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Tuesday, February 27, 2018
Tektonics and hip-house history
Various
Artists
Tektonics
(Om Records)
unpublished review, Spin, 1999? 2000?
At a recent electronica festival I watched
queasily as an English DJ played "Planet Rock" on one turntable,
scratched feebly on the other, hyped the crowd with repeated hollers of
"1, 2, 3, 4, HIT IT!," and then stepped stage-front to perpetrate
some lame breakdancin' and backspinnin'. There is something nausea-inducing
about the way that Eighties hip hop signifiers became white property (in the
form of trip hop and big beat) just a few years after African-Americans moved out and
onward. In a similar (if not so problematic) gentrification syndrome,
turntablizm has codified old school DJ techniques into a black bohemian
virtuoso art, but only when those skillz became near-irrelevant in contemporary
street rap.
Which means there's a weird kind of
sociocultural logic to Tektonics's alliance of mostly African-American
turntablists (Disk, Rob Swift, Craze, J-Rocc) with mostly white Brit old-skool
fetishists (Meat Beat Manifesto, Howie B., Freestylers, Propellerheads). The
results are entertaining but hardly, pardon the pun, earthshaking. Rather than
reverberating like the long-overdue collision of two sonic continental plates that have
been kept unnaturally separate, Tektonics cosily recalls bygone happier days
when hip hop and rave shared small patches of common ground: the late Eighties
DJ collage tracks by Coldcut, M/A/R/R/S, and Bomb the Bass; the mirage/lost
dream that was hip-house (Shut Up And Dance, Blapps Posse, Rebel MC), the
breakbeat-and-incongruous-soundbite tomfoolery of early jungle.
The story of British rave basically is a series
of compulsive attempts to merge house with hip hop, resulting in the sort of
hybrids that rarely happen in the New World but thrive in the U.K. (where
everything is inevitably decontextualized and therefore open to recombinant
mash-up). Not that many of these collaborations achieve anything as seamlessly
organic as a hybrid. Photek meets The Scratch Perverts is more like
superimposition, or even defacement--the glassy surge of the former's
"Water Margin" daubed with scratchadelic scribbles. It's weirdly appropriate
(given that Photek's innovation/crime was to replace jungle's B-boy flava with
techno's frigid neurosis) and, like graffiti on a subway train, it actually
enhances the clinical original.
J-Boogie meets DJ Imperial's
"Brazilelectro" thrillingly renovates the spectral syncussion shiver
of Man Parrish's "Hip Hop BeBop" and T. La Rock's "Breaking
Bells". But elsewhere the mix-illogical sleights and disruptions feel deja
entendu: portentous this-is-a-journey-into-sound type voices (like the smarmy
voiceover from a stereo-testing LP declaring "probably the most
challenging record you have ever put on your turntable" in Wagon Christ/
DJ Rob Swift's "Never Ending Snorkel"); wikky-wikky flurries that
could be from McLaren and the World's Famous Supreme Team's ancient
"Buffalo Gals"; overfamiliar breaks, stabs, horn fanfares, and go-go
percussion loops welded together in ways that advance on West End Mob only in
terms of airless digital precision.
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