Vessel - Wax Dance

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  • Released on the new label A Future Without, Vessel's Wax Dance shares the moody dynamics and abraded sonics of El Kid's Hypnosis. Vessel's a master of combining worn samples, synthesizers and drum machines into a sound that suggests another material entirely, the way a chemical solution yields its precipitate. It's a chalky sound, with bitcrushed grit smeared between the beats. Despite the title, there's not much dancing here. Nominally house, "Wax Dance" proceeds with a stumbling 4/4 beat and what might be creaky hinges. There's a hint of Farben in the hissing drums; overdriven synths and vocal samples take on the texture of raw meat beneath a particularly blunt bassline. "James Dean" sounds like Actress remixing "Tubular Bells," with minor-key arpeggios against a nervous, double-time bassline and slow, lurching drums. The sound quality suggests low bit-rate YouTube rips, but it's neither off-putting nor precious, and wild dub delay creates its own kind of warmth to compensate for the general chill. "Cuba" is laidback funk in a Floating Points vein, but rendered in Vessel's particularly gauzy tones; "Blowback" and "Trapped Wave" both sink to hip-hop tempos. The former, a kind of funky riposte to Andy Stott's recent work, is somewhere between slo-mo boogie and chopped-and-screwed bleep techno, all squelch and lead shoes. The latter is weirdly bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, with chipper portamento synths and a hint of acoustic guitar. Like most of the EP's tracks, it's less than three minutes long, and it leaves you wanting more.
  • Tracklist
      01. Wax Dance 02. James Dean 03. Blowback 04. Cuba 05. Trapped Wave
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