I LOVE DRUKQS+

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Could some kind soul C&P that NYT article?

Maresn3st, Thursday, 15 April 2021 16:53 (three years ago) link

i like the voicings of those first 4 left hand arpeggios

eisimpleir (crüt), Thursday, 15 April 2021 17:09 (three years ago) link

Just took a look at the sheet music. You really have to stretch you hands or move them very quickly. All those octaves! Might be a fun song for 4 hands.

o. nate, Thursday, 15 April 2021 19:29 (three years ago) link

Oh yeah that's the other thing, I have short fingers and was like no way. As a programmer not a pianist, it immediately made sense as something he would have programmed as midi.

change display name (Jordan), Thursday, 15 April 2021 19:40 (three years ago) link

The Long Tail of Aphex Twin’s ‘Avril 14th’
A song released 20 years ago continues to inspire curiosity and covers by classical, experimental and pop artists.
By Eric Ducker - Published April 13, 2021

On April 14, 2020, the producer and pianist Kelly Moran woke up in Long Island. She had temporarily moved back there the previous fall to work on her next album, but when the pandemic arrived, she got stuck. Looking for a challenge to fill the hours that Tuesday morning, she figured out how to play the Aphex Twin song “Avril 14th” and filmed the results on her cellphone.

Like the original, Moran performed it on a prepared piano — a technique developed by the avant-garde composer John Cage where objects are placed in between the instrument’s strings. Moran’s interpretation is tender but eerie, like the sound of a music box that’s about to die. “I always picture a ghost playing this record,” she said in an interview last month.

Moran put the video on Twitter and Instagram, where it became one her most popular posts. “Not everyone is going to like drum and bass or, like, really fast IDM,” she said, referring to intelligent dance music, “but I feel like every person likes a sentimental piano song in some way, shape or form.”

Moran’s cover was one more blip in the strange and improbable life of “Avril 14th,” which turns 20 this year. An instrumental piece that barely lasts two minutes, it has been sampled by pop stars, inspired classical pianists and experimental artists alike, and once cost a major TV network over $100,000 (more on that later). On YouTube there are renditions of it performed on the harp, the pedal steel guitar and dueling vibraphones.

“Avril 14th” was released in October 2001, the same week the first iPod arrived, on the first disc of “Drukqs,” a double album by Aphex Twin, the most common pseudonym of the English musician Richard D. James. The 30-song collection churns across dark ambient works, aggressive breakbeats and sparse piano interludes.

At the time, James claimed he released “Drukqs” because he left an MP3 player filled with unreleased music on a plane. It was only a matter of time, he maintained, before someone figured out what it was and put it all online. There were rumors that James actually released “Drukqs” to get out of his contract with Warp Records, though when its follow-up “Syro” arrived 13 years later, it was on the same label.

James only did a few interviews in support of “Drukqs.” There were no music videos by Chris Cunningham, who directed wickedly perverse treatments for the landmark Aphex Twin songs “Come to Daddy” and “Windowlicker.” There were barely any tour dates or festival appearances.

James doesn’t disclose much about his creative process, or anything else really. (He did not respond to interview requests and representatives from Warp declined to comment.) From the faint mechanical sounds heard on “Avril 14th,” members of his devoted fan base surmised that it was made on a prepared Disklavier — an acoustic piano created by Yamaha with internal and external MIDI capabilities, which allows it to reproduce a composition without a human player but with incredible accuracy.

“Drukqs” received a mixed critical response, but it did have devotees. Not long after its release, the members of Alarm Will Sound, an adventurous group of classical musicians based in New York, decided to arrange Aphex Twin songs for their chamber orchestra’s 2005 album “Acoustica.” “It felt like a statement to say this is really serious music,” said Alan Pierson, the group’s artistic director. “Aphex Twin is a genius for color and timbre, and so much of ‘Acoustica’ is about that, but with ‘Avril 14th’ it’s really just the notes,” Pierson added. “The notes are really gorgeous.”

Around the same time, the composer and music supervisor Brian Reitzell began work on Sofia Coppola’s 2006 film “Marie Antoinette.” Before shooting began, he compiled two CDs of contemporary music that captured the tone the director wanted, even though it was a period piece. Reitzell felt “Avril 14th” almost served as a bridge between the two eras.

While James passed on Reitzell’s invitation to contribute new compositions for the film’s score (“Some artists are just not comfortable making their art fit into someone else’s art,” Reitzell said), “Avril 14th” does appear in a sequence where Antoinette, played by Kirsten Dunst, languorously walks through a field and up a palace staircase. Reitzell said that after an early screening for friends, the director Wes Anderson complimented him for including the song, and said he had considered using it for one of his own films, but now was bummed because he felt like it was off limits. It later appeared in the trailer for “Her,” the maudlin A.I. romance from Coppola’s ex-husband, Spike Jonze.

The song’s life in pop culture spiked again just a year later thanks to a longtime fan, Jorma Taccone of the comedy trio the Lonely Island, a group that became famous from its musical digital shorts on “Saturday Night Live.” “I’m the perfect demo for liking that song in terms of I like a lot of electronic music and I’m also a totally emotional, romantic dude,” Taccone said in an interview.

For years he kept a basic beat on his computer featuring a looped sample from “Avril 14th,” but never had the right opportunity to use it. In September 2007, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, then the president of Iran, visited New York City and gave a talk stating there were no homosexuals in his country. In response, the Lonely Island created “Iran So Far.” Over Taccone’s “Avril 14th” beat, Andy Samberg performed a love song dedicated to Ahmadinejad, delivering lines like, “You say Iran don’t have the bomb, but they already do/You should know by now, it’s you.”

Because “Saturday Night Live” is made at a breakneck speed, Taccone brushed off the legal department when asked if “Iran So Far” used samples that needed to be cleared, figuring they could deal with any problems later. That meant the network eventually had to pay the label $160,000, Taccone said, and the group couldn’t afford to put it on its own 2009 album, “Incredibad.”

Kanye West ended up replaying a part of “Avril 14th” on “Blame Game,” a key song on his 2010 opus of hedonism and self-loathing “My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy.” Coincidentally, West was the musical guest on “S.N.L.” the night the Lonely Island short aired, and Taccone takes pride in the fact that they both saw the possibility in the same unlikely material. “It just made me feel like I was a genius,” he said.

As the popularity of streaming music services rose over the past decade, the record label Silent Star approached the British pianist Martin Jacoby about recording covers for a catalog of tranquil pieces, including “Avril 14th.” Jacoby’s version appears on compilations with search-friendly titles including “Sleepy Baby Lullaby” and “Classical for Studying.” Spotify has included the Aphex Twin version on such curated playlists as “Peaceful Indie Ambient” and “Classical Yoga.”

On the service there are now more than 30 covers of “Avril 14th” by electronic artists and classical musicians. Some have millions of streams of their own. There are jaunty interpretations and atmospheric ones. Others stay loyal to Aphex Twin. “It’s almost divorced from him as an artist,” said Jacoby, of the track’s originator. “It’s become one of those pieces that’s now exploded in its own right.”

While this popularity may expose classical music fans to the sometimes overwhelming, occasionally terrorizing music of Aphex Twin, the exchange also flows the other way. “It’s a gateway to Debussy, or some of the other amazing piano pieces that are out there,” said Reitzell, the music supervisor. “If you like that piece, man, I’ve got 30 more for you. That is the most beautiful thing about music. That song will probably outlive Richard’s entire catalog in a way.”

But Moran hears an even more fundamental reason modern listeners have turned a haunting piano piece with minimalist influences into a digital era phenomenon. Before our interview, she transcribed “Avril 14th” again to refamiliarize herself with it. Holding up the piece of paper, she noted its chorus-verse-chorus-bridge-chorus structure. “Honestly,” she said, “this is like a pop song to me.”

G.A.G.S. (Gophers Against Getting Stuffed) (forksclovetofu), Saturday, 17 April 2021 04:11 (three years ago) link

I guess I’m in good company waking up in Long Island and trying to play it also

Western® with Bacon Flavor, Saturday, 17 April 2021 05:14 (three years ago) link

i like avril 14 s the rest is pretty boring as i have given it many chances and i just can not get into it!

xzanfar, Saturday, 17 April 2021 15:44 (three years ago) link

one year passes...

Drukqs is every bit as unlistenable as Metal Machine Music.
― Mr. Snrub (Mr. Snrub), Friday, February 9, 2007 3:16 AM (fifteen years ago) bookmarkflaglink

Shut up, asshole.

Mr. Snrub, Tuesday, 19 April 2022 00:33 (one year ago) link

lmao I guess that was a phase

octobeard, Tuesday, 19 April 2022 01:29 (one year ago) link

I tend to keep my negative opinions on music to myself rather than post 'em here, but I did make an early post about how Super AE by Boredoms was one of the worst albums ever and I was so so wrong

Vinnie, Tuesday, 19 April 2022 01:42 (one year ago) link

this seems like it's THE aphex album for a lot of kids who discovered him in the last decade, which is so wild given that it was considered a disappointment when it first came out. (and still not in my top five.)

brisk money (lukas), Tuesday, 19 April 2022 04:38 (one year ago) link

six months pass...

i'm
taking
control

of the drum machine

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Thursday, 17 November 2022 02:20 (one year ago) link

this is the greatest album of all time

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Thursday, 17 November 2022 02:20 (one year ago) link

this seems like it's THE aphex album for a lot of kids who discovered him in the last decade, which is so wild given that it was considered a disappointment when it first came out. (and still not in my top five.)

― brisk money (lukas), Monday, April 18, 2022 9:38 PM (six months ago)

It's his most accessible by far for contemporary tastes. RDJ is too eccentric, Come to Daddy too short, ICBYD is too "hard", SAW II is too ethereal and specialized, and everything else is a side project or dated in its sound (Classics). Drukqs is well rounded and accessible, under his main moniker and showcases most of his range enough to be a perfect intro. Makes sense.

octobeard, Thursday, 17 November 2022 18:22 (one year ago) link

That's definitely the first time I've seen "DRUKQS" and "accessible" used in the same sentence

Paul Ponzi, Thursday, 17 November 2022 18:48 (one year ago) link

It will never be my favorite Aphex album, there's something monochrome about it to me. Still amazing obviously.

I really enjoyed this first-time reaction video by a musician: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DO_zMfLpjqI

death generator (lukas), Thursday, 17 November 2022 19:55 (one year ago) link

xp relative to his other stuff yeah. And a ton of the piano bits are super accessible. Drum and bass and some of his more spastic acid tracks aren't nearly as "experimental" as they used to be given some of the normalization of glitchy electronic music since the 2010's.

octobeard, Friday, 18 November 2022 23:38 (one year ago) link

i think RDJ is his most accessible mainstream release, but that's just me

Karl Malone, Friday, 18 November 2022 23:41 (one year ago) link

cool video, thanks for sharing

ꙮ (map), Friday, 18 November 2022 23:59 (one year ago) link

I think ICBYD is pretty accessible (it’s what first got me into RDJ, when I had very little background electronic music). “Come to Daddy, skip Track 1” is also a classic entry point.

I probably wouldn’t pass along a 2CD as an entry point to any artist…

"Mick Wall at Kerrang!" (morrisp), Saturday, 19 November 2022 00:13 (one year ago) link

Yeah accessible is a relative thing with this dude. RDJ Album to Windowlicker is by far my favorite period of his (despite ICBYD being my favorite singular album of his) and what I'd deem the most "accessible", but there's a ton of stuff before or since too that fills this bucket. Those records aren't as diverse and intense and as pretty as Drukqs, even if I think they're more overflowing with originality and personality. He set a pretty high bar. Shit like SAW 85-92 could be construed as accessible, but it's also super minimalist and roughly recorded, sounding quite dated.

Ixi even goes into this at the end of Meltphace 6 (59:15 in) where she herself confesses she is "primed" to enjoy this record more and likely wouldn't have appreciated it back then. For an earlier track she referenced Venetian Snares, implying she got around to listening to Aaron Funk before Richard James (which I found surprising). What was experimental then is now much more accessible and more people are exposed to these genres. Back then, especially in the US, this kind of music was nary to be heard outside of a tiny nerdy pocket communities. The "mainstream" here has come around to this album and is primed for it like Ixi. In terms of how RDJ's records translate to contemporary tastes, I still stand that this record is the most comprehensively accessible while simultaneously variant enough in style to truly give you a glimpse into Richard's oeuvre. The timbre of the beats and percussion feel more contemporary than the textures used in RDJ or Come to Daddy. If anything it truly shows how visionary this record is and how timeless a lot of Aphex's music is, especially in this window between 96-01.

octobeard, Saturday, 19 November 2022 00:52 (one year ago) link

I spotted Aphex on my 12 year olds Spotify

calstars, Saturday, 19 November 2022 00:54 (one year ago) link

(it's ixi rather than lxi btw, which is odd because ixi-lang is the name of some music live-coding programme)

koogs, Saturday, 19 November 2022 08:19 (one year ago) link

one year passes...

First time ever listening to this album all the way through this morning -- I'd only ever sampled random tracks because of the mixed reviews. Might be overreacting but thought it was excellent? The whiplash mix of complex programmed beat tracks and gorgeous, contemplative piano tracks enhances both for me. Maybe the Spotify Playlist Era has retrained my brain.

Indexed, Wednesday, 13 March 2024 14:49 (one month ago) link

It's a remarkable record. The reviews at the time seemed mostly based on (I assume) the press release: an album full of "Erik Satie-style piano pieces"... Well, it's obviously not that if you've actually listened to it: maybe 10-15 minutes' worth. That said, I love how he kind of managed to control the narrative on its release IN A BAD WAY; telling the press beforehand that it was a rush released bunch of offcuts because someone had nicked a DAT on a plane or something like that. The thing is a meticulously constructed work of genius that he almost deliberately scuppered. I would love to hear what he actually thinks about it, but I guess he just doesn't do interviews like that! I think it's only bettered by Syro in his catalogue.

Keith, Friday, 15 March 2024 22:23 (one month ago) link

I love this album. Full disclosure, though: I didn't at the time

Paul Ponzi, Friday, 15 March 2024 22:30 (one month ago) link

Yeah me neither at release. Took some years.

Keith, Friday, 15 March 2024 22:31 (one month ago) link

feel like it's not stated enough how the Analord series birthed an entire subgenre of techno/electro

clouds, Friday, 15 March 2024 22:34 (one month ago) link

I didn't like it much at the time, either (as a massive fan up until then) – it hit in v underwhelming fashion, from the first single onward (*except for* the Satie-style piano pieces, which I thought were wonderful)

Hippie Ernie (morrisp), Friday, 15 March 2024 22:45 (one month ago) link

(I've liked it much more upon revisiting recently)

Hippie Ernie (morrisp), Friday, 15 March 2024 22:46 (one month ago) link

I on the other hand, a man of culture, loved it straight away

H.P, Friday, 15 March 2024 23:06 (one month ago) link

Vordhosbn is the first track that spins in my head when I'm reminded of aphex twin. The one-two punch of the first two tracks are a perfect set up for all the joy that is to follow

H.P, Friday, 15 March 2024 23:07 (one month ago) link

The prepared piano sounds on this album are soooooo gorgeous

H.P, Friday, 15 March 2024 23:08 (one month ago) link

feel like it's not stated enough how the Analord series birthed an entire subgenre of techno/electro

― clouds, Friday, March 15, 2024 6:34 PM (two hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

absolutely true. It might have helped if they had remained available, or at least to people who could afford them

Paul Ponzi, Saturday, 16 March 2024 00:52 (one month ago) link

You mean stuff like Brainwalzera or stuff on Further Electronix?

brimstead, Saturday, 16 March 2024 02:38 (one month ago) link

Considering how intensely iconic, creative and diverse the sound pallets were for RDJ, Come to Daddy and Windowlicker, Drukqs def felt like a bit of a let down. It's held up quite well, but the uptempo glitchy jungle tracks still sound quite a bit "samey" to me by the end of it. Felt like the beginning of the end at the time, an artist who found his sonic "niche" and would no longer stray from it. And that has largely held true to this day.

I kinda wish he'd actually dropped a full length of just the prepared piano stuff.

octobeard, Saturday, 16 March 2024 09:03 (one month ago) link

xxp CPU Records comes to mind as a label that sprouted from this influence

http://cpurecords.net/

octobeard, Saturday, 16 March 2024 09:05 (one month ago) link

Octobeard so close to otm with that post, you're just forgetting the reason he found that niche and settled into it is because it's so damn good

H.P, Saturday, 16 March 2024 11:25 (one month ago) link

xp ah yes that label too!! So much cool stuff

brimstead, Saturday, 16 March 2024 12:54 (one month ago) link

Octobeard totally OTM

Hippie Ernie (morrisp), Saturday, 16 March 2024 14:47 (one month ago) link

would no longer stray from it. And that has largely held true to this day.

i don't think that's otm!!! analord and syro are both wildly different projects and soundworlds from drukqs imo

ivy., Saturday, 16 March 2024 16:39 (one month ago) link

in general i think the drill n' bass stuff is pushed to its limits on this record, its outer regions, and the prior records are a little too pretty and structured to ever get there. which it's fine if people prefer that!!! but this album is insanely creative and never stops

ivy., Saturday, 16 March 2024 16:42 (one month ago) link

also the dark ambient tracks are more fucked up than the majority of SAW2... idk when i listen to this album i feel like i'm at the edge of the RDJ universe looking at the sharp cliffs and gnarled trash below, and that rules

ivy., Saturday, 16 March 2024 16:45 (one month ago) link

Couldn't agree more with Ivy.

Keith, Saturday, 16 March 2024 18:05 (one month ago) link

Syro sounds like a permutation of the Druqks sound. I wookdnt call it worlds away

your mom goes to limgrave (dog latin), Saturday, 16 March 2024 19:47 (one month ago) link

Bored during lockdown, I wrote some stuff about Aphex Twin for Facebook pals, this is the Drukqs entry, which came in at number 2 in my top 10:

2001’s Drukqs is Aphex Twin’s masterpiece. Why number two then, I hear you say? Well that’s easy, it’s because whatever is at number one is his masterpiece as well.

I say this, despite the fact that an album more deeply misunderstood on its release (and to a lesser degree, to this day) you would be hard pushed to find. Around the time of release, there were a couple of rumours: it was just a load of half-finished demos that were rush-released because he lost a tape on a plane, and that it was an album of “Erik Satie-style piano pieces”. The latter, I suspect came from some reviewers who hadn’t listened beyond the very first track; where the former came from is less clear—I have a half-memory of it actually coming from James himself. It’s a fun story if it did—how to spike the guns of your reviewers to your own detriment.

It’s a thirty track double album coming in at more than an hour and a half of music, so it isn’t easy to digest; in fact, it can seem quite impenetrable. Alex Needham, as one of the few people to properly pay attention at the time, helped me to understand it in his review of the album in the NME at the time. He says: “And after a few listens, a pattern seems to emerge. Abstract piano pieces always seemed to be followed by some strange Japanese-style ritual music. Stompers arrive at regular intervals. And there are even patterns within the patterns”. He also says that it is “beautiful”, which in a simple act of reframing, helped me to recognise it for what it is—it’s quite easy to view it as a mess, but you’re just not looking closely enough.

There’s lots of attention given to the structure of the album and its pacing; however, given its length, it likely does help to listen to a chunk at a time, stopping and starting where your attention wanders. And it does require your attention as I’ve said before—it has so many ideas compressed into its hundred minutes. Little details come and go, for example at the end of lengthy [insert uninvented genre] classic “Ziggomatic 17”, hints of “Alberto Balsam” from 1995’s “I Care Because You Do” shift in and out of view.

The album projects an image of being created using arcane technologies and incomprehensible techniques to make this deeply mysterious music of the future. The piano tracks sound as though they are being automated, which they likely are, in a similar fashion the “Nannou” track discussed as part of the post on the Windowlicker EP. The image on the album cover appears to be the insides of some kind of piano or perhaps synthesiser, again creating an image in the mind of him painstakingly automating the machinery in order to make the music.

To add to the enigma, most of the tracks are named in Cornish, e.g. “Bbydhyondchord”; “Hy A Scullyas Lyf A Dhagrow” etc. The album’s most well-known track is “Avril 14th”, though I do sometimes wonder why this is so much more famous than the album’s opener: “Jynweythek Ylow” other than the fact that no-one (outside of Cornwall and perhaps Wales) knows how to say the name of the latter.

As I alluded to earlier with “Ziggomatic 17”, there’s no real word to describe these tracks—I have heard them referred to as “acid bangers”, but they don’t really sound anything like acid house, other than perhaps using a synthesiser bass line; they aren’t “bangers” either. Each of them sounds almost as if an entire album’s worth of ideas has been compressed on to a single track.

If the “Who Sampled?” website is to be believed, bizarrely it turns out this album is a trip-hop masterpiece—it appears to have quite a large number of 1970s samples on it, e.g. Augustus Pablo; Led Zeppelin; Kool and the Gang; Weather Report etc. I can confidently say I have never noticed a single one of these samples in amongst this record. I have listened again to the tracks in question and I still can’t hear them, but they’re apparently in there somewhere.

Drukqs is Aphex Twin’s most difficult listen. Roy Castle once said that “dedication is what you need”, and if you are prepared to dedicate yourself, Drukqs is very rewarding—it’s highly innovative, packed with ideas and carefully constructed. Keep in mind that it is beautiful; that there is method to the madness and that it will slowly reveal some of its mysteries.

I’ll go with Meltphace 6 for a track, it illustrates the frenetic yet spacious “acid” tracks, with a melody that explores detuned scales, ghostly voices that echo over the percussion track that occasionally starts to sound like Klunk from Dastardly and Muttley.

Keith, Saturday, 16 March 2024 22:48 (one month ago) link

What was number one?

your mom goes to limgrave (dog latin), Sunday, 17 March 2024 03:29 (one month ago) link

The lost-on-a-plane thing very much did come from James himself… that was the backstory he was presenting.

Hippie Ernie (morrisp), Sunday, 17 March 2024 05:11 (one month ago) link

Syro was number 1.

Keith, Sunday, 17 March 2024 09:47 (one month ago) link

Love to hear your take on that one. It's not that I don't like it, I've just always wanted to like it more

your mom goes to limgrave (dog latin), Sunday, 17 March 2024 11:39 (one month ago) link


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