1/ Ex Machina - (Laswell,Showard) 10.08
Automaton
2/ Bullit In the Head - (Showard) 4.16
DXT
3/ Quark Soup - (Olive,Loop,Once II) 7.27
We
4/ Peace Akhi - (Af Next Man Flip) 1.46
Jungle Brothers
5/ Backstab (Night of the Long Knives) - (Fernando) 7.16
Spectre
6/ Senseless Humor - (Martine) 4.34
Corporal Blossom
7/ Twisted Tables - (Showard) 4.55
DXT
8/ Night Stalkers/Mayday - (Fernando) 5.10
Spectre
9/ Conveyor - (Martine) 4.45
Corporal Blossom
10/ Journey (Paraspace Mix) - (Paul Miller) 4.14
DJ Spooky
11/ Prime Order - (Martine) 1.53
Corporal Blossom
12/ Play To Win - (Torture) 3.23
From the Jungle Approach
13/ Nasty Data Burst (Why Ask Why?) - (Paul Miller) 7.20
DJ Spooky
Recorded at various studios
Each track produced by it’s respective writer(s)
Compiled and mastered at Greenpoint Studio, Brooklyn, New York
Engineering : Robert Musso
Assistant : Layng Martine
Called down by Bill Laswell
Subharmonic : Robert Soares
Material, Inc. : Tracy McKnight
Axiom : Bill Murphy
(1) Produced by Bill Laswell and DXT; (2 & 7) Produced by DXT; (3) Produced
by We; (4) Produced by the Jungle Brothers; (5 & 8) Produced by Spectre; (6,9
& 11) Produced by Corporal Blossom; (10 & 13) Produced by DJ Spooky, Tha
Subliminal Kid; (12) Produced by Torture.
1995 - Subharmonic (USA), VCD 4400-2 (CD)
Dan Foley (courtesy of the Ambience For the Masses website)
Valis is bassier, darker and a lot more abstract than "altered beats," which is probably why i like it a hell of a lot more. Automaton sets the tone for the whole thing with "ex machina," a nice combo of dub beats and ambient drones with amorphous noises, bizarre horn sounds and delayed-ed-ed guitar. DXT's "bullit in the head" picks up a bit with some fat synth, metallic beats and severely painful scratching... lots of samples of chaos and anarchic screaming add to the overall assault on your senses. We kicks in with "Quark Soup," which is a pretty amazing composition: a mixture of slow dub with drones, heavy percussion, more disjointed sampling and heavy, stuttering programming - then suddenly it moves into outer space with some oscillators, uh, oscillating and then the track comes back, and somehow it all makes perfect sense. "Achoo." The JBs (the Jungle Brothers? or _the_ JBs?) combine a Naked City sample (i swear! "osaka bondage!") with an aggressive, distorted beat (or my speakers are bad) and some strong cutting and slicing up of tracks that make you want to do some hallucinogens just so you can understand this shit. Spectre's first track "Backstab" mixes Scarface samples ("fuck you, mayn") with tense, low piano chords and an overall gangster feeling to nice effect; his second track combines Psycho shrieks with looped guitar wackness and big, bulbous bass. Well, fuck it, i've gone on long enough, haven't i? DJ Spooky is on this, too, and his tracks are also superior; as a matter of fact, this whole disc is excellent. The last thing i have to mention is the utter godhead of DJ Spooky's "Nasty Data Burst," which is as close to experimental hip-hop as it gets.
grievous (courtesy of the Noise From the Spleen of Space website)