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Deadbeat: Wild Life Documentaries
Monteith got started as Deadbeat in 1998, releasing a handful of 12"s and compilation tracks along the way before his first full-length (appropriately entitled Primordia) a year ago on Mitchell Akiyama's Intr_version label, out of Montreal. Wild Life Documentaries, his second record, continues along the same lines. Rather than presenting an extended soundscape, Deadbeat breaks things up into relatively encapsulated chapters that reveal different angles of his vision. The deliciously understated "Cause for Hope" runs through drone and echo, waves breaking on the shore while a light beat starts and falters. It's a nice little haven of peace. "For Israel (Jaffa Revisited)" gradually works its way into a bouncing dub groove, reinforced by changes of key and a steady beat. (And don't worrythe Palestinians get their own dedication one track earlier.) "Organ in the Attic Sings the Blues" emerges from a snap crackle and click introduction into a loose, hypnotic flow.
Listeners familiar with this hybrid style of electronica will find Wild Life Documentaries a fresh, invigorating outlookand for those new to the sound, this record makes a fine introduction. While heavily reliant on reverberant sounds and ever-pulsating bass, this music is anything but plodding or dull. Deadbeat has clearly realized that intelligence and hypnosis make for an involving combination.
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Track Listing
Open My Eyes That I May See; Organ in the Attic Sings the Blues; For Palestine; For Israel (Jaffa Revisited); Let It Rain; Cause for Hope; To Berlin With Love; A Dub For Akufen; When First You Gave Me Shivers...; Kezia.
Personnel
Written and produced by Scott Monteith.
Album information
Title: Wild Life Documentaries | Year Released: 2002 | Record Label: ~scape
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