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Bruegs
If you read the press release and you are a fan of the influences and collaborators id say disappointment is a baffling response.

After reading the bumf I was a little apprehensive about how they would juggle the spirit of Perrey and Riley but the two short tracks that flank the title track pull it off.

I don’t smoke much these days but had to grab a bag when this dropped. We danced like loons to the first 5 tracks and then lay down and bathed in Supreme Balloon. What better way to celebrate the history of electronic music than squeezing squelch-funk and nature documentaries out of a battery of antique synths?


John Mulvey hits a lot of nails here:

QUOTE
Matmos: Supreme Balloon
A couple of things I played rather a lot over the weekend: the second Brightblack Morning Light album from 2006, which reminds me of unbearably hot afternoons in our old office, and which still sounds gorgeous on a windy Saturday afternoon in March; and “Supreme Balloon”, the 24-minute title track of the new album from Matmos.

Continued...

“Supreme Balloon” – the album, that is – initially seems like something of a departure for the Matmos duo. As the thoroughly eloquent press release explains (I wonder if Drew Daniel himself wrote it?), the album was entirely constructed on antique synths: Moogs, Arps, Korgs and so on, plus a very grand Coupigny modular synth housed at Radio France and previously utilised by, and I quote, “some of the titans of musique concrete”.

“Supreme Balloon”, we’re told, is not such a conceptual piece as its predecessors: the traditional Matmos technique of sampling odd sounds, then making thematically consistent music out of them (most famously, I guess, on the operating theatre squelches which became 2001’s A Chance To Cut Is A Chance To Cure), is abandoned here. I’m usually a little suspicious of music which seeks to ellide form and content in this way, suspecting that it’s more akin to stunt art than aesthetically satisfying music. But the rigorous, vigorous smartness of Matmos, and the playful music which comes out of their intellectual processes, has never failed to be enjoyable as well as satisfying.

The same goes for “Supreme Balloon”, which is far from just a bunch of tracks made out of synths. In some ways, I think it’s a celebration of how electronic music has a history: that this music, so doggedly presented as futuristic, has a backstory that can match rock for richness. It’s a celebration, too, of how synthesisers have been the tools that powered both the classical avant-garde and the notionally disposable, kitsch extremes of pop and dance music. Matmos, it seems, are intent on collapsing the barriers between high and low art – or maybe I’m overthinking all this, and they’re just having fun with some cool old toys.

Listen to the squelching epiphanies of “Polychords”, anyway, and you’ll find something that’s as rooted as much in the work of Chicory Tip as, um, granular synthesists. And while “Mister Mouth” may feature Marshall Allen from the Sun Ra Arkestra on, yep, a breath-controlled oscillator, its frantic squiggles aren’t a million miles from the stuff being made by all those hotwired Gameboy jockeys riding the underside of the nu-rave boom. Matmos are better, mind.

“Les Folies Francaises”, meanwhile, is a baroque trinket by Francois Couperin which the press release has the good grace to admit has been “given the Wendy Carlos treatment”. But it’s that title track I’m fixated on: a gently undulating electronic meditation, which floats into the same rapturous airspace as any number of early ‘70s kosmische types (the admitted reference is Cluster, which is a good starting point). I’m reminded too, though, of something fractionally earlier – the salute-the-sun ecstatic wobble of Terry Riley’s “A Rainbow In Curved Air” (Riley apparently turns up himself on a vinyl bonus track, “Hashish Master”, which I don’t have here).

It’s compellingly beautiful. A historical recreation, I guess, but one imbued with such love and melodic sophistication that it demands to be treated as the equal of its influences, not as their derivative. It’s an irony that might amuse them, hopefully, that while Matmos have made some fabulous and genuinely innovative records in the past (“A Chance To Cut”, “The Civil War” and “The West” are all terrific), this expansively lovely, historically resonant epic of synth-psych might just be my favourite thing they’ve ever done.
John Mulvey



Can’t wait to hear Hashish Master now.
BGwaves
I actually enjoy this album from start to finish, especially the title track. I think the last three songs work well as a suite.

Evokes q-bert-like geometric landscapes,
skies filled with polygon clouds,
and swaying 8-bit oceans of vector fish.
2-D hypnosis. Faster though,
more speed, infinite speed,
infinite surface, flat.
Oh my!
The cosmic butterfly,
here too.
Past this was Swamp Land.
The bubbling bog,
and the toad who was old and wise.
speaking backwards talk,
the kind I can't always follow.
He had to leave when things got all musical.
I stayed til the end though,
floating down the colorful river,
glimpsing that balloon from the album cover in the distance.
I KNEW I HAD BEEN DRUGGED.
avec
QUOTE
Matmos: Supreme Balloon
A couple of things I played rather a lot over the weekend: the second Brightblack Morning Light album from 2006, which reminds me of unbearably hot afternoons in our old office, and which still sounds gorgeous on a windy Saturday afternoon in March; and “Supreme Balloon”, the 24-minute title track of the new album from Matmos.


good review.

odd, those are the two albums i've been spinning all week

I'm having a strange compulsion lately to only listen to leaks a couple times if I like them. Then I'll wait to buy the release if I like it. Why listen to a shitty rip? I shelved the new M83 and Sun Kil Moon. I just can't put this one down, though. It makes me too happy.
I never really checked out Matmos, their 'concept' schticks turned me off. I read an interview with one the founding members and he came off like a twat justifying all his rules for making his music. Glad I waited for this one.
Now if next they can just put out a kosmische album that rivals early Tangerine Dream with all of those synths, I'd be in heaven.
shame cock
If you liked this one, definitely go back and check out their previous releases. Listening to this last night brought me through a visual experience. Everything existing in the weird place inside of your video game cartridge. Everything is an "easter egg," if you know what I mean. Then I returned to Rose Has Teeth in the Mouth of the Beast and was blown away again. That one is seriously fantastic. I recommend you guys return to it and explore its caverns a bit more. Rag for William S. Burroughs is mindblowing.
James D
Seriously, how did I live without SOMB? Alerted me to so much good stuff. This included.

The title track on this is just... wow.
_jon

Oh yeah
UPCOMING APPEARANCES:
Jul 27 :: 9:00 PM
$15.00
http://www.lakeshoretheater.com/ShowDetail.aspx?ShowID=123
Bruegs
Supreme Balloon bonus tracks



CODE
http://www.mediafire.com/?x3xmgnryjbw

Four tracks - Orban - The hidden track that was not included in the leak and the three vinyl only tracks Zemoi, Hashish Master and Staircase. (Hashish Master features Terry Riley getting evil on an ARP 2600)

Just got tickets to see them do highlights from this on June 9th - should be a nice way to celebrate the first night of my 30s.
avec

Thank you very much! I haven't heard these yet. And let us know how the show is.
arkin
finally spent some quality time with this record. MAN! so good.

Matmos is one of the most consistently interesting electronic acts around. I've pretty much been impressed with everything they've put out since A Chance To Cut Is a Chance To Cure, likely because every album is so different.

This one's a lot of fun, but has some great atmospheric stuff too. Awesome.
paramedicfetus
I'm giving this album a run through for the first time. Stuff like this is usually right up my alley. However, I am not sure if I am completely sold. If I had to put my finger on what I feel like it is missing, I would say some really meaty bass/low end.

The title track just started though, so maybe it will totally alter my perception of the album. But at the moment, I'd say that I prefer Black Moth Super Rainbow over this...seems to be a similar aesthetic.

edit - forgot to mention how much this reminds me of a clockwork orange.
Bruegs
QUOTE(paramedicfetus @ May 15 2008, 09:02 PM) [snapback]650011[/snapback]
But at the moment, I'd say that I prefer Black Moth Super Rainbow over this...seems to be a similar aesthetic.


Thats a good one biggrin.gif
shame cock
Rose Has Teeth > Chance to Cut > Civil War > Supreme Balloon

It sure is trippy though. There isn't anything near the quality of "Tract for Valerie Solanas" or "California Rhinoplasty" here. Those two albums are classics, packed with genius sampling usage and really rhythms and ideas. This here is pretty awesome, still, but it isn't the same in my opinion.
arkin
QUOTE(vamos scorcho @ May 15 2008, 03:56 PM) [snapback]650054[/snapback]
Rose Has Teeth > Chance to Cut > Civil War > Supreme Balloon

It sure is trippy though. There isn't anything near the quality of "Tract for Valerie Solanas" or "California Rhinoplasty" here. Those two albums are classics, packed with genius sampling usage and really rhythms and ideas. This here is pretty awesome, still, but it isn't the same in my opinion.


Yeah, Chance to Cut is really awesome. I like Supreme Balloon a lot more than Civil War, though. Like, I admire their ambition in that album, but I just find the new one to be an all-around more enjoyable listen.
The Luscious Phil
After owning both Chance to Cut and Civil War, I think this is the first album by Matmos I truly love.

Swan
QUOTE(The Luscious Phil @ May 15 2008, 06:27 PM) [snapback]650088[/snapback]
After owning both Chance to Cut and Civil War, I think this is the first album by Matmos I truly love.


Them vinyl tracks is gooooooodddddddddddd too, I rarely keep bonus tracks b-sides on, but I think the vinyl track list is what will make my iPod.
Bruegs
This is the first electronic album that has captured my little lady’s attention and for that, but not that alone, I love it dearly. I don’t like to preach or force my music on others but my girl was into this from the off so its given me the perfect excuse to school her.

Supreme Balloon was her gateway - a couple of weeks back I shroomed, she is tea total but we listened to this lot together and she totally came on my trip:




I think she visited my world and we are closer for it. I feared that I would have to twist her arm to come and see Matmos in June but now she is chomping at the bit.

It’s difficult for me to put these personal associations to one side and subject it to critical scrutiny but I genuinely feel its a great album and I can easily see it surpassing The Civil War in my affections.

edit: My 5 year-old nephew told me on the phone last weekend that he likes the "bleepy music" that he heard at my house (Supreme Balloon) more than he likes his Monster Truck pants. What finer endorsement can there be?
vurt
QUOTE(Pieter Hussein Bruegel @ May 16 2008, 06:44 PM) [snapback]650251[/snapback]
edit: My 5 year-old nephew told me on the phone last weekend that he likes the "bleepy music" that he heard at my house (Supreme Balloon) more than he likes his Monster Truck pants. What finer endorsement can there be?


laugh.gif

Brilliant. I can't see this surpassing The Civil War for me, personally, but it's still a really fantastic album.
shame cock
Pieter, your story touched my heart. Seriously man.
James D
Great story man.
red
QUOTE(Pieter Hussein Bruegel @ May 16 2008, 01:44 AM) [snapback]650251[/snapback]
edit: My 5 year-old nephew told me on the phone last weekend that he likes the "bleepy music" that he heard at my house (Supreme Balloon) more than he likes his Monster Truck pants. What finer endorsement can there be?


Haha. That's so cute! And a fine endorsement indeed.
_jon
Man, I do love the warmth this record emits.
shame cock
I'm a fool. This is truly great. See, Matmos is one of those groups that I look forward to getting really high for and listening to on great headphones. For whatever reason, this album wasn't as mindblowingly insane as the last one in regards to that experience, but upon fifth or sixth listen today I'm really enjoying every bit. Especially the long ass Terry Riley inspired piece.
BGwaves
Just got it on vinyl today! Fuckin sweet gatefold, comes with all the unreleased tracks, changing the sequence a little but oh well. Also, its a none glossy cover which totally adds to the vintage feel of the whole thing. Hashish Master is fucking amazing! The vinyl brings out the warmth of this record WAY more than the digital. Great album.
red
You guys are starting to make me want to start collecting vinyl. The last thing I need is another hobby that requires spending money.
throughsilver
gave this an initial listen this avo. very nice indeed. i am always slightly concerned when an artist decides to limit themself to one particular thing (c.f. ratm and their 'all music on this record produced by guitar, drums...' bidneth), but this was cool. haven't read through the thread as i wanted to listen with unprejudiced ear, so apols if this is echoing something (i will read back in a bit prolly), but initially reminded me of hi-scores ep. made me think of that dylan gershon line: 'this sounds like a baby shark waking up. he wakes up and says "don't try this at home"'.

sadly the heft of the 180g discs cut slits in the inner sleeve and a small one or two in the gatefold itself. thankfully the sound is awesome. landstrumm's last album transferred from a 2am club to super mario world. love the art too
Bruegs
QUOTE (Pieter Hussein Bruegel @ May 16 2008, 07:44 AM) *
I feared that I would have to twist her arm to come and see Matmos in June but now she is chomping at the bit.


This show cemented my love of Matmos. I’ve seen and loved them live before but the combination of the venue, the atmosphere and my personal mood just elevated this. I popped in to the venue at 7 to find out what time they were going on and the first person I bumped into was Mr Daniel himself. He said they wouldn’t be on until after 10 so I went back to the pub to watch the Dutch beat Italy smile.gif (I didn't have much interest in watching Cosey Tutti Fanni-ing about for 2 hours)

Returned to the venue nicely lubricated and secured a spot right up front. This intriguing little chap was looking out over the crowd:


We didn't have to wait long to find out his role in events because Messers Schmidt and Daniel (with Jay Lesser in tow) approached through the audience pointing little infrared torches at him and other sensors set up around the stage. The various sensors triggered different frequencies so the three of them contrived a tune.

After that unconventional entrance they took their seats and played the following:
Rainbow Flag (Supreme Balloon)
Public Sex for Boyd McDonald (A Rose has Teeth) - entirely appropriate gay German porn projections during this one
Sun on 5 at 152 (The West) - Id forgotten how great The West is - gave it a spin today and it really holds up
Supreme Balloon (Supreme Balloon)

They were all spotless elaborations on the recorded version but Supreme Balloon was particularly majestic and a great way to end the show.
badger5000
3.5 hour improv set the night before, none of the hits were discernable in the sprawl but there were lots of pleasing Reich/Riley style moments, some nice white noise interludes and what felt like a brave attempt the locate the tone that makes everyone shit themselves. Also some less, er, productive mucking about but that's the way of these events I suppose. No German porn while I was there. Very nice space innit. Audience was well jackson.
Bruegs
QUOTE (Badger @ Jun 12 2008, 11:05 AM) *
Audience was well jackson.

laugh.gif For the hour and a half I was there my chin felt naked.

Totally fucking Mexico
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