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Claude Young shows exactly why he’s a top-tier techno artist with this fantastic record which could well be the finest record of his career.
Not that Dust gives a flying one about careers or the industry, but
this tune is such an anthem for us that we can’t believe it won’t be seen as one
of the landmark releases of 2005. For Young has taken the well-worn "Metropolis"
blueprint for techno and injected it with much-needed vigour and emotion.
| Tracklisting |
| a1. | Electronic Dissident | lo | hi |
| b1. | Electronic Dissident 2 (Bitten Hard by The Black Dog) | lo | hi |
| b2. | Hamburg By Night | lo | hi |
An involving, pulsating intro gives way to shuddering tribal percussion and vast
square-wave bass that make the dancefloor take off in all kinds of unexpected
directions. It has all the string-driven Detroit soul you’d hope for, but it’s
also infectious and energising, causing involuntary hip-wiggling and
shape-throwing. This isn’t techno like it used to be; while it’s utterly in
touch with the currents that once made techno so vital, and comfortably fits
into techno sets, it takes its own magnificent path to disko heaven. It’s just a
wicked record and is guaranteed to put a smile on your face.
The Dust-ed, re-born Black Dog complement the muscular beauty of the original
with an evil ziggurat of dark electrofunk. A surprise and a delight, the Dog
collective distil every ounce of their transcendent expertise into supercharged
gamelan breaks and disorientating melodic ear-candy. The result is sharp,
controlled, and devastating, with the Black Dog marauding dancehalls, spitting
flames, and flicking Vs.
Closing track Hamburg By Night is heathen electronica that will cheer you up,
not put you to sleep. Obviously evocative of neon cityscapes, the song
effortlessly transports the listener through imaginary architecture without ever
descending into a dull cerebral exercise. Instead it’s a rare outing for ambient
gamelan funk.
Out Now
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