Luke Slaters Mote-evolver Reach The Big 4-0 With The Help Of Chris Jarman, The Commanding Officer Behind The Kamikaze Space Programme. Concrete Musique Is Four Tracks Of Loud, Hard-nosed, Techno-taunting Speaker Pressure.
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Luke Slater's Mote-Evolver reach the big 4-0 with the help of Chris Jarman, the commanding officer behind the Kamikaze Space Programme. Looking to redefine the concept of uncompromising from bass culture's traditional Bristol HQ, 'Concrete Musique' is four tracks of loud, hard-nosed, techno-taunting speaker pressure.
Both 'The Bailiff' and 'Network Rail' power off boxy kick drums: such is their statement of intimidation, not much else is needed to accompany this campaign of haymaking through the arena.
With percussion veering between tub-thumping and machine gunned tribalism, the pair set about a session of straight up and down ear-bashing. 'The Bailiff' carries the thinnest and daintiest of supernatural airs, while 'Network Rail' and its spearing loops demand to be housed in a hangar reaching breaking point.
Dancing on the live rail and taking a buzzsaw to its bottom end is the blackened electro breakbeat of 'Radio', laying down body-popping lino before the techno undertone turns it into a bed of nails. KSP's palette is again sparse, watching the sparks fly while cowbells ring in the distance, making a date with the Deathstar for all poppers and lockers brave enough to face its wrath.
'Death to the Valley' is a versatile beast. Thanks to its explosive bass foundation, it can be found sweeping grime and trap before it, hanging out in the deepest techno recesses, and stomping its breakbeat feet. Another seethingly bare backdrop, punctuated by lab squiggles and signals vainly trying to keep a leash on the marauder it has let loose, means you should wear protection: contents are white hot.