Livin' The City Hype
If you'd told us back in 2009 that Hype Williams would one day be
releasing an EP on Hyperdub, we'd have raised our eyebrows, but a year
or so later it actually makes sense - Dean Blunt and Inga Copeland's
predilection for sickly-psychedelic synths, rugged beats and a sense of
occluded urban dread making them a simpatico if still bold addition to
Kode9's stable. Have they altered their sound for the bass-heads? Nah,
course not, and nor do they need to - for all its lo-fi patina, Hype's
music has always been heavy-as-f*ck on the subs. That said, opener 'Rise
Up' is a pretty mellow affair, as anyone who heard the version on that
uber-limited white label issue earlier this year will already know; in a
similar vein to their Sade rip 'The Throning', it's an almost Balearic
haze of sighing strings, crisp claps, smacked-out boogie-funk-bass and
Copeland's distant, pining vocals. 'Boss Man' is a cheerier but witchier
number, synths strafing haughtily across unquantised drum hits;
'Farthing Wood Dub' is as cute and enchanting as its namesake, but still
delightfully unstable, like John Barry's Midnight Cowboy soundtrack
reimagined by a cracked-out Clams Casino. But it's the closing 'Badmind'
that's the masterstoke - sampled American voices delivering stentorian
lectures about death, auto-eroticism and, er, Ezra Pound against a shaky
gamelan and sub-bass backdrop somewhere between Ryuichi Sakamoto and
sino-grime; the lack of context for their ruminations, coupled with
droop and sway of the synths, is quite overwhelming in its effect Yep,
this EP is just mind-melting, low-end-savvy audio surrealism as only
Hype Williams know how; a big, big 12". [boomkat][dl]

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