ricardo villalobos

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my mind will, more often than not, change 180 from initial impression, so i was trying get some insight into what sucks in order to brace for any possible future letdown of my own. and curious in general about others thoughts just to see how they piece stuff together. i understand frustration with how much people allow themselves to worry about others opinions, but worrying about others worrying about it when you know it will always be that way - too much wasted energy. and if you make music your stance then you can feel you're being a hypocrite any time there is a conflict. i don't know how the inverse of that is critical either.

Susan Douglas (Susan Douglas), Monday, 20 March 2006 22:24 (eighteen years ago) link

I think, simply put, The Au'Harem is just a lot less obviously melodic than Alcachofa or the new EP.

Also I think the song order doesn't help. After the first track there's several tracks in a row of very minimal four-to-the-floor stuff with very subtle rhythmic shadings. It only really breaks out again on "Miami" and "True To Myself", which perhaps a lot of listeners don't hang around for.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 00:11 (eighteen years ago) link

I love the way "true to myself" insinuates its way into your brain and then far into the track, when you least expect it, you're confronted with the dreaded piano! And you can't help but enjoy it.

jimnaseum (jimnaseum), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 00:29 (eighteen years ago) link

somebody just posted que belle epoque to the ysi thread. parts of it sound a lot like steve reich - at times like the less percussive moments of music for 18 musicians and at other times like the faster pieces in tehillim. i wish more producers would work with those textures outside of that silly 'reich remixed' set.

lf (lfam), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 00:52 (eighteen years ago) link

True to Myself is great

some of the other ones are good but there's not much about them to latch on to .... you couldn't even say "the one with the fizzing sprinkler noise" or "the one with glisteny Orbital IDM chimes" like you can with Achso

Renard (Renard), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 00:55 (eighteen years ago) link

(somewhat related xxpost) -i find myself at odds sometimes with how subliminal it is.

Susan Douglas (Susan Douglas), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 01:24 (eighteen years ago) link

somebody just posted que belle epoque to the ysi thread.

Could someone point me to this please?

Good Dog (Good Dog), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 05:19 (eighteen years ago) link

hmm - i guess i got it from here: http://ohmygoshparty.blogspot.com/

lf (lfam), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 06:40 (eighteen years ago) link

have you heard the b-side on that que belle epoque 12", 'lazer@present'? it's startlingly straightforward!

geeta (geeta), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 07:52 (eighteen years ago) link

I'm slightly confused about que belle epoque. I assume this record is being referred to at the start of this thread as the 'insanely happy beach elf' record. How is this new 2006 12" different from the other one then?

The track 'que belle epoque 2006' is a remix right? So is 'lazer@present' also different from the original?

Michael Dieter (Mika), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 08:55 (eighteen years ago) link

no, lazer@present is the same as the original issue

a, Tuesday, 21 March 2006 09:20 (eighteen years ago) link

that darnielle quote is awesome. it's pretty dumb to attack people for changing their minds about stuff which they've clearly thought hard about - as i get older, i find that revisiting old opinions/thinking about things for years is one of the most rewarding things one can do.

anyway, without looking up old threads/reviews, i think au'harem has proved to be a real grower for lots of people - certainly for me "hierklon" was the only thing that stood out at first, but now it's one of my favourite albums of the last few years.

also, i feel like "miami" offers lots of possibilities that no-one else has explored, although i'm not really sure how to make that statement more precise.

re villalobos and autechre - i've had that comparison in my mind for a long time (maybe back to au'harem?), but less in the sense of the actual sound and more in the relationship to their peers - e.g. au'harem to the other microhouse i was listening to was somehow like mid/late 90s autechre were to other idm. but possibly this just shows how shallowly i engaged with these genres! i definitely disagree with this trend to single out villalobos as the only innovator in town, but i do think that he was an eye-opener for a lot of people (esp with au'harem).

what else? oh, i've taken ketamine, but only by accident, and i din't find it worked that well with this kinda music (or indeed sound full stop). these days i find that this stuff's best listened to on sleeping pills - stay up really late until your super tired, then take some sleeping pills, stick au'harem on repeat on your headphones and drift off into the warmth...

toby (tsg20), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 13:28 (eighteen years ago) link

oh, and i'm sure i've said this half a dozen times before on ilm, but the vinyl version of au'harem is key - among other things it has a 5min longer version of hierklon with loads more stuff going on.

toby (tsg20), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 13:29 (eighteen years ago) link

the bass on Serpentin is really deep and shifts around all over the place ....

Renard (Renard), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 15:23 (eighteen years ago) link

au harem is still a weird one for me because it's yet to really open up to me but i keep pulling it out once a month or so and giving a few good, hard spins. ("hierklon" and "miami" excepted.)

strongo hulkington is a guy with a belly button piercing (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 17:40 (eighteen years ago) link

p.s. something being "a slog" doesn't mean it's not also interesting. i found alcachofa a slog too at first. (in the wrong mood "easy lee" can still really irritate me, in others it's a work of genius. mea culpa.)

strongo hulkington is a guy with a belly button piercing (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 17:44 (eighteen years ago) link

excepted because they've already opened up, or because you skip them?

mike h. (mike h.), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 17:45 (eighteen years ago) link

well "hierklon" was the only thing that stood out from the first listen on (i still think it might be his best track) and "miami" opened up when i began mixing it up with other stuff (sometimes actually mixing it -- it usually doesn't work, cf. my aborted blend into/out of "plastic dreams" -- or just placing it next to other tracks in mixes.)

strongo hulkington is a guy with a belly button piercing (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 17:53 (eighteen years ago) link

so i guess i should start doing the same with the other tracks but there's only so much time in a day.

strongo hulkington is a guy with a belly button piercing (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 17:55 (eighteen years ago) link

re: easy lee--i feel like I know what others hear in easy lee/can see how its possibly genius but for some reason fails for me about 90% of the time. some sort of rockist issue maybe (will explain later if anyone cares to hear).

Susan Douglas (Susan Douglas), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 18:04 (eighteen years ago) link

but villalobos productions makes me feel queasy most of the time (not in a good way) when he's on he's on though. I love easy lee.

i had a jazz guy slamming his beer on the table telling me that villalobos was "such shit. not even music. djing is not even playing music..." the other day.

Something about him interests/annoys/intrigues people who don't follow dance music so closely?

Good Dog (Good Dog), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 18:11 (eighteen years ago) link

i can see how he'd particularly annoy a jazz guy.

Susan Douglas (Susan Douglas), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 18:16 (eighteen years ago) link

Villalobos is one of those artists who's great in 30-40 minute doses. Once past 40 minutes or so, I find that I hit a wall and he starts feeling too moody, bland, and repetitive. "Achso" is nearly flawless, but I wouldn't have wanted another two tracks/25 minutes worth of it.

NoTimeBeforeTime (Barry Bruner), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 18:24 (eighteen years ago) link

i think the most "k-hole" type track he's done in the last year is that mix of 'let we go' for rhythm and sound. that really did bring back some, er, interesting memories, ha. the way you feel like you're falling, the way you feel like everything you're seeing is being fed through a delay pedal, the inexplicable sounds ping-ponging out of nowhere...it's all in there.

geeta (geeta), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 18:51 (eighteen years ago) link

actually if someone could post a YSI of the vinyl version of "Hireklon" it would be nice.

although mp3s never do justice to the low end of vinyl records...

Raffles: Gentleman Thug (Raffles: The Gentleman Thug), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 19:45 (eighteen years ago) link

jazz heads don't like it from my experience, but kids into classical music composition are totally riffing on shit like this. it's kind of nice.

trees (treesessplode), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 19:49 (eighteen years ago) link

i keep pulling it out once a month or so and giving a few good, hard spins. ("hierklon" and "miami" excepted.)

ha, i totally misread that at first and was bewildererd as to how you found everything else more accessible.

i can see how he'd particularly annoy a jazz guy.

really? pretty much all i listen to these days is villalobos-style stuff and jazz, so i find that rather odd.

"let we go" is totally k-hole, yes. it's tracks like that and i guess also that mathew jonson/the mole speicher effort that make me want to learn to use ableton and make huge 5 hour mixes (or maybe even just edits) to do pure maths to/listen to when really tired.

toby (tsg20), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 19:53 (eighteen years ago) link

i'm surprised jazz heads don't get it, really. unless it's because they're close-minded.

Villalobos reminds me of Miles Davis and Sun Ra though.

Raffles: Gentleman Thug (Raffles: The Gentleman Thug), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 19:53 (eighteen years ago) link

oh, thinking of maths (and i know there are dozens of dull threads on ilm (and maybe some good ones too)), does anyone else find that this stuff is the best music to work to ever ever ever?

toby (tsg20), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 19:54 (eighteen years ago) link

so i guess i should start doing the same with the other tracks but there's only so much time in a day.

indeed - i'm sure it only feels like this thread is linking in with loads of others, either real or imagined, but i think this music does raise the issue of there only being so many things that one can spend time and effort gaining an understanding/appreciation of, and it wasn't clear at first that au'harem was one of the things that i wanted to take that effort with; but having done so, i've automatically done the same with other villalobos releases (eg chromosoul, which doesn't seem to get mentioned much round here). i'm sure there are tonnes of other minimal-related things that i'd appreciate if i made the same effort with them.

toby (tsg20), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 20:07 (eighteen years ago) link

re: jazz dicks --they're being somewhat close-minded, he's being a little too open-minded.

Susan Douglas (Susan Douglas), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 20:09 (eighteen years ago) link

i have the same sort of reaction to chromosul as i do to the au harem, but i dont listen to it nearly as often.

strongo hulkington is a guy with a belly button piercing (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 20:37 (eighteen years ago) link

i guess one of the reasons i make such a big play of villalobos' "genius" - even with all the problems his records give me - is that i can't imagine us talking/arguing about booka shade like this.

strongo hulkington is a guy with a belly button piercing (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 20:40 (eighteen years ago) link

right, exactly.

all of this has just reminded me of this:

geeta in london nov 27-dec 2: FAP? (Little Duke, Roger St, Clerkenwell, 29/11)

i strongly suspect that i'll never know what that 7am record was, or if i've heard it since. this still bothers me sometimes.

toby (tsg20), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 20:50 (eighteen years ago) link

aaah that 7 am record! i remember exactly the one you're talking about!

geeta (geeta), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 21:22 (eighteen years ago) link

christ man, between villalobos and that guy with the nurse with wound list download blog, my poor brain will ever be the same again

geeta (geeta), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 21:23 (eighteen years ago) link

for some reason that 7am record is making me think of ice cream... i presume you have no idea what it was?

toby (tsg20), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 21:43 (eighteen years ago) link

no idea. haha, the next time i go to berlin, i'll ask mr. villalobos. 'yo dude, what's that track you like to play that has like the odd twittering sounds and the music-box chimes and the ringing bells...sounds a bit like an ice-cream truck from the m-42 nebula...'

geeta (geeta), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 22:02 (eighteen years ago) link

the word genius should be very sparingly applied. i think you can can go a whole decade of music without one, and its probably best awarded retrospectively.

we can pay credit to ricardo's endurance though. the guy is almost undoubtedly the worlds best when it comes to playing at a messed up afterhours looking like a sweat-soaked casualty of gurn.

rchinn (rchinn), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 22:08 (eighteen years ago) link

"nurse with wound list download blog"

Debris "Static Disposal"!! omg. I wonder if that guy will start the site back up, no new ones since February ....

sorry, back to Ricardo ....

Renard (Renard), Tuesday, 21 March 2006 22:12 (eighteen years ago) link

'i guess one of the reasons i make such a big play of villalobos' "genius" - even with all the problems his records give me - is that i can't imagine us talking/arguing about booka shade like this. "

I think this is correct but I think this has more to do with the way in which "we" tend to talk about dance music and experimentalism and etc than the quality of the music - not that this delegitimates the claim.

That was the point of my mammoth post on dissensus comparing the two - I actually find both equally exciting but, rightly or wrongly, villalobos is exciting in ways that make many people (critics esp) grope for the word "genius" rather than, I dunno, "hot shit" or something.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Wednesday, 22 March 2006 06:32 (eighteen years ago) link

dissensus is arguing about villalobos vs. booka shade? link? all i see are like ten million grime and jungle and dubstep threads.

geeta (geeta), Wednesday, 22 March 2006 06:36 (eighteen years ago) link

No I imported my own private argument into an unrelated thread, Simon expressed mild interest in my description of Booka Shade until i assured him that he would find them underhwhelming. And then everyone else moved on to talking about dubstep again etc.

This is what I said:

"This is what I meant when I was talking on that other thread about the difficulty of proving vanguardism. It's not so much that vanguardism doesn't exist, but that - at least today - its claim is always plausibly (but rarely finally) refutable. There is in all contemporary music a certain component of revivalism or repetition, and this becomes a sticking point for people (or not) depending on their willingness to accept the presence or echo of that which is being repeated - e.g. dub and reggae in dubstep.

Dance music provides some good examples of this. When I think of two of my favourite current producers - Ricardo Villalobos and Booka Shade - it's immediately clear that Villalobos is the one being lauded as vanguardist (to the point that I felt moved to complain on ILM that in critical terms he's becoming the Outkast of German dance music). But the argument could be made that Villalobos's Achso ep, as awesome as it is, is just reviving 80s Jon Hassell and early nineties "intelligent" techno (Black Dog and early Autechre are probably the key reference points).

Booka Shade, meanwhile, are arguably reviving disco, early UK (acid) house, early trance, early rave and detroit techno - so their reference points are maybe A Guy Called Gerald/808 State, Eye Q Records, early Warp/Ital Rockers etc, with a dash of Detroit and early Orbital in there too.

Both are providing a pretty clear "twist" on their influences in terms of recognisable production nuances and immediately recognisable sonic signatures. Neither tend to straightforwardly revive one sound in particular, but carefully combine their influences (Villalobos's "Ichso" is a Jon Hassell/Talk Talk collaboration with Black Dog on production; Booka Shade's "Manderine Girl" is, I dunno, Carl Craig gone trance through a white noise filter).

So how do we distinguish between the two?

The audacity of the translation of influences? Villalobos is drawing on stuff from further outside house's legacy, but it's not really outside techno's legacy. His chosen sources may appear to come from more disparate genres, but they actually blend together quite easily and smoothly - whereas with Booka Shade the influences rub up against one another quite forcefully and delightfully ("Mandarine Girl" and esp. the new track "In White Rooms" do quite amazing and unexpected things with tearjerker trance riffs).

The freshness of the source material? Is Jon Hassell less played out than early A Guy Called Gerald? Hard to say...

The transition of the source material from a genius context to a scenius one? Maybe, but in doing so Villalobos is increasingly being distinguished as "genius" rather than "scenius" anyway.

The radicalism of the new production stamp? Villalobos is more openly, ostentatiously idiosyncratic and epic, but I think Booka Shade are just as impressive and interesting finally.

These aren't unanswerable questions, but they're complex ones, and every juncture I just see personal taste bleeding through.

Mark's definition of vanguardism - the creation of new populations, the redefinition of the very concept of music - avoids this trap, but it does so by skirting the entire field, equally rejecting both options as being mere product. Which is fine, but it leaves us with a vacuum as to what critical language we can use to talk about these rejected options. And there is music we all like which falls into this category - Junior Boys for example, or Ariel Pink, or..."

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Wednesday, 22 March 2006 06:47 (eighteen years ago) link

i don't mean to hijack a thread, but are you finding the discussions on dissensus rewarding, tim? i always bounce off it when i try to dip into it!

ps did my package get to australia?

vahid (vahid), Wednesday, 22 March 2006 06:52 (eighteen years ago) link

Yes! Vahid when I get home I am writing you a long e-mail about it as I picked it up a few days ago and have been blowing my mind with b jaxx essential mixes et al!

dissensus requires patience i think, you have to adjust to a different speed whereby there may be one interesting new thread per month as opposed to one every couple of days at least here.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Wednesday, 22 March 2006 06:54 (eighteen years ago) link

that's a really interesting post, tim--i'm sure booka shade would be psyched to see all those interesting and slightly offbeat influences ascribed to them! when i interviewed them and asked them about their influences, they said depeche mode, metro area, and ricardo villalobos (though they kept saying 'metro area' over and over and over again), and they said that DJ T was the one who schooled them in chicago house!

geeta (geeta), Wednesday, 22 March 2006 07:07 (eighteen years ago) link

Yeah I'm not sure if they've actually heard all of that stuff, let alone like it, but the music reminds me of all those things. I think maybe that this is just a consequence of the crispness of Booka Shade's current sound - it makes me think of basically all 4/4 dance music from the beginning of the 90s. Whereas smeariness makes me think mid-late 90s (deep house, french house etc.)

(Vahid perhaps your polemaesthetic is strident pro-smeariness!)

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Wednesday, 22 March 2006 09:41 (eighteen years ago) link

re: accessible the au hareme...
surely the most accessible tune is "true to myself"???

godammit i wish this had been released as a 12" instead of chromosul

ambrose (ambrose), Wednesday, 22 March 2006 10:50 (eighteen years ago) link

eh... it is a 12"? unless you have the CD copy. if so, sell it and buy the vinyl. as noted above, it's much better.

a, Wednesday, 22 March 2006 11:03 (eighteen years ago) link

sorry i meant the tune itself on a 12" single, as opposed to buying the whole album. tho i'll probably buy it all anyway

ambrose (ambrose), Wednesday, 22 March 2006 14:16 (eighteen years ago) link


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