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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
a gorgeous and dreamy journey of musical perfection, July 13, 2001
There's something about plaid that reminds me of david sylvian. maybe it's the guitar riffs they use, especially on 'ralome' from 'rest proof clockwork' or 'eyen' the opening track on 'double figure', their current release. but i digress, not all their stuff reminds me of david slyvian.With past releases, plaid smooshed many moods of electronica together on one CD. on 'not for threes' you had tracks with NIN guitar riffs melded with soothing melodies ('extork') next to icelandic vocalist tracks (lilith). on 'rest proof clockwork' you had eerie atmospheric tracks (dead sea) with bubbly, poppy electro tracks (dang spot) next to acid jazz-like grooves (shakbu). but on 'double figure' plaid goes for mellow melancholy pop-like tunes that are weirdly familiar. there's such a wonderful flow to this CD that you don't realize you've listened to 19 tracks (!!!!) 71 minutes later. 'squance' is okay but not a very strong track. those appear later. each track gets stronger and better as the CD progresses. 'assault on precinct zero' is a cover version of the theme music john carpenter wrote for his 1976 film 'assault on precinct 13' (an incredibly intense, mindblowing flick that needs to be seen. if you haven't seen it go out and rent it! NOW!!!). so if you've seen the movie and this track sounds strangely familiar to you, now you know why. 'ooh be do': fuzzy bass beat, creepy synth orchestral melody from the right speaker, surreal electro melody from the left speaker and a lot of randomly scattered chimy keyboardish synth that slowly takes over (really! i'm trying to explain this brilliant track! it has to be heard!). this is one of the many moments of brilliance throughout this CD. 'light rain' god! this track is so gorgeous and my favorite! a beautifully muted xylophone-like melody, a scratchy beat and weird crunchy synth squished together in a jell-o mold only to fade out into a nursery rhymish melody repeated, echoed and layered over itself with weird vocal samples. BEAUTIFUL!!! 'twin home' is a subtly strong track. a repeated rhythm and echoing chimes. the beauty of this track creeps up on you and when it's over you realize how wonderful it was so you repeat it. 'tak 4' is really cool but it's only 59 seconds long so why bother to describe it, just listen to it. 'ti bom' is a really messed up jazzy jungle number. scattered synchopated jungle beats, sax blowing in a distorted way, prominent hi-hats and filtered piano lurch their way through this funky little avant garde modern dance track. 'manyme' is a dreamy laidback close to 'double figure'. beautifully echoing yet incoherent vocals laid over a strumming bassline and weird synths that are like vocals themself. it's like laying in bed as sleep slowy falls over you. Overall this is by far the best, most mature plaid effort to date. all traces of black dog (which was evident in earlier releases) have been washed away leaving behind 'double figure'. gorgeous production, seamless transistions from track to track and a coherent yet strangely familar feel to the entire CD. If you're new to plaid, this is where you should start. it's plaid at their pinnacle. hopefully they'll remain in top form for years to come.
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