Audun Kleive/Generator X ~ Ωagoddabl
Ωagoddabl is
Generator X’s third outing. Audun Kleive’s occasional group is
made up of some of the cream of Norway’s electric jazz players, namely
Jan Bang (samples), Christian Wallumrod and Stale Storlokken (keys), and Arve
Henriksen (trumpet). Ωagoddabl’s eponymous predecessor was an intriguing,
though occasionally patchy work; its spare moments were perhaps a little too
spare, though they were balanced by some marvellous future jazz experiments,
so this latest release is met with some anticipation. That Generator X’s
sound is so highly percussive is perhaps unsurprising given that Kleive is
a drummer, but this motive power clearly harks back to Miles Davis’s
1970s explorations as well as connecting to the rhythmic monomania of the
electronic dance music revolution of the last 15 years.
The first moments of Genreactor might be mistaken for a Carl Craig techno track except that bass stabs simultaneously signal a potential junglist anthem. Then clattering drums liable to cause clubland consternation start up, sounding like they’re trying to lock into a pattern. Arve’s trumpet discharges haunted moans and plangent appeals over some fine, phat bass while Audun continues to pursue the beat, but instead of repetitive groove, he delivers a kaleidoscopic matrix of rhythmic possibilities. Around the five minute mark things turn heavy and monstrous, murderous even. A minute later and it’s all over, all too suddenly.
Exploded Cod is thrash jungle complete with rubber keyboard bass. Ghost winds float over the melee like a dread fog. Stumblin’ At The Savoy sounds like musical bricolage, as if anything that was within reach of the musicians had been grabbed and put into the service of rhythm. There’s a precarious sense of parts travelling separately but towards a roughly similar destination. It’s the musical equivalent of watching a Jean Tinguely sculpture negotiating its short lifespan towards an assured destruction. The pressure gradually increases to explosive levels until the ten minute mark when events turn into something like a junkyard symphony centred upon Kleive, who seems to excel at producing a grooveless groove. He’s joined by all manner of squelches, squeals and electronic squwaking over which Storlokken’s high pitched synths –recognisable from Supersilent - soar like sci-fi comets.
When compared to the previous year, Norway’s musical output was relatively quiet in 2003. Perhaps its musicians were drawing their breath for the next onslaught of creative, cutting-edge hybridisation. Hopefully Ωagoddabl is the harbinger of that riptide, but even if nothing follows on its heels, it’s a vital and remarkable set of music. Any fan of 1970s Miles Davis who also enjoys swimming in the oceans of electronic music that have formed in the last couple of decades should listen to this.
The first moments of Genreactor might be mistaken for a Carl Craig techno track except that bass stabs simultaneously signal a potential junglist anthem. Then clattering drums liable to cause clubland consternation start up, sounding like they’re trying to lock into a pattern. Arve’s trumpet discharges haunted moans and plangent appeals over some fine, phat bass while Audun continues to pursue the beat, but instead of repetitive groove, he delivers a kaleidoscopic matrix of rhythmic possibilities. Around the five minute mark things turn heavy and monstrous, murderous even. A minute later and it’s all over, all too suddenly.
Exploded Cod is thrash jungle complete with rubber keyboard bass. Ghost winds float over the melee like a dread fog. Stumblin’ At The Savoy sounds like musical bricolage, as if anything that was within reach of the musicians had been grabbed and put into the service of rhythm. There’s a precarious sense of parts travelling separately but towards a roughly similar destination. It’s the musical equivalent of watching a Jean Tinguely sculpture negotiating its short lifespan towards an assured destruction. The pressure gradually increases to explosive levels until the ten minute mark when events turn into something like a junkyard symphony centred upon Kleive, who seems to excel at producing a grooveless groove. He’s joined by all manner of squelches, squeals and electronic squwaking over which Storlokken’s high pitched synths –recognisable from Supersilent - soar like sci-fi comets.
When compared to the previous year, Norway’s musical output was relatively quiet in 2003. Perhaps its musicians were drawing their breath for the next onslaught of creative, cutting-edge hybridisation. Hopefully Ωagoddabl is the harbinger of that riptide, but even if nothing follows on its heels, it’s a vital and remarkable set of music. Any fan of 1970s Miles Davis who also enjoys swimming in the oceans of electronic music that have formed in the last couple of decades should listen to this.
Colin Buttimer
May 2004
Published by the
BBC