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Drukqs

Aphex Twin

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Album Review

Despite threatening retirement several times, in 2001 Richard D. James finally released another Aphex Twin record. But for all this record tells listeners, he may still be in retirement. Spreading 30 tracks (most with unpronounceable titles) across two discs, Drukqs sounds less like a major new statement from electronica's best producer than the results of a Sunday afternoon's trawl through his hard drive for files he hasn't released before. Many songs here evoke the feel of recordings long since past, from the quiet ambient techno of his breakthrough, Selected Ambient Works 85-92, to the demonically extroverted programming of Richard D. James Album and the Come to Daddy EP. Stylistically, the record leans toward the later recordings, with many tracks here reprising the off-key melodies and overloaded drum programming of "Come to Daddy" or "Windowlicker." There's also little rhyme or reason to the program; James veers directly from a drill'n'bass firestorm ("Cock/Ver 10") to a delicate piano piece à la Erik Satie ("Avril 14th") to an acid-techno burner ("Mt. Saint Michel Mix") with barely a glance backward for transition. Of course, aside from all the criticism, the previously unreleased musings of Aphex Twin are still far more intriguing and solid than most producers' best releases. The opener, "Jynweythek Ylow," and "Ruglen Holon" are brilliant, inscrutable pieces reminiscent of a rusty, bygone music box or the gamelan music of Indonesia. And a few of the second-disc highlights, "Meltphace 6" and "Taking Control," chart a middle ground between the emotional ambience of early Aphex Twin and the wracked hysteria of his later work. Drukqs is a sprawling album that defies listeners to understand or enjoy it as a whole, and would've worked much better as a fan-only release than the long-awaited return of the techno vanguard's favorite producer.

Customer Reviews

Fukqed up on some Good Aphex Acid

I remember reading a review for this cd in rollingstone magazine while waiting to get my haircut. The crappy review just slammed James, saying this album was a sprawling mess of tired futuristic techno meets aimlessly pretty piano tracks. Out of my raw hatred for a magazine that gives Britney Spears and Amy Winehouse good reviews over an electronic prodigy that's been doing this way too long to have that garbage written about him. I picked up this double disc 'Drukqs' and man I've gotta learn to stop reading mainstream music magazines. Because this cd is just mind-blowing on all accounts of music. Then a good friend told me you are supposed to jam both discs at the same time, how exciting I thought. So I did, and wow they really match up and it's one good acid trip of a ride, my ears really haven't been the same sense. But i'm almost completely certain my neighbors called the cops explaining someone is building a time machine or dismntling a super computer, so I never tried it again . Plus both discs by themselves shuffled on an ipod are just as moving, so I could go either way. That just helped me realized how pitifully worthless Rolling Stone magazine is, kill the mainstream I say. This is the first time He ventures brilliantly into dreamlike piano, harmonium and music box sounding interlude tracks (Kesson Dalef, Petiatil Cx Htdui, etc.) that blindly whip you into his most intricately grooving yet utterly mutating drill 'n' bass experiments. Tracks like 'Mt. Saint Michel', 'Ziggomatic17' & '54 Cymru Beats', are pyschosis inducing with enough shapeshifting and unremarkable flow to send your head to outer space. Then sick tracks like 'Gwarek2' & 'Prep Gwarlek 3B', James just chucks your mind, ears, and nerves into a skin crawling soundscape of tortured screams and creaturish ratchet noises that sound like their about to come out of the speakers and behead you. The second track is a brilliant noise experiment that sounds like a group of men banging on pipes, he conjures such a remarkable rhythm with this insanity. Personally my favorites on the disc just by atmosphere, never heard him so evil. Overall I'd definetley agree that this is for hardcore fans only, this stuff is very personal and very heart stopping with non-stop movement and beautiful orginality. Every cd I hear from him sounds 15 years ahead of its time. So please you C**nts, let's all have some Aphex acid for Aphex's sake!

Why!!!????

The United Kingdom iTunes has so much more aphex twin, but you can't buy it with a U.S. iTunes account. Why can't they have all of it in the U.S. store?

Taking Control

This is the definitive Aphex Twin album. Richard D. James has proven to be in control of every step, shape and sound of his music. It took me about 6 months to truly appreciate this work, and lurking under the surface of the loud, dissonance, and confusing drum n bass tracks is a master work. Piano pieces are scattered through the album expressing a wide variety of emotional and tonal control. But don't worry they are definitely enough IDM tracks to make you move your feet and lose your mind. If you're looking for a great album to get to know & discover a new way to experience music you're money would be well spent on this amazing album.

Biography

Born: August 18, 1971 in Ireland

Genre: Electronic

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

Exploring the experimental possibilities inherent in acid and ambience, the two major influences on home-listening techno during the late '80s, Richard D. James' recordings as Aphex Twin brought him more critical praise than any other electronic artist during the 1990s. Though his first major single, "Didgeridoo," was a piece of acid thrash designed to tire dancers during his DJ sets, ambient stylists and critics later took him under their wing for Selected Ambient Works 85-92, a sublime touchstone...
Full Bio

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