Buxton, "Simultaneously Simon's EQing what I'm doing on the
desk, effecting them, and placing them within the track."
Where
Buxton's musical trajectory (digging Gilles Peterson's jazz-dance scene
in the late Eighties, organising his own underground house parties in
Brixton in the early Nineties) is oriented around club culture,
Ratcliffe's background has oscillated wildly--from playing guitar in
jazz-funk bands to making hardcore rave tunes under the name Tic Tac
Toe. Fondly recalling the days when his breakbeat anthem "Ephemeral" got
remixed by Fabio, Grooverider and Mickey Finn, Ratcliffe describes
'ardkore as a positive example of "the technology taking over. And it
was so English--unsophisticated, full of attitude and energy.
They used illegal samples, made vocals so high they sounded
ridiculous--but it worked. It's that same punk spirit that we're trying
to incorporate into our music."
Indeed, Basement Jaxx call what
they do "punk garage". This nicely punning inversion suggests a
spiritual kinship with speed garage--like Jaxx trax, a smooth and sexy
New York sound ruffed up with English attitude. In the awesome "Jump 'N
Shout", Buxton & Ratcliffe managed to create a bolshy, boisterous
ragga-house hybrid that parellels but sounds nothing like speed garage,
while the gorgeous hypersyncopated ballad "You Can't Stop Me" echoes
2step's infatuation with Timbaland-style beat-science. And the
re-released "Red Alert" comes with a remix from two-step auteur Steve
Gurley.
Like London's underground garage crews, Basement Jaxx
brilliantly combine songful musicality and trackhead FX-mania, human
fluency and machinic angularity, high production values and digital
dirt, jazz and punk. In the past, they've swung back and forth on a song
by song basis--from the sultry Latin house of "Samba Magic" and "Fly
Life" to the evil drug-noise of "Raw Sh*t" and "Set Yo Body Free". But
now they're meshing those extremes inside the same track. Take "Don't
Give Up", simultaneously Remedy's most accomplished and most deranged
track--a quiet Sturm und Drang ballad reeling between Scott
Walker strings and nauseously roiling billows of acid-bass. The song's
about how you can dig yourself a deep hole by thinking too deeply: the
chorus beseeches "don't pull the cracks in your mind apart." And it
reflects the trepidation Jaxx felt as they started recording Remedy.
"We
were on this precipice, looking down," recalls Ratcliffe. " We'd talk a
lot about what should we be doing. That song is like us saying 'let's
just get on with it'. So instead of working our way up to it, we did did
the most experimental track first. It was us forgetting about dance
music altogether."
BASEMENT JAXX, Rooty
Spin, summer 2001
by Simon Reynolds
When Basement Jaxx's debut album Remedy
materialized in 1999, dance music had arrived at something of an
impasse. All the outer limits of post-rave music had been reached a few
years earlier. It was hard to see how drum'n'bass could convolute rhythm
any morer without tying dancers limbs in knots; hardcore gabba had
taken concussive beats, distorted noise, and sheer velocity to
life-threatening extremes; minimal techno had anorexically paring itself
down to the brink of non-existence. In the absence of some new
drug-technology synergy, the only way forward appeared to involve
systematic cultivation of undeveloped terrain within these frontiers.
Hence the spate of inbetween-sounds like tech-house, speed garage,
progressive trance, nu-skool breaks, and other hybrids, which convulse
committed clubbers into pro- and anti- factions, but understandably
leave outsiders scratching their heads and wondering what the fuss is
all about.
There was another alternative: frolicing through
dance music's own back pages. And so Daft Punk's brand of "filter disco"
simultaneously harked back to and renovated house's Seventies roots;
big beat slammed Sixties surf music, ska, and garage punk into old skool
hip hop and acid house; others, from Les Rhythmes Digitales to i/F,
rediscovered Eighties electro and synthpop. And it was all great fun,
while not exactly delivering the future-rush and shock-of-the-now that,
say, jungle transmitted in its prime. And then there was Basement Jaxx
with their house-not-house cornucopia that pick'n'mixed freely across
all these options and more. What's great about Simon Ratcliffe and Felix
Buxton's sound is the way they go from cartoon disco like Deelite at
their groovalicious peak to sick drug-noise perfect for humid murky
catacombs; from tunes that resemble Prince's Sign of the Times
if he'd come from Chicago rather than Minneapolis, to samba-house beamed
in from that Brazil-as-utopia that haunts the imagination of many
British dance producers. And yet every track has that special Jaxx
signature.
Like Prince's Paisley Park fantasy, Jaxx-music
conjures the sense of a freakadelic demi-monde you'd just love to
inhabit full-time for real. In that spirit, the queerly titled Rooty
is named in homage to Buxton & Ratcliffe's most recent South London
club. Album opener "Romeo" is so Sheila E you just have to smile, and
"Breakaway" makes me flash on "Baby Wants To Ride" by Jamie Principle, a
long-lost house pioneer with an unhealthy Prince obsession. With its
broken beats and dirty bass, "S.F.M. (Sexy Feline Machine)" is one of
the few tracks here that substantiates a rumored 2step garage direction,
and it's nowhere near as full-on foray into that London
R&B-meets-house style as Remedy's "U Can't Stop Me." So
far, so groovy. But there's a side to Basement Jaxx that's a bit too
ditzy-ditty and quirky-verging-on-twee, and "Jus 1 Kiss", I'm afraid to
say, just makes me think of Wings: intricately ornamented, but as sickly
and unsatisfying as a meringue. "Broken Dreams" also has McCartneyesque
shades of clever-clever craft, but for some reason its confection of
Spanish horns and jaunty bassline makes for a lovely slice of happy-sad.
It's also one of several tracks where a weird effect on the vocal makes
it sound glossy and faded at the same time--sort of like, if plastic
could rust.
Midway through, Rooty takes a timely turn
from silly love songs to dark dirty lust. "I Want U" has the awkward,
angular almost-ugliness of Jaxx's most compelling music, e.g. Remedy's
"Same Old Show". Singer Mandy's exaggerated London accent ("I've bin
finking") recalls UK punkettes like Honey Bane and Hazel O'Connor. "Get
Me Off" is a hot 'n' horny pummel, all panting breath and brooding oozy
bass swelling and ebbing like oily surf after a tanker spill. "Where's
Your Head At" rocks harder still, with a bombastic synth-riff that
recalls Never Mind the Bollocks (but is actually sampled from
Gary Numan's "M.E.") and a jeering thug-chorus that's pure Oi! These
three brutal blasts of headbanger house make for a neat parallel with
Daft Punk's inspired merger of disco and FM soft-rock (ELO, Supertramp,
Frampton, Buggles) on Discovery.
After the monsterfart electro of "Crazy Girl", though, Rooty
rather peters out, with the ill-advised juke-joint Dixieland flavor of
"Do Your Thing", all piano comping and diva scat, and "All I
Know"--winsome, wistful, slight. Despite its many delights, there is a
feeling emanating from Rooty that Basement Jaxx didn't really know how to top Remedy.
When you've made your reputation through impurism and hyphenated
hybrids, you can't really scale back, the only way forward is further
into ever more spectacular and farfetched fusion. And the risk is that
you'll throw so many things into the pot you end up with the sonic
equivalent of that poly-ethnic fusion cuisine so trendy nowadays. Buxton
& Ratcliffe have such impeccable taste that they've mostly avoided
that calamity. But Rooty's sheer brevity, at 43 minutes,
suggests loss of confidence, or even that a number of tracks were pulled
at the last minute owing to last-minute jitters.
If they're
looking for tips, I'd say jettison any remaining Latin influences or
notions of "jazzy" and instead build on the lumpen thump of "I Want
U"/'Get Me Off"/"Where's Your Head At". That glorious sequence adds
weight to the theory that dance music, in the absence of strong
influences from or secret affinities with rock, tends to the pale and
uninteresting. Acid house, after all, got its name because it reminded
co-creator and Sabbath-fan Marshall Jefferson of acid rock. Indeed
whenever purists get worried about dance music going awry they always
raise the specter of "heavy metal house". But everybody knows clubland
cognoscenti got shit for brains.
No comments:
Post a Comment