http://www.myspace.com/berndfriedman
Origine du Groupe : Germany
Style : Electro Dub
Sortie : 2003
By Colin Buttimer From http://www.bbc.co.uk
Clipped. Funked. "F*** Back". Can't Cool. Monosyllabic. Not quite sensical. Everything shorn, smoothed, streamlined into a form that narrowly resists apprehension. After so many years. People
stop. They f*** back. Instruments swim along in the slipstream. Inimitable Friedman. This is the sound of a sleek new car cutting you up and leaving you way behind in a trail of anger and
dust.
"This one's dedicated to the children of love... the children of God..." Abi's impassioned delivery on "Fly Your Kite" lies uncomfortably across synthetic, over-compressed beats. Dub rises to the
surface on "Paternoster": vocals echo and break apart, only to return reassembled into new shapes. Funk, breakbeat, dub and now a new shape, messy and unpredictable, never knowing whether the
beat will rocksteady out or break up in static...
"Gets Things Strait" lays vocals from Patrice Bart-Williams over and around the reprised melody of a Flanger track which ultimately feels like an entirely new creation. "Looks like the whole
world is falling apart, a small scratch to remind you of the next track." The revisit gets revisited later in a dub version which brings everything together into a rickety, wheezing
falling-apartness.
His Name Is Alive join Friedman on the eighth track "Someday My Blues Will Cover the Earth" which signals the end of the vocal element of the album. Four instrumentals bring up the rear leaving a
strange impression after the expressiveness of the singers - like when a band carries on playing after their vocalist has taken a bow and left the stage.
"Consider A Bigger Wallet" is an instrumental version of "Fly Your Kite".Minus the vocals it's clear how melodic the track (and by extension the whole album) is. There's a moment when the
breakbeat rhythm seamlessly eases into reggae before almost immediately returning to the plucked, strummed, echoing, horn-sectioned whole, and you realise how rich this sound is, how detailed and
how effortless sounding. What seemed initially to be straightahead and smooth is revealed to be complex, detailed and a real work of art(ifice?)
Burnt Friedman appears to have put aside his penchant for shapeshifting games and jazz, but perhaps it's still lurking there deep down under the mellifluous tones and guest vocals. Can't Cool is
a heavier, more richly melodic sound than his previous music.
After a long silence a voice intones, "44 degrees Centigrade in the shade". Is that Burnt Friedman lurking there in the shadows? Gone. He's a moving target tracing an unpredictable musical
odyssey, impossible to nail down in one place. What will be his next missive from the other side of irony?
Tracklist :
01. Fuck Back (feat. Theo Altenberg)
02. Fly Your Kite (feat. Abi)
03. Pater Noster (feat. Abi)
04. Dublab Alert (feat. Abi)
05. Life Is Worth Dying For (feat. Patrice)
06. Get Things Strait (feat. Patrice)
07. Real Abstraction (feat. Abi)
08. Someday My Blues Will Cover The Earth (feat. His Name Is Alive)
09. Designer Groove
10. Get Things Strait dub
11. Five Star Group Travel
12. Consider A Bigger Wallet
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