
Squarepusher: Don’t Go Plastic, Ill Descent and Shin Triad
From: Music is Rotted One Note [Warp, 1998]
Before I dive into the subject matter of this week’s post, I would like to personally thank Junior and Chuck for making the switch over to Wordpress without any major issues occurring. I apologize that I have been missing in action lately, but life has been smacking me around like a red-headed step child. I hope to get my bearings and post on a more regular basis, but I am unable to commit to any sort of schedule at this point. Thanks go out to the rest of the crew for bringing the serious funk while I was gone. Here’s to continuing the legacy of Ear Fuzz on Wordpress.
Today’s post focuses on electro-jazz, a style of music that juxtaposes elements of jazz fusion, funk and soul. In the late 90’s, electronic acts and jazz musicians began marching to the same drummer, as numerous like-minded acts started releasing records all over the globe. I know the name electro-jazz or nu-jazz makes a lot of people cringe, but aside from a few big names like St. Germain and Jazzanova, there is an abundance of great stuff to be found in this genre.
One of my first discoveries of Electro-jazz was the album Music is Rotted One Note by UK electronic act Squarepusher. This is essentially the brainchild of Tom Jenkinson who combined vintage samplers and sequencers with organic intrumentation to achieve a fascinating reinterpretation of the sound Miles Davis mastered on Bitches Brew. Even though I was merely a jazz novice when I first discovered this record, I couldn’t help but notice the similarities between Squarepusher and most of the 70’s fusion like Miles, Weather Report, Mahavishnu Orchestra, etc. The entire album is not in the jazz-fusion vein however, as it incorporates musique concrete, ambient electronic passages and aural transmissions from another world.
I am featuring three songs from the album that encapsulate the feel of it as a whole, with two of them sounding like they could have easily been on any Miles Davis album from the fusion era. Keep in mind that the only instruments used on this record are sequencers, synthesizers, percussion and rhodes piano.
The second track on the record “Don’t Go Plastic” starts out with cymbal splashes and the sound of rhodes piano bubbling under the surface like molten lava. It slowly builds with percussion that seems to be spliced from different takes, while the rhodes glides through the song like it has wings. At about the two minute mark, their is a percussive break that is seemingly computer-generated, and then a sinister piano melody plays for a couple bars. After a brief but impressive drum solo, a solo kicks in that is like no other. It is hard to tell whether this solo was achieved through the various sequencers and pedals that are the usual M.O. for Squarepusher, but it sounds to me like a piano is being played underwater while the rest of the band is riding the groove.
“Ill Descent” captures the essence of ambient rock bands like Tangerine Dream and Klaus Schulze while simultaneously managing to experiment with textures and sound that pull from jazz and avant garde music. If I had thought of this song when I was compiling my triumvirate of space music comps, it would have fit like a glove.
The last track is a short burst of creative energy that opens with scattershot drumming and electronic sound waves only to switch gears completely into a cacophonous, funky slab of goodness that is just too good to pass up. The rumbling bassline from Digital Underground’s classic hip-hop track “The Humpty Dance” is the most obvious influence on this track.
This concludes my overview of Squarepusher’s 1998 classic Music For Rotted One Note. I welcome any comments about other Electro-jazz bands that you guys are digging right now.




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No electro-jazz, but I just discovered Alice Coltrane’s “spiritual” albums (I’m a newbie to jazz), which are awesome. Interesting post, interesting music btw.
Lope:
Thanks for your comment. Spiritual jazz is one of those genres of music that can definitely lead you down a rabbithole. I would also recommend John Coltrane’s later era stuff like Mediatations, Ascension and Stellar Regions. Absolutely killer stuff. Other amazing spiritual jazz outside of the Coltrane family includes Archie Shepp- Blase, Frank Wright- Church Number 9, Larry Young-Lawrence of Newark and Albert Ayler- Spiritual Unity. If you dig this stuff and want find out about some more, let me know.
Also, if you are interested in digging deeper into Electro jazz, I highly recommend the following records:
Skalpel- S/T
Jaga Jazzist- A Livingroom Hush
Matthew Shipp- Equilibrium
Spring Heel Jack- Amassed
Anti-Pop Consortium- Antipop vs. Matthew Shipp
Best, Kevin
I totally agree with Kevin, the Coltranes are certainly always worth a closer look (although the late Coltrane is so overwhelming that a mere mortal is not really able to comprehend something like Acsension:It may be really, really good, but sometimes I just don’t get it….)
Concerning these Electro/Jazz/DnBass-Crossovers of the early nineties: Carl Craigs Innerzone Orchestra is certainly worth a closer loook. “Programmed” is more jazz and less electro and he was joined by a former band-member of Sun Ras Orchestra:And this disc is certainly very “spaceways”….
Adam F’s “colours” is also great, with “circles” being on of the all-time d’n'b anthems: it’s a little more electro than jazz, but still has some very clever and stylish tunes like Dirty Harry or the laid-back “the tree knows everything” together with Tracey Thorn…
Stfrean,
Acsension is pretty heavy stuff indeed. It is an acquired taste, but it can be a truly rewarding listening experience.
Thanks for the tip on Carl Craig’s Innerzone Orchestra and Adam F’s electro-jazz records. I will definitely check these out.