Lords of Svek - "Stars" review

From: Bethany A. Johnson (bethany@rawkawn.com)
Date: Wed Jul 12 2000 - 03:41:11 MET DST

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    Hello all - here's a review for you to consider, but warning, only
    a few of these tracks (Sunday Brunch, J. Dahlbach, Brommage Dub)
    actually qualify as acid jazz.

    ---
    	Svek's most recent compilation, Stars, sends the listener reeling 
    from second :01 with it's opening track, "Close 2 You" by Joel Mull. 
    Mull's synth melodies and traveling rhythms will pull at your emotions 
    and well up inside you like only string orchestras and classical scores
    previously could. Who is this Joel Mull? A pseudonym for Cari Lekebusch 
    in love? Swayzak emoting after the birth of a child? The warm vocoded 
    vocals will pull you in and leave you in love with Mull and his
    machines. 
    This song moves me in unexplainable ways.
    	The second track, "Szeremena Programs" by Numume features Cari 
    Lekebusch and his sexy but not-so-endearing-as-Mull's vocoder. One to 
    get you up and moving, "Szeremena" follows the classic Lekebusch formula
    for well-tempoed beaty beats that repeat and amuse.
    	Sunday Brunch's "After the Rain" shimmers, rattles, bumps,
    jams, slides and seduces with sax and funky guitar. Jesper D + gang
    have the good summertime tune formula down pat. 
    	Brommage Dub appears with tracks "Trinidub" and "Trinity"
    which don't seem to bear any direct resemblance aside from the titles.
    "Trinidub" features bright trumpet melodies, free-style bongos 
    and a moving tempo. "Trinidub" stays on the sexy, jazzy side while
    "Trinity" leans toward the dub-y.
    	Track five, Briskeby's "A Song to Whisper" proves to be a
    standout with natural drums + offbeat snares. The female vocals
    are absolutely ethereal and will leave you blissed and starry eyed.
    Sublime.
    	Jesper Dahlback seduces as always with the flute and sax laced 
    beauty, "Sand", then the comp takes a gradual turn towards
    the left field. Tracks eight through eleven feature Forme and
    Conceiled Project alternating with tech-house and straight up 
    techno. Track nine, Conceiled Project's "D-weqst" will make you
    bounce to it's dark and melodic tech. Forme's "Moonraker" features
    more bleeps, breaks and beats with some ominous melodic swells. 
    The final track, Conceiled Project's "D-End" takes the listen
    a bit far out with some heavy heavy techno.
    	Overall, Svek "Stars" will heighten your emotions, make you bounce
    and simply leave you awestruck. I was disappointed to find Seba
    missing from the comp lineup, but I was twice as excited to find
    new names present. "Stars" is every bit as standout
    as it's predecessor, "Galaxy". 
    	 
    -- 
    Bethany A. Johnson
    http://www.rawkawn.com/
    http://www.thedownbeat.org
    



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