Kim Gordon of Sonic Youth, ex-DNA drummer/drum-machinist extraordinaire Ikue Mori, and Illbient pioneer DJ Olive embark on electro-acoustic excursions of haunting abstract beauty. Taking a breather from the snazz that is... more »/was Free Kitten (Miss Julie birthing Alice and teaching inner city high school, Yoshimi about 10,000 miles away and Mark Ibold aswamp in the madness that is Pavement) Sonic Youths femme-mystere has created a distinctly NEW trio of spontaneous composition and prose. Since reclaiming the electric guitar (her original instrument w/ SY) and developing a newfound post-Patty Waters free-vox technique she has enjoined her vision w/ the improvisational meta-talents of Ikue Mori (ex-drummer of no wave legends DNA - currently in a class by herself w/ other-world sampling) and DJ Olive (he of the wizardly WE, coiner of the ill term "illbient" and regarded by those in the heavy underground of post-beat turntable/drum + whatever as "the heaviest"). Together they hit the local boards throughout 1999 and created a unified concept of sound/energy dynamix. They recorded w/ engineer Wharton Tiers and mixmaster Jim ORourke for what will be the first recording on SYR not by Sonic Youth proper (a situation which will be, possibly, expanded upon). The results, which also feature the magic fingers of CIBO MATOs Yuka Honda on a track, are at once sensuous, elegant and completely blistering. This is truly the new illprovisation rising up from ground zero.« less
Kim Gordon of Sonic Youth, ex-DNA drummer/drum-machinist extraordinaire Ikue Mori, and Illbient pioneer DJ Olive embark on electro-acoustic excursions of haunting abstract beauty. Taking a breather from the snazz that is/was Free Kitten (Miss Julie birthing Alice and teaching inner city high school, Yoshimi about 10,000 miles away and Mark Ibold aswamp in the madness that is Pavement) Sonic Youths femme-mystere has created a distinctly NEW trio of spontaneous composition and prose. Since reclaiming the electric guitar (her original instrument w/ SY) and developing a newfound post-Patty Waters free-vox technique she has enjoined her vision w/ the improvisational meta-talents of Ikue Mori (ex-drummer of no wave legends DNA - currently in a class by herself w/ other-world sampling) and DJ Olive (he of the wizardly WE, coiner of the ill term "illbient" and regarded by those in the heavy underground of post-beat turntable/drum + whatever as "the heaviest"). Together they hit the local boards throughout 1999 and created a unified concept of sound/energy dynamix. They recorded w/ engineer Wharton Tiers and mixmaster Jim ORourke for what will be the first recording on SYR not by Sonic Youth proper (a situation which will be, possibly, expanded upon). The results, which also feature the magic fingers of CIBO MATOs Yuka Honda on a track, are at once sensuous, elegant and completely blistering. This is truly the new illprovisation rising up from ground zero.
Matthew F. Watters | Seattle, WA USA (when in Seattle, please visit my | 10/14/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I'm not sure why this record has elicited so much confusion and mixed critical response: fans of Sonic Youth, who are surely aware of Thurston Moore and company's longstanding interest in avant garde jazz and experimental music, shouldn't be all that surprised by this record. That said, a rock record this isn't. However, as the cover art (with its Japanese characters) tends to imply, anyone who might be attracted to Japanese noise artists, as well as to experimental or improvisational music that treads a fascinating line between ambient and industrial (with dream-like vocals from the perpetually cool Kim Gordon) will find much to appreciate in this album's intricate and atmospheric improvisations. Like great free jazz, it isn't necessarily background music, but (unlike some others have commented) I find much of this album quite beautiful: for me, it was love at first listen. (To those who have bought and enjoyed this album: you might also enjoy the CD by Hoahio, on the Tzadik label, on which three Japanese women experiment with everything from pop songs to Japanese folk to pure sound sculpture and improvised noise, with similarly fascinating results.)"
Eclectic
J. M. Zuurbier | Canada | 01/14/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The muse behind husband and bandmate Thurston Moore's love of droney, tangent filled guitar lines, Kim Gordon shows her influences here. The fifth in their series of minimal, music concrete-inspired releases, this is a collaboration that collides, twists, and smashes each of its parts. DJ Olive on the turntables mixes the inklings of crackly melodies and slight orchestral washes, while Ikue Mori deals with the scrapes, the swishes, and the organic bleating of beats. Gordon takes care of the affected, alternatively-tuned guitar strumming, and breathy vocal snippets.Each song varies in its usage of these three talents; the album is full of varying degrees of drone (thanks to DJ Olive's wax tracks), paired with odd sounds and irregular rhythms and blasts (thanks to drummer Ikue Mori's avant guard/no wave-ness), and out of tune vocals singing along with muted, chunky Sonic Youth-like guitar lines. The album screeches, wafts, and dissonantly bleaches out any familiar melodies. Highlights include Cibo Matto's Yuka Honda with "Take It To the Hit," and the surprise reggae sample on "Take Me Back." In "We Are The Princesses", Kim Gordon offers an interesting set of vocals and lyrics, repeating over and over "we are the princesses" and then "donald duck will follow her! kill! kill minnie! kill minnie!" over and over, an example of how interesting and diverse this cd can be, definately a great album to own."
Noise-Rock Concrete Noise!
Vincent Bergeron | Canada | 09/08/2000
(4 out of 5 stars)
"After, one and a half listens (not a lot for this type of music, but i'm fast to get it often). A nice following to the "a bit too long and uneven, but still excellent" SYR 4. This time, the music is more ambient, post-electronica (well kind-of) like, only a few noisy ones. I wont say anything else about the style, the title of this review explain how dumb it is to classify this music ; it's sound pushing experimentations, not music to some ears. The whole thing is really dense, maybe more than SYR 4 at his most freak out! Not a single weak moment too. Kim Gordon innocent, atonal voice work perfectly over the non-structured textures behind (modified percussions, minimal simple guitar riffs, noises of all sorts). Also, Jim O'Rourke is back on the mix table, i never liked his music, but he is a terrific sound mixer! The whole thing never sound distant, cold, but always warm, near (like the musicians are in front of you)! A great quality for this type of music/noise!So, a really active non-linear musical trip that i liked really much! Not for all ears of course..."
Beautiful Dissonance
Matt Exp. Guitarist | 05/20/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The talented female Sonic Youth artist Kim Gordon And Ikue Mori (former member of DNA:taiko drums) and DJ Olive combine together dissonance, with a unique experimental atmospheric approach using electronics, distorted guitar, harmonics, to make ambient sounds,....It might take a few listens, cause it could get chaotic.....Kim expresses herself with her randomness and kind of a beat poetry style....If you like Mars, DNA, Teenage Jesus And The Jerks it should definately be a part of the experimental archive, cause this really shines through the SYR albums..
"
God bless the New York art scene
moses the man | Pittsburgh, PA., USA | 03/10/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Sonic Youth and Co. do this kind of experimental/borderless noise-music exceedingly well, and this is very good for its kind, atmospheric and even tasteful, like jazz in the sense that it's more about texture and "sounds" than anything else. Kim Gordon's vocals give this a familiar feeling, and at times the mechanical beatbox rhythms recall the Youth's earlier "Ciccone Youth" side-project (a personal fave). My only regret is that it's almost too subdued: I was wishing there were a few more fun, let-'er-rip numbers like "We are the Princesses" ("Kill! Kill Minnie!"). Still, "Lemonade" and "Take Me Back" are nice little demented late-night blues. All in all, a sweet taste of How They Do It in New York."