Search - Swayzak :: Himawari

Himawari
Swayzak
Himawari
Genre: Dance & Electronic
 
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #1

House/techno. This Latest Album Moves the Listener Into Uncharted Territories of Deep Minimal House, Techno, Dub and Electro. The 12 Tracks Feature Contributions from Dub Poet Benjamin Zephaniah on 'illegal' and Vocalist K...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Swayzak
Title: Himawari
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Highe
Album Type: Import
Genre: Dance & Electronic
Style: House
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1

Synopsis

Album Details
House/techno. This Latest Album Moves the Listener Into Uncharted Territories of Deep Minimal House, Techno, Dub and Electro. The 12 Tracks Feature Contributions from Dub Poet Benjamin Zephaniah on 'illegal' and Vocalist Kirsty Hawkshaw.

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CD Reviews

Surprise yourself
bowery boy | seattle | 04/25/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"OKAY: first of all swayzak is an incredibly amazing talented duo who perfectly and precisely fuse Detroit techno minimalism with thumping house beats and repetitious trance grooves. But before i go on about the wonders of their music, i must debunk the naysayers.ONE: for those of who say swayzak is a lousy rip-off of a Berlin sound, then read the liner notes to their first CD 'snowboarding in argentina'. They give a shout out to Maurizio and Basic Channel (in addition to Orbital, Kraftwerk, Beastie Boys and mark rothko, the brilliant 60s abstract artist who committed suicide). So these guys know where they're coming from and are paving the way for whatever direction they want to go.TWO:sure it's been done before but musically what hasn't? Nowadays good music seems to be about taking tried and true formulas and ideas and re-inventing them. swayzak is awesome at doing this and because they're so good at this, almost too good, people seem to be afraid to give them the accolades and recognition that they so richly deserve.THREE: then there's the music. on 'snowboarding...' vocals were almost non-existent (except that 'life' thing on 'burma heights' and that weird chant on 'cone') and the beats are straight forward trance. However on 'himawari' the first half of the CD drifts across different genres of sound whereas the second half is more driving trance.standouts are the 80s synth-pop of 'state of grace'. kristy hawkshaw(former lead singer of opusIII) sings in that blissed out way of hers and when that click-beat kicks in and kristy croons in german. . .euphoria!!!!'illegal' is a dubbed out reggae tinged affair. it reminds me of early massive attack for some reason.'kensal rising' is classic deep house down to it's 'love me' refrain. . . ambrosia!!!!But it's from track 6 on that the deep down and dirty grooves begin and don't let up.'caught in this affair' is a standout and, although predictable, is dreamy in it's house sensibility, washes of gorgeous synth and the delicious vocals of j.b. rose. . . pure perfection!!!'pineapple spongecake' is full of teutonic industrial beats and wah wah wah wahs like old school techno. . . good stuff!!!'the frozen loch' is gorgeous in its simplicity. A spoken word intro and a downtempo groove that reminds me of opusIII's 'into this universe'(perhaps the inspiration for their colaboration with kristy or maybe a by product of it???)'floyd' is my fave. four-on-the-floor beats and claps, synth keyboards and this pounding pulse of a groove that dares you to defy the urge to get up and boogie.'betek' closes things out with a cool yet not very memorable groove that's still as good as the rest of the tracks.FOUR: i cannot praise this CD enough. Being heavy into IDM and moving further and further away from the predictability and triteness of most techno/house/trance artists and DJs i was beyond pleasantly surprised by this disc and went back out the same day to purchase their first release as well.Surprise yourself.Buy swayzak."
Quality,diverse albums are a rarity- and they pull it off
Richard Diaz | 08/07/2000
(4 out of 5 stars)

"There are countless great albums released yearly that get hardly any recognition or label push; you know this, of course, being an electronic fan. So when a new record gets a press spurt, and it's not Global DJ #24 or Label Comp 200X, well, you take notice.Thankfully, James Taylor and David Brown (Swayzak) aren't wasting your time or the company's money. The duo have worked up a fine techno/house long player, shuffling a broad range of styles and making a complete artistic statement.The early tracks mostly establish the mood- "Illegal" is a cursory spoken word exercise, and "kensai rising," while catchy, shows how easy it is to make dance music. Then they start to diversify their sound: "State of Grace" gets things going proper- if you survive the seizure-inducing 80's flashbacks it causes, you'll realize it has that synth/tech/pop thing nailed. I swear I'd seen a blonde in a blownout-white studio singing this. "Leisure centre" is a sublime little treat trying to hold back it's dangerous bassline. "Mysterons" is an old-school car thumper, "Doobie" (a mild letdown) slowly draws you in but can't keep it together. The standout "Caught in This Affair," will be in precisely 245 compilations soon courtesy of J.B. Rose's smooth voice and the sharp beats that try to penetrate a swirling atmosphere.Things peter out from here, though. "Japan Air" is eh, "Pineapple Spongecake" is dark, creepy, and bass-shuddering- nice, but you won't reach for seconds. Stick through it, however, for the ever-building energetic finale "Betek"."Himawari" tries to do more than offer a dozen variations of shuffling techno beats; these are songs, not programming exercises. It may not all work, but quality - yet diverse - albums are a rarity these days, and Swayzak pulls it off. Grade: B+"
Organic Detroit/Berlin-esque house music that is head trip!
Troy L. Stewart | Federal Way, WA United States | 07/18/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I don't wish to say much about Swayzak other than they are just a total head trip listening to their stuff. I just purchased this CD after downloading "Kensal Rising" and I have to say that I favorite track. "Kensal" is just a deep house groove with a funky bassline that I just can't stop listening to! I love "Mysterona" as it has a cool Kraftwerk-meets-GrandMaster Flash-meets-Herbie Hancock (old school breaks, yo!) feel to it. I have "State of Grace" in a different version on the NuBreed-Sander Kleinenberg-Series; both are odd, yet still scary and errie, similar to a teacher scratching her nails on the chalkboard! OUCH!For those of you that are into the more deeper, mental, and emotional site of techno (Aphex Twin, Wagon Christ, Squarepusher, the defunct Electric Sky Church, etc.), then you should get this CD. It will not disappoint as it reminds me of the Detroit and Berlin house scenes of the 80s and 90s that I miss so much and can never be repeated!"