CD/LP/Track Review

Squarepusher: Go Plastic (2003)

  • 211
By Published: August 1, 2001
Squarepusher: Go Plastic

Squarepusher's musical territory has certainly had its hills and valleys. With his first full-length record, Feed Me Weird Things, Squarepusher (aka Tom Jenkinson) launched a series of fine drill-and-bass masterworks on the Warp label. Up until 1998's Music Is Rotted One Note, every single Squarepusher record was a keeper. But at that point, he dumped the sequencer and switched over to a more spacey, acoustic approach involving lots of real instruments. It was a disastrous turn for the worse.

Fortunately he seems to have grown tired of this dull morass of navel-gazing... and with Go Plastic Squarepusher proves he never really lost the magic. (Musta just been keeping it in his back pocket for a while.) Go Plastic takes the advanced rhythmic ideas of the old school drill-and-bass and applies them within a richer sonic palette. Instead of plain vanilla bass and snare hits, we now have whistles, crashes, vocal fragments, synth noises, and any toys Jenkinson could coax sounds from in his studio. The music as a consequence becomes more multi-dimensional and energizing. You won't find any four-to-the-floor beats on this one. Instead, the rhythms sputter and splatter their way along at an often blistering pace, always changing: doubling, or swinging, or digging deep into the Latin groove. Quiet moments (which are not common on Go Plastic) only serve to emphasize the contrast between silence and Jenkinson's dynamic-sculptural process of sound accretion.

Go Plastic is not a noisy record in the slightest, even though Squarepusher shoves in a more than a few square waves here and there. Every note, every component of this soundscape, serves a purpose. It's leading, it's following, or it's trying to relate. Amazingly enough, most of these tracks have occasional passages where one might get up and briefly shake one's booty—before sitting back down and trying to figure out what just happened to the corporeal groove. For an adventurous fan of electronic music, Go Plastic will throw the doors wide open. And if you need a break from the Britney Spears dance grooves, check out what Squarepusher has to say. Hard to deny the timeless masterpiece here.

Check out more drum-n-bass classics here.

Track Listing: My Red Hot Car, Boneville Occident, Go! Spastic, Metteng Excuske v1.2, The Exploding Psychology, I Wish You Could Talk, Greenways Trajectory, Tommib, My Fucking Sound, Plaistow Flex Out.

Personnel: Tom Jenkinson: music, art.

Record Label: Warp | Style: Electronica

Be the first to post a comment on Squarepusher's Go Plastic.

Signup & post a comment

Artist Name

Album Title

Record Label

Author of Review

Contest Giveaways

Local Calendar


Date Title/Musician Venue Location
Feb 09 New Tricks Garage Restaurant & Cafe New York, NY
Feb 09 Ekah Kim Tutuma Social Club New York, NY
Feb 09 Michael Garin and Mardie Millit Aza Lounge (New York, NY) New York, NY
Feb 09 Blaise Siwula*Dom Minasi Duo 125th Street Library New York, NY
Feb 09 Blaise Siwula*Dom Minasi Duo 125th Street Library New York, NY
Feb 09 Webster Hall Ladies Night Thursdays New York, NY
Feb 09 Ted Kooshian's Standard Orbit Quartet Somethin' Jazz Club (formerly "Miles Cafe") New York, NY
Feb 09 Vocalist Lisa Nobumoto with her New York Jazz Quartet! Piano/Bass/Drums/Trumpet Birdland New York, NY
Feb 09 Benny Golson in New York on 02/09/12 Jazz Standard New York, NY
Feb 09 Roy Hargrove Big Band Blue Note: New York New York, NY
Feb 10 Chilcano Tutuma Social Club New York, NY
Feb 10 Gabriel Alegria Afro-Peruvian Sextet Tutuma Social Club New York, NY