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Bidnezz

Machine Drum

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Album Review

If anyone has a new take on the breaks, now would be a good time to come forth, as the classic kick/ snare/hi-hat seems to have gone through every mutation possible with no small thanks to those crazy computers and their ability to instantly cut everything into double time, quadruple time and 120th time with a click of the mouse. As Machine Drum, Travis Stewart has his fun with breaks, running them through the DSP ringer or distorting them to a healthy crunch. On his fourth album, he remains technically proficient, on par with Jimmy Edgar or Jamie Lidell. But what seems missing here is the soul of the funky drummer, lost in a barrage of ones and zeros that become the ends, not the means. He keeps the boom-bap reasonably straight on "Stevie Bam Jackson" and "Legs," which twists a honky tonk piano along with the slow stuttering drums akin to Dabrye. But he also lets too much hang out, particularly on "Worldcomin" and "Inner Outer" which push the delay past the point where your neck even tries to keep time. Three mixes of other people's tracks awkwardly drop in the middle, although Stewart's cut-up of Cinelux's "Hollis" holds together nicely, with a distant vocal and a vibe melody that fills out the end nicely. If only his concept of melody stayed as firmly planted on this whole album, rather than just the insistent computerized textures, there might be something worth listening to the whole way though.

Customer Reviews

Machine Drum owns the future.

Machinedrum is the Archetype whom Prefuse Ripped off. The Real People know. Buy this album and Listen to it on an amazing sound system or a pair of studio headphones. This album is 2012 Music. There is nothing like it anywhere. A++

A musical achievement in of itself

What an awesome album, particularly in making these types of songs and pulling it off like this is no easy feat. More and more are pulling it off wonderfully like Venetian Snares, Murcof and BT using Classical music idioms, reminiscent of the great ECM label's recent directions. Using Jazz music however, as a collage-based music is nothing short of extraordinary, particularly when one is dealing mostly with chordal textures and using them in a way to create melody without having to fall into much repetition. I love repetition, but making tracks where there isn't much repetition while using these types of textures is really difficult without falling into an overly conceptual album. This album has tons of deep feelings and soul, while being technically super proficient. I'm also a fan of Prefuse 73, The Books, Caural and Plaid, and this album is definitely a huge step in forming a highly complex form of IDM, while bringing in understatement, soulfulness, simplicity, melody, and meaningful compositions reminiscent of Bill Frisell's impact on Jazz. Machine Drum I believe has set a new standard in all of the stated above and will help those like us making this kind of music to really expand outside of our own boxes. Thank you, Mr. Travis for this album, it's a gem. Keep up this great work.

Machine Drum!!!

yoyoyoyo What can I say? I bought this after "Urban Bio"-which I loved. This album is different though. Out of respect for the artist. There is nothing else like "Bidnezz" out there in the Market today. Fine, Fine Productions and Directions. Pick it up.

Biography

Genre: Electronic

Years Active: '00s

Of the many aliases attributed to Orlando, FL-based artist Travis Stewart (aka Syndrone, tstewart) Machine Drum is handily the most well-known. Although initially conceived as an outlet for Stewart's drill'n'bass meanderings, Machine Drum's first public release was a hazy, skittering melange that owed more to hip-hop and ambient than early Squarepusher. Indeed, the bursting "Izey Rael" would prove to be the template for Machine Drum's ensuing long-player. Recorded during the summer of 2000 through...
Full Bio
Bidnezz, Machine Drum
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Customer Ratings

Contemporaries

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