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Betty Botox - Mmm, Betty!
Label / Endless Flight
Cat # / Endless Flight CD 2
Released / August 2008
Style / Re-Edits
Rating / 4.5

This release is one big can of worms. Are re-edits creative? Are bootlegs ethical? Does our obsession with retro mean there's nothing new to say? Is rarity important?

On the other hand, it's very simple. Suppose you didn't know re-edits existed, and you heard Mmm, Bettty. Would you get excited? Would you dance? I take the latter view. Dance music has a very clear purpose, and whether it's re-edited, sampled, digital or analogue has little bearing on that. Mmm, Bettty has ideas, grooves, surprises and a clear aesthetic and I can't ask for much more than that from an album.

It's no secret that Betty Botox is JD Twitch from Optimo, a man who quite possibly owns more records than every RA reader combined. Because of this, you're highly unlikely to know the originals of many of these tracks and, indeed, that's somewhat the intention—to rescue these grooves from vinyl obsolescence and create beat-matchable versions for modern club play.

The thing that really jumps out about Mmm, Bettty is that, despite the diversity of the source material, it all has a similar 'industrodelic' feel—clanky awkward rhythms meshing with off-centre sound effects and blank vocals. It's a far cry from the Paradise Garage/Loft vision of disco, but is compelling precisely for that reason: Love it or hate it, it's certainly original. I can't think of any other DJ or producer out there who does anything remotely similar.

Key moments here are the amazing bongo odyssey of "Dragon Balls" (originally by Japanese house producers "Flying Rhythms"). It's just drums and the occasional yawp, and it doesn't last nearly long enough as the drums ripple, curl and echo around. It's so amazing in headphones that I'm slightly fearful of ever hearing it in a club. "Et" consists of robotic pigeon coos overlaid with ludicrous spanglish stream-of-consciousness spoken word lyrics. It's an "atmosphere" piece, but will satisfy anyone's need for that essential "weird crap to play at after parties" section in your record collection.

We do get some more straightforward disco cuts here as well: "Jive Baby on a Saturday Night," "Beginning of the Heartbreak" and "Greater Reward" all deliver a satisfying 4/4 stomp and groovy bassline, but are far from straightforward in approach, all containing those slightly dislocated sonics that characterize an Optimo mix. Best of all is the curiously sexless but still horribly sleazy "Diskomo" by the Residents.

If you "know what you like and like what you know," I'd probably avoid this release, but if you gravitate towards the odd and anachronistic, Mmm, Bettty could just be your favourite album of the year.



Published /
Thu, 18 September 2008



Buy Betty Botox - Mmm, Betty! at
buy this online at juno recordsbuy this online at juno download


Tracklist: Betty Botox - Mmm, Betty!
01. The Jellies - Jive Baby on a Saturday Night
02. Love of Life Orchestra - Beginning of The Heartbreak
03. The Residents - Diskomo
04. Severed Heads - Greater Reward (Dub)
05. Pankow - Boys and Girls
06. Carlos Peron - Et
07. Hawkwind - Valium Ten
08. Flying Rhythms - Doragon Balls
09. Zed - Fremen (Naum Gabo's Flying Saucer Edit)

Betty Botox - Mmm, Betty!

 
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Betty Botox says Mmm...Betty

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jacobwwrote
Thu, 02 Oct 2008Bareklik i could agree with you if my analysis of music simply extended to what decade it was from. In which case we could be saying that Lindstrom is identical to Scissor Sisters and that Richard X and Jurassic 5 make the same sort of music.

Of course the 80s has been revisited, but it's the synth-pop/italo clean electronic sound that has been thoroughly strip-mined. The clanky proto-industrial stuff that Betty Botox and Optimo cover, however, is far less often referenced, and definitely... More

AnalogLovewrote
Thu, 02 Oct 2008Also, I think these are all officially licensed rather than a bootleg.

AnalogLovewrote
Thu, 02 Oct 2008I disagree. Firstly, half of the tracks on this aren't from the 80s and surely the point of projects like this is quite clearly to take things from the past and make them relevant to now. I don't think that is living in the past.

bareklikwrote
Wed, 24 Sep 2008You really can't think of a single DJ or producer out there that rehashes the sound of the 80s in one fashion or another? It's only been the most enduring popular trend in dance music since January 1, 1990. Why don't you head down to the nearest 80's night at your local dancehall and ask the DJ his name? Then you'll know someone. A less sarcastic suggestion: what about Richard X and Girls on Top (in the early 2000s) with their awesome mash-ups, which came out before too many djs and satellite... More

antiguanawrote
Wed, 24 Sep 2008really funny album !!! but i would say to electronic for me .)

putyrhandsupwrote
Tue, 23 Sep 2008this is Stefan Marx's company: The Lousy LivinCompany

Also Betty Botox album = Awesome


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