Steve Jansen, Richard Barbieri and Mick Karn combine their talents to produce 'Seed', the second project to emerge from their own Medium Productions label. Unlike the first release, this mini-album features material written solely by Jansen, Barbieri & Karn and includes an 'alternative' version of the title track from Medium's debut release 'Beginning To Melt'. By maintaining the ambient textures of the original version and combining them with a fundamental groove element the track takes on a very different guise. 'In The Black Of Desire' (written by Jansen & Barbieri) was originally planned to be included on the duo's following release but since performing it live on the Mick Karn tour 1993/4 it seemed well suited to be included with this release. 'The Insect Tribe' by Karn and 'Prey' by Jansen & Barbieri are two new and diverse instrumental pieces. 'Seed' preempts empts a full length album to be released by the trio on the Medium label sometime in the future, after individual projects have been completed. |
Jansen / Barbieri & Karn deliver a beautiful instrumental mini-album which flickers and grooves. Seed is sexy in it's understatement and flow. It centres around a 12 minute revamp of Beginning To Melt. Hypnotic, glistening, it shows up most techno's paucity of imagination while simultaneously offering itself as an intro to 'Station To Station' in another dimension. I'm not crap enough to describe 'Seed' as ³seminal² but there can be no doubt that all ex-members of Japan get moments of genius like the rest of us get free pizza leaflets through the letterbox.
Melody MakerOne of the things I hate is music with labels, especially the labels 'ambient' and 'new age'. To me, they conjure up images of people mucking about on their synths until they hear a wishy wash that reminds them of something from nature which is then given a title and called 'music'. No way - I'm not that easily fooled. Jansen, Barbieri and Karn haven't gone that route - they're established professionals, after all. But what you see on the front cover are computer generated images and on the reverse a list of just four tracks, all over the 3 minute pop-song length, so immediately you're led to believe that it's going to be a pile of ... But back to the point. This album is fantastic. It's concise, the tracks are contrasting, the musicianship is unquestionable, the sounds are inspiring and it's musical. In fact, if I was to be pretentious, I'd even describe it as 'art'. Many a home music programmer could do with studying this 27 minute album (just the right length to prevent things becoming boring). 'Beginning To Melt', the longest track at just over 11 minutes, starts off with a repetitive drum-machine rhythm and bass riff over which textures unfold. Various other synthy things happen until, at around seven minutes in, boredom threatens to creep in - but before you know it more new ideas are introduced. The track is rounded off with a 30-second coda which leaves you feeling that you've really experienced something substantial. 'In The Black Of Desire' contrasts with live drums, thick textures, sampled vocals and a hint at Indian scales. 'The Insect Tribe' shows off some beautiful velvety-smooth bass, plus a whole lot more. And the album concludes with 'Prey', a funkier number - a sort of 70's/90's juxtaposition. Wonderful stuff.
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