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5 Reviews
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Toronto's Soundtrack to its Sewers,
By LexAffection (Philadelphia, PA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Viva Toronto (Audio CD)
Steve Lawler's Viva: Toronto embraces a sentiment that John Digweed once expressed about minimal electronic music - That is, that good minimal techno contains as much relative importance in the audible sound as it does in the absence of sound. Despite the wise sentiment, it was hard for me to be bought immediately by Lawler's minimal prominence. Viva: London was a decent enough disc, but hardly a frontrunner in its category. Viva: Toronto is altogether a similar concept, mastering the devilish attitude that accompanies darkened rooms, seedy nightclubs and unfamiliar faces. However similar the genre is to its predecessor, Toronto is altogether better than London (we're talking about the discs, here!).Disc One ("Inside") embraces colorful, mucky and gritty minimal-tech. Like wind rushing between city buildings, the sound on this disc carries more force than it cares to show. Despite its near-phantomlike presence, I found myself bouncing around to the music as I had a listen. I argue that this type of musical incongruity sometimes makes for a better listening experience, and reminds me of the M_nus label afterhours party I attended in Detroit after D.E.M.F.'s second day. Astonishingly fresh minimal that can actually be danced to is refreshing, and now that I have come to terms with the fact that the prior king of grimy tribal has moved on to other territories, the Lawler watermark continues to cast a veritable shadow over a new genre of 4 A.M. clubbing madness. Less mad than disc two, "Inside" shows a clear progression in Lawler's new path as a class DJ. Highlights include "Give It A Go," "Loosey Goosey (Reboot Rework)," "Ramper (Patrick Zigon Remix)" and "Grains (TG Remix)." The second disc, "Outside," feels like anything in the world other than a romp around the dewy fields of electronica the title suggests. "Outside" takes minimal to places where sunlight is merely a concept, never a reality. In short, the type of place Steve Lawler has been dominating since the beginning. "Outside" unleashes a wave of exceptional new releases; echoic and murky sounds rhythmically drip and trickle into place like water from ceiling pipes in a cellar. Miss Fritz' passive "Drifting On" segues into the stellar and demonic tone of Nivek Tsoy's "Time and Space." Most of Lawler's selections are dissimilar pieces of music taken alone. For me, they combine to form a descending staircase leading to all sorts of delightfully clandestine activites: masquerades, liquor and sweat. To follow the second disc's progression is to witness, in an entirely different realm of EDM, that which Lawler became famous for in the tribal and progressive house circuits. Other tracks worth mentioning (though all are fantastic) are "Diskotecktonik," "Cambio," "Symphony for the Apocalypse," "Perception" and "The Astropop Shop." Viva: Toronto clearly outclasses both its "Viva" predecessors. With choice electronic cuts in all directions, I found that it was truly difficult for these discs to lose my attention. Lawler puts all the meat on one bone and emerges with a strong, energetic and intriguing compilation album. Leave it to Lawler to take minimal under his covert wing and make it appealing! ~ Lex / JW (iBeats)
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Metaphysics of House,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Viva Toronto (Audio CD)
This is an interesting period for this genre. For the last 2-3 years many dj's have spun a wide array of minimalistic electronica in the search for the pulse of house music and perhaps blaze a path forward that is unique and interesting while reflecting their own style. Steve Lawler in his last few albums has experimented along these lines, moving from what is best understood to be tribal house to a nostalgic neo-tech-house that is true to the recesses of a dark and sublimanal place where we depart from our day-selves.The tracks on this set reflect a signature Lawler sound which is best indicated in the way he handles space, a consistent rate of peaks embeded across tracks. across albums. This is not atmospheric music, it is intense...seductive and the power behind it is best described as magnetic. The journey takes you from a chaotic pass through an airport and then as you settle in, ever inward until there is no sense of time. As always, the quality of recording is outstanding. The engineering second-to-none, selection of tracks inspired, In summary? State of the art.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Big Day in Viva Land,
By Nathaniel Udel (Ft. Collins, CO USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Viva Toronto (Audio CD)
Viva Toronto had many requests and was expected to be a good album having many reviews. I was one of many fans to request it. Sure enough, it did get good reviews. I heard both discs in one day and loved this in no time flat. My friend John was loving the new Alex Dolby album, but told him if that was anything, wait until he hears Viva Toronto because that kicked my butt!The first disc is liked mellowed back keeping it simple and the introduction doesn't have Steve lawler in it, but is like being at the airport. Music with spanish people in the background immediately kicks in with a beat rising up out of no where. You here samples of a soundscape throughout the entire album that keeps grabbing at my ear. The first disc is laid back, but a lot more organized than Viva London was. It was really the 2nd disc that got my attention and in a lot of ways, reminds me of some of Deep Dish's Global Underground releases, exspecially because of the sound. Evp Echoes and Symphony for the Apocalypse are good examples of this. The sound is bigger and does nothing but keep my ear stuck to it like it is deformed. Outstanding soundscape and outstanding music. This is a good disc, exspecially for the 2nd disc. If I were in your shoes, I would just take it. Doctor recommended!!
0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
It really Sucks!!!,
By Mauro "mapiz" (Miami, FL USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Viva Toronto (Audio CD)
I own over 2000 cd's and this is one of the suckiest mixes I've heard. This guy is great livebut his cd releases ddo not do him any justice.
0 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
I could wax eloquent as do the other reviews but....,
By
This review is from: Viva Toronto (Audio CD)
But I'll get to the point. It kinda sucks. May not tell you much about the the specific tracks and the moods it creates, or the subtleties of emotion, but hopefully is conveys the essence of what I think of the CD and the selection of music. so if you have $18 to waste and just need to have every possible selection in your collection, then its a must have otherwise....not.
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Viva Toronto by Steve Lawler (Audio CD - 2008)
$20.99 $18.45
In Stock | ||